How to Read a Home Inspection Report (Without Panicking)
The first time you open a home inspection report it can read like a list of disasters. Forty, fifty, sometimes a hundred findings. Take a breath: a long report is normal, even for a well-maintained home. The skill is knowing how to separate the cosmetic notes from the items that genuinely change your decision.
The anatomy of a report
Most modern reports share a common structure:
- Summary. The headline page — usually the most important defects pulled to the top. Read this first.
- System-by-system sections. Roof, exterior, structure, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, interior, insulation/ventilation, and appliances, each with photos.
- Findings. Individual observations, typically with a description, a photo, a location, and a recommended action.
Understanding severity
Inspectors classify findings so you can triage them. Labels vary by company, but they generally map to:
- Safety / immediate — hazards that should be addressed now (exposed wiring, gas leaks, missing railings).
- Major / significant — costly or system-level issues (aging roof, failing HVAC, foundation movement).
- Minor / maintenance — routine upkeep and small fixes.
- Monitor / informational — note it and keep an eye on it.
In an InspectAI report each finding carries a category, a severity, and a confidence level from the AI photo analysis, alongside the inspector's own notes — so you can see both what was observed and how it was rated.
The five questions to ask of every finding
- Is it a safety issue?
- Is it structural or system-level (expensive), or cosmetic (cheap)?
- Is it active (a leak now) or potential (could leak)?
- What's the likely cost to address it?
- Does it need a specialist to evaluate further?
What to do with what you find
Group the findings. Safety and major items are your negotiation list — you can request repairs, a credit, or a price reduction. Minor and maintenance items are your to-do list for after you move in. "Recommend further evaluation by a licensed [electrician / structural engineer]" is not a scare tactic; it means the issue is outside the scope of a general visual inspection and deserves a specialist's eye.
Use the report as a roadmap
Long after closing, a good report is a maintenance manual for your house. Reports you receive from an InspectAI inspector are shareable web links that stay live, so you can revisit them — and forward the relevant sections to a contractor — without digging through email attachments.
FAQ
How many findings is "too many"?
There's no magic number. A 100-item report full of maintenance notes can be less concerning than a 12-item report with three structural findings. Read for severity, not volume.
Should I attend the inspection?
If you can, yes. Walking the home with the inspector turns a static document into a guided tour, and you'll understand the report far better afterward.
What if I don't understand a finding?
Ask the inspector. A reputable inspector will happily explain any item in the report. For a head start on the language, see our first-time buyer's checklist.
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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