How Long Does a Home Inspection Take?
Short answer: a typical single-family home inspection takes roughly two to three hours on site. But "typical" hides a lot of variation. Here's what stretches or shortens the timeline, and when you can expect the report afterward.
What a normal inspection looks like
For an average-sized single-family home in reasonable condition, plan on about two to three hours. The inspector works methodically through the exterior and roof, then the interior systems — electrical, plumbing, HVAC — room by room, attic to crawl space, photographing as they go.
What makes it longer
- Size. Square footage is the biggest driver. A large home simply has more to look at.
- Age. Older homes accumulate more to document and more potential issues to investigate.
- Condition. A neglected home with many findings takes longer than a well-maintained one.
- Foundation type. Crawl spaces and finished basements add time; a simple slab is quicker.
- Add-ons. Radon setup, sewer scope, and similar extras add time on top of the standard inspection.
- Accessibility. Blocked attic hatches, locked panels, or cluttered rooms slow things down.
What makes it shorter
Small condos and townhomes, newer construction, and well-kept homes all inspect faster — sometimes well under two hours. Shorter isn't worse, as long as the inspector is being thorough; the home just had less to document.
Should you be there the whole time?
You don't have to attend the full inspection, but joining for at least the final walk-through is valuable. The inspector can point out concerns in person, which makes the written report far easier to understand. (See how to read the report.)
When do you get the report?
Most inspectors deliver the written report within 24 hours, often the same day. Modern tools speed this up: an InspectAI inspector's photos and LiDAR scans are analyzed and assembled into a structured, shareable web report, so the buyer and agent can open it in any browser shortly after the visit — no waiting on a PDF in the mail. That fast turnaround matters when you're working inside a tight due-diligence window.
FAQ
Is a faster inspection a worse inspection?
Not necessarily. Time tracks the size and condition of the home. A thorough inspector of a small, well-kept condo can finish quickly and still be complete.
Can I schedule add-ons the same day?
Often yes — many inspectors offer radon, sewer scope, and termite inspections alongside the main visit, which adds time but saves a second trip.
How far ahead should I book?
In a busy market, book as soon as your offer is accepted so the inspection fits inside your due-diligence window. For what it costs, see our cost guide.
Inspecting homes for a living? InspectAI turns your field photos and LiDAR room scans into a structured, shareable report your buyers and agents can read in any browser — no app required.
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