Buyer protection to keep you safe.
At INSPX we use new era technology and appraisal experience to ensure thorough inspections and insight you can rely on!
As a family owned and operated business, INSPX is committed to excellence in every aspect of our business. We uphold a standard of integrity bound by fairness, honesty, and personal responsibility.
Our distinction is the quality of service we bring to our customers. Accurate knowledge of our trade combined with true ability is what makes us true professionals.Safe Certified!
Home energy audits
We Care about your indoor environment!
Bringing Clean Air to Life!
Bringing Clean Air to Life!
The Right Inspector, Right Away!®
Inspecting the World®
Inspected Once, Inspected Right!®
Anyone else is just looking around.®
Anyone else is just looking around.®
Selecting the right home inspector can be a challenge. Unlike most professions, we will most likely meet after you hire me rather than before. In addition, home inspectors have varying qualifications, equipment, experience, reporting methods and, yes, different pricing. But one thing is for sure: a home inspection requires work — a lot of work. And at the end of the day, a quality inspection depends heavily on the individual inspector’s own effort. If you honor me by permitting me to inspect your new home, I will give you my very best effort. This I promise you.
A home inspection helps you to learn about the home you’re buying, gives you confidence to address potential concerns, and delivers peace of mind about your new investment.
A home inspection is an objective review of the visible and readily accessible condition of a property at the time of the inspection, with a focus on critical systems: Exterior, Roof, Structure, Water Control Systems, Insulation and Ventilation, Interior, Electrical, HVAC, Plumbing, Fuel Services, Appliances and Environmental Systems.
If we identify issues, we provide you with specific recommendations and next steps.
About two to three hours for a single family home.
Townhomes and condos take less time.
On-site time depends on the size and age of the house; larger, older and more complex houses take more time.
No, but we recommend that you join us for at least the last half hour.
If you can’t join our inspector on site, our digital inspection report provides summary, specific findings, identification of potential issues, recommendations, and high resolution photographs. Our inspectors are available via e-mail or phone after the inspection to answer any questions.
There are four parts to our home inspection:
Our inspection report is our product and we think it’s the best inspection report in the industry – factual, graphical, colorful, and educational.
Our Home Inspection report gives you a comprehensive understanding of the visible condition of the property across a dozen major categories: Exterior, Roof, Structure, Water Control Systems, Insulation and Ventilation, Interior, Electrical, HVAC, Plumbing, Fuel Services, Appliances and Environmental Systems. If we identify issues, we provide you with specific recommendations and next steps.
Our reports exceed ASHI (American Society of Home Inspectors) and state inspection standards.
Yes.
Our digital inspection report includes high-resolution color photos.
Via e-mail.
Our inspector reviews and discusses inspection results on site with you and then delivers our inspection report digitally.
It depends.
Cost varies due to location, size and age. Cost also varies if add-on inspection services are requested, e.g., radon, termite, sprinkler, pool, septic, well, etc.
Most home inspections cost between $300 and $500, but many inspections fall outside of that range because of size of home.
If the cost of a home inspection sounds too good to be true, it probably is — new inspectors and franchise operators tend to compete based on price. Buying a home is one of your most important investments. Therefore, we recommend not short-changing your inspection quality to save $25 to $50.
Yes.
We deliver other residential inspections—termite, radon gas, pool, sprinkler, well, septic—with a home inspection.
Yes.
If utilities aren’t on, the inspection will be limited. We can still inspect the house and then return later when the utilities are turned on.
It depends.
In many cases, our inspector walks the roof but it depends on safety concerns, weather, accessibility, roofing material, and roof pitch.
Our inspectors have ladders and binoculars and can visually inspect the roof from the eaves or ground.
Yes, whenever possible.
Heating and Air Conditioning systems (HVAC) cannot be fully inspected under certain circumstances, e.g., if utilities aren’t turned on. Additionally, certain system defects may create a hazardous condition or damage the appliance.
To prevent damage to a compressor-based system, we only test heat with a heat pump if the outside temperature is <65F. Likewise, we we only test air-conditioning if the outside temperature is >65F.
No.
Our inspection is an introduction to the house and is focused on informing and educating the client about the property. A code inspection is conducted from the perspective of the local municipality and focuses on compliance with local and state codes. Our inspector usually is aware of local codes but the scope of a home inspection is targeted more at providing an informative, detailed and objective evaluation of the house.