Buying a home is probably the biggest purchase you will ever make. So before you sign, you want to know what you are really getting. That is the whole point of a full inspection. Good home inspectors walk the entire property, top to bottom, checking the systems that keep a house safe and standing. They look at the structure, the roof, the plumbing, the wiring, and much more, then write it all up.
Knowing their checklist helps you follow along and ask better questions. Here is what a thorough inspection covers, room by room and system by system. Even a little knowledge here goes a long way.
Structural Areas Inspectors Should Evaluate
Home inspectors start with the bones of the house. The structure is the most important thing they confirm. Everything else matters less if the frame is unsound.
Foundation and Settlement
They check the foundation for cracks, movement, and signs of settling that could point to bigger problems. Inspectors note the size, pattern, and direction of any cracks.
Floors, Walls, and Ceilings
Sagging floors, bowed walls, or cracked ceilings can all signal structural stress. They look for uneven floors, sticking doors, and gaps that widen over time.
Stairs and Railings
Stairways and railings are tested for stability and safe, code-level spacing. Loose handrails and uneven steps are common safety flags. Structural problems are the priciest to fix, so this is where inspectors slow down.
Exterior and Grounds
Next comes everything outside the walls. The exterior protects the home and steers water away from it. Most water damage starts with problems you can see from the yard.
Inspectors look closely at:
- Siding, trim, and exterior paint for damage or rot
- Grading and drainage that should slope away from the house
- Driveways, walkways, porches, and decks for cracks or instability
- Exterior doors and windows for seals and smooth operation
- Foundation walls and visible cracks from the outside
- Trees and landscaping that touch the structure
Poor grading is a leading cause of wet basements, so it gets real scrutiny.
Roof and Attic
The roof is a major cost, so it gets close attention. The attic reveals how well the roof and insulation are holding up. Failing roofs can mean costly repairs soon after move-in.
Up top, the checklist covers:
- Roof covering, shingles, and flashing for wear or leaks
- Gutters and downspouts for flow and secure mounting
- Attic insulation, ventilation, and vents
- Water stains or damage that hint at past leaks
- Chimney, skylights, and any roof penetrations
- Soffits, fascia, and roofline for sagging
Inspectors note the roof’s age and rough remaining life where they can. That estimate helps you plan for a future replacement.
Plumbing, Electrical, and HVAC Systems
These three systems keep a home livable. As a result, inspectors give each one a careful, separate look. Repairs here are often the most expensive in the whole house.
Plumbing
They check pipes, fixtures, water pressure, and drain speed. This means running taps, flushing toilets, and looking for leaks, plus testing the water heater and shutoff valves. Sewer lines are not part of a standard visual inspection, but a sewer scope can be added to check for blockages, root intrusion, or pipe damage that would not show up otherwise.
Electrical
The panel, breakers, outlets, switches, and grounding are all reviewed. Safety devices like GFCI and AFCI protection are tested where present. Outdated panels and amateur wiring are flagged as safety concerns.
Heating and Cooling
Heating, cooling, ducts, vents, and fans are run and observed. Inspectors note airflow, filtration, and the age or condition of the equipment. Older furnaces or AC units can be a major upcoming cost.
Together, these systems account for most big repair bills, so nothing is rushed.
Interior Conditions
Inside, the focus shifts to everyday livability and hidden moisture. Small clues here often reveal larger issues. Even a small ceiling stain can point to a hidden roof or pipe leak.
Inspectors walk every room and check:
- Walls, ceilings, and floors for cracks, stains, or damage
- Windows and doors that should open, close, and seal
- Stairs, railings, and handrails for safety
- Signs of moisture, mold, or past water intrusion
- Outlets, light switches, and built-in fixtures
Moisture and mold are two of the most important things to catch early. Where staining or discoloration suggests a moisture problem, a dedicated mold inspection can go further, using air sampling, moisture meters, and thermal imaging to confirm whether mold is present and where it has spread.
Garage, Basement, and Crawl Spaces
These spaces hide some of the most telling problems. Inspectors go where most buyers never look. Hidden damage down here can be the costliest of all.
Down low and out of sight, they assess:
- Structural issues in beams, posts, and slabs
- Moisture, standing water, and poor drainage
- Insulation, ventilation, and safe access
- Garage doors, openers, and fire safety features
- Signs of pests, rot, or wood damage
- Firewall and self-closing door to the living space
Thermal imaging is particularly useful in crawl spaces and basements, where hidden moisture behind walls or under floors is easy to miss visually but shows up clearly with an infrared camera. Crawl spaces and basements deserve a careful, hands-on look.
What a Home Inspection Report Should Include
A good home inspection report should be easy to understand, well organized, and supported by photos.
Key Information Should Include:
- Major defects and safety hazards.
- Repairs or specialist evaluations needed.
- What was inspected and what was excluded.
- Clear photos documenting the findings.
Why the Report Format Matters
A same-day digital report gives you time to review the findings before escrow deadlines. Clear prioritization also makes it easier to identify urgent issues instead of sorting through a long list of equally ranked observations.
What Home Inspections Do Not Cover
Full inspections are broad, but they have limits. Knowing the gaps helps you plan extra checks. Ask your inspector what falls outside their scope.
Standard inspections usually exclude:
- Anything hidden behind walls or buried underground.
- Specialized tests like sewer scope or radon, unless added.
- Pools, spas, and some outbuildings.
- Code enforcement or appraisal-style valuation.
- Cosmetic wear that does not affect function.
- Anything requiring tools to dismantle or open.
Since radon is odorless and invisible, it will never show up on a standard visual inspection. The only way to measure it is with a separate radon test, and it is worth adding whenever the property has a basement or ground-level living space. For all other excluded items, a specialist or an added service fills the gap.
Why This Checklist Matters
A home inspection checklist does more than list what an inspector examines. It helps you understand the process and make informed decisions.
You Ask Better Questions
- Follow the inspection with confidence.
- Understand what the inspector is checking.
- Read the final report without confusion.
You Make Better Decisions
Knowing the checklist helps you spot major issues early, estimate repair costs, and decide when to bring in specialists. Buyer and seller verification walkthroughs also let you see findings in person instead of only reading about them later.
Bottom Line
Full inspections cover the whole house, from foundation to roof, so you buy with eyes wide open. The more you know going in, the fewer surprises later. Even a few hours now can save you thousands later.
When you want that kind of thorough look, Greenhorn Breckenridge sends certified home inspectors who check every system on this list. They deliver a same-day, photo-rich report written in plain language. In addition, every inspection includes free thermal imaging to catch hidden moisture and heat loss.
Book with them and walk into your purchase knowing exactly what you are buying.
