What a Home Inspection Should Look At

A home inspection helps buyers understand the condition of a property before they close. While the exact scope can vary, a good inspection usually looks at the home's major systems, visible structure, and common problem areas.

Knowing what an inspection should cover can help buyers ask better questions and spot when more review may be needed.

Exterior and site

Inspectors often look at the outside condition of the property, including siding, grading, driveways, walkways, decks, porches, gutters, and drainage patterns. Problems outside can point to water issues or deferred maintenance.

Roof and attic

The roof is a key part of the inspection. Buyers should expect attention to shingles, flashing, visible wear, and signs of leaks. The attic may also be checked for ventilation, insulation, and moisture clues.

Foundation and structure

Visible cracks, settling concerns, water entry signs, and other structural clues may be noted. Not every crack means a major problem, but the inspection should help flag issues that deserve closer review.

Doors, windows, walls, and floors

Inspectors often look at operation, fit, and visible condition in these areas. Sticking doors, damaged trim, uneven floors, or moisture staining can all be useful clues.

Electrical and plumbing

A standard inspection usually includes a visual review of accessible electrical components and plumbing fixtures. This may include the panel, outlets, visible pipes, water pressure, drainage, and signs of leaks.

Heating, cooling, and water heater

Major systems such as HVAC equipment and the water heater are commonly part of the inspection. Buyers should expect a general review of visible condition and basic operation.

Garages, basements, and crawl spaces

These areas often reveal moisture, cracking, ventilation issues, or maintenance concerns that may not be visible elsewhere.

Know when a specialist may be needed

Sometimes a general inspection points to something that needs a closer look. Roofing concerns, electrical questions, structural movement, or possible pest issues may call for a specialist. That does not always mean the deal is in trouble. It means you need clearer information before deciding how to move forward.

Inspection is a tool, not a guarantee

A home inspection is valuable, but it is not a promise that every issue will be found. Some concerns are hidden behind walls, under flooring, or outside the scope of a general inspection.

Still, a solid inspection gives buyers important information. It helps them understand the home better, plan for future maintenance, and decide whether any findings require more evaluation before closing.

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