Home Inspection vs. Appraisal: What's the Difference?
Two professionals visit the home before you close, both write a report, and both cost a few hundred dollars — so it's easy to assume the home inspection and the appraisal are the same thing. They're not. They answer different questions for different people, and in most purchases you'll encounter both.
The one-sentence difference
An inspection tells you about the home's condition. An appraisal tells the lender about the home's value.
The home inspection
- Who orders it: the buyer (optional, but strongly recommended).
- Who it's for: the buyer.
- What it covers: a detailed, non-invasive look at the roof, structure, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and more — the physical condition of the home.
- The deliverable: a detailed report listing defects by severity, with photos.
- What it affects: your decision to proceed, and your negotiation over repairs or credits.
The appraisal
- Who orders it: the lender (usually required for a mortgage).
- Who it's for: the lender.
- What it covers: the home's market value, primarily by comparing it to recent sales of similar nearby homes ("comps").
- The deliverable: an appraised value figure.
- What it affects: how much the lender will lend. If the appraisal comes in below the purchase price, the loan may not cover the gap.
Side by side
| Inspection | Appraisal | |
|---|---|---|
| Question answered | What condition is it in? | What is it worth? |
| Ordered by | Buyer | Lender |
| Required? | Optional (recommended) | Usually required for a mortgage |
| Focus | Defects & systems | Market value vs. comps |
| Helps you | Negotiate & decide | Secure financing |
Do you need both?
If you're financing the purchase, the lender will almost always require an appraisal — you don't get a choice. The inspection is technically optional, but skipping it means buying a home with no independent assessment of its condition. They protect you in different ways: the appraisal keeps you from overpaying on paper; the inspection keeps you from inheriting expensive surprises. For what an inspection actually costs, see our 2026 cost guide.
FAQ
Does the appraiser check the condition like an inspector?
Only at a high level. An appraiser notes obvious condition issues that affect value but does not perform the detailed systems check an inspector does.
Which comes first?
The inspection usually happens first, during the buyer's due-diligence window, so you can act on the findings. The appraisal is ordered by the lender as the loan progresses.
What if the appraisal is lower than my offer?
You can renegotiate the price, pay the difference in cash, dispute the appraisal, or walk away if your contract allows. Talk to your agent and lender about options.
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