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Sample Reports

See exactly what you'll receive.

Photo-rich, organized by severity, and delivered the same day. Download a real anonymized report or watch a 2-minute walkthrough.

Real Report · Anonymized

Download a sample we actually delivered.

This is a real inspection report from a recent transaction — with property address, owner names, and any identifying details removed. Same format you'll receive after your inspection.

Download Sample Report (PDF) Watch 2-min Walkthrough

PDF · approximately 12MB · 60-80 pages typical

Inspection Report
SAMPLE
Roof — Damaged FlashingSEC 4.2
Electrical — Sub-panelSEC 5.1
HVAC — FurnaceSEC 6.3
Plumbing — Main LineSEC 7.4
FoundationSEC 2.1
Crawlspace — MoistureSEC 3.6
Attic — InsulationSEC 8.2
Action neededMonitorOK
What's In It

Every report includes these sections.

// 01

Executive Summary

One-page overview of the most important findings, color-coded by severity. Read this first — it's everything you need for an initial response.

// 02

Detailed System Reports

Every inspected system documented with photos, descriptions, and severity tags. Roof, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, structure, exterior, interior, and more.

// 03

Thermal & Drone Imagery

FLIR thermal scans flagging temperature anomalies. Drone roof imagery with annotated findings. Visual evidence you can reference and share.

// 04

Action Priority List

Findings prioritized by urgency: Action Needed (fix soon), Monitor (track over time), and OK (functioning as expected). Clear next steps for each.

// 05

Reference Information

System ages where determinable, manufacturer info on major equipment, and notes on items that may not be defective today but will need attention soon.

// 06

Photographs

200-400+ photos in a typical report. Every flagged finding is documented visually. You'll be able to see exactly what we saw.

Honest Expectations

What an inspection report is and isn't.

Inspections are visual and non-destructive. Here's what the report covers — and what it doesn't.

What it is

  • A snapshot of the home's visible condition on inspection day
  • A guide to what's working, what's wearing, and what needs attention
  • Documentation you can use during inspection-period negotiation
  • An evaluation by InterNACHI standards of practice
  • A starting point for further specialist evaluations if needed

What it isn't

  • A guarantee of future system performance or longevity
  • A code-compliance review (we note safety concerns but aren't code officials)
  • A destructive evaluation — we don't open walls or remove finishes
  • A specialty engineering, structural, or environmental analysis
  • A property valuation or appraisal