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How to Read a Home Inspection Report (For Buyers Who Have No Idea What to Do With It)
You just received your home inspection report. It's 47 pages long. It has hundreds of line items, dozens of photos, and rating categories like "Safety Concern," "Repair or Replace," and "Recommend Monitoring." It was emailed to you while you're at work, you have 5 days to make decisions about your offer, and you've never owned a home before.
Here's how to actually read it.
Start with the Summary
Every well-structured inspection report has a summary section at the beginning that collects the most significant findings. Start here, not on page 1. The summary is where the inspector tells you what they think is most important. If you do nothing else, read the full summary carefully.
The summary is organized by severity. Different inspectors use different terminology, but the tiers usually look like this from most to least urgent:
Safety hazard: Items that pose immediate risk to occupants. Electrical panels with documented safety issues, gas line leaks, structural failures. These require professional attention before or immediately after closing.
Repair or replace: The item has failed or is failing and needs professional remediation within 1–2 years.
Repair or maintain: Functioning but with issues that will worsen if not addressed. Your 2–5 year planning horizon.
Monitor: Currently acceptable but should be watched. If these items get worse without attention, they move up in category.
Routine maintenance: Normal wear items for your regular maintenance schedule.
Understand What the Inspector Didn't Check
Home inspectors are generalists. A standard inspection is visual and non-invasive — the inspector doesn't cut into walls, move furniture, or conduct specialized tests. This matters because it means:
Inspectors often can't assess what's behind walls or under floors (hidden plumbing, buried electrical, pest damage inside wall cavities).
Specialized systems — septic systems, wells, radon levels, mold, Chinese drywall, environmental hazards — require separate specialized inspections.
Attic and crawl space inspection quality varies by the physical access available and the inspector's willingness to enter tight spaces.
When an inspection report says "recommend evaluation by a licensed specialist," that's the inspector telling you they found something outside their reliable assessment range. Always follow through on these recommendations before closing.
The Items That Require the Most Scrutiny
Not all findings deserve equal attention. These categories deserve your focused reading:
The Roof
Roof replacement is one of the most expensive single-item repairs a homeowner faces: $8,000–$25,000 depending on size, materials, and complexity. The inspection report's roof section should tell you the material type, the estimated remaining life, and any specific concerns. If the inspector estimates "2–4 years of remaining useful life," that's a budget item you need to plan for immediately.
HVAC Systems
Note the age of every system: furnace, air conditioner or heat pump, water heater. Compare these to expected lifespans. A water heater installed in 2013 (expected life: 10–12 years for a tank unit) is a replacement you'll likely face within the first few years of ownership. A furnace from 2008 with 20 years of expected life has more runway. Know what you're inheriting.
Electrical
Electrical findings range from minor (a few ungrounded outlets) to significant (an overloaded panel, aluminum wiring, or a brand-name panel with documented safety issues like Federal Pacific Stab-Lok or Zinsco). If you see "recommend evaluation by licensed electrician," follow through before closing — not after.
Foundation and Structural
Inspectors are conservative about structural findings because they're not structural engineers. A report that says "evidence of past settlement, recommend monitoring" is not necessarily alarming. One that says "horizontal cracks in basement wall, recommend evaluation by structural engineer" is — horizontal cracks in foundation walls can indicate lateral soil pressure that requires serious remediation.
Moisture
"Evidence of moisture" is the phrase that sends buyers into a spiral. The important distinction: past moisture vs. active moisture. Stains from a fixed issue are cosmetic. Ongoing moisture is a problem that needs a source identified and addressed.
Using the Report in Negotiations
You can negotiate with the seller on significant inspection findings before closing. Your options are generally:
Request repairs: The seller fixes specific items before closing.
Request a credit: The seller reduces the purchase price or provides a closing credit, and you handle the repairs after closing.
Walk away: If findings are severe enough that the home doesn't make sense at any price, the inspection period is usually your last clean exit.
Most real estate agents advise against trying to negotiate every line item — it creates friction without meaningful value. Focus negotiations on significant safety items, structural concerns, and systems that are immediately past end-of-life. Minor maintenance items are the price of homeownership, not negotiating leverage.
Using the Report After Closing
This is where almost every buyer fails. The inspection report is not just a negotiating tool — it's the closest thing to a home management manual you'll ever receive.
After closing, use the report to:
Build your maintenance calendar based on your specific systems and their ages
Prioritize the "monitor" items you need to watch over the next 1–2 years
Identify which systems will need replacement in years 3–7 of your ownership
Have an informed conversation with contractors about what they're working on
KotiCare does exactly this translation — taking your specific inspection findings and converting them into a personalized maintenance system with reminders, seasonal task lists, contractor recommendations, and ongoing guidance specific to your home’s systems and their current condition. If your agent provided KotiCare as a closing gift, you already have this running. If not, the report itself is worth revisiting every 12–18 months with fresh eyes.
Most people read the inspection report once, negotiate on it, and file it away. The homeowners who read it three or four times over the first few years of ownership — and actually act on what they find — spend less on emergency repairs and more on planned maintenance. That's the whole difference between reactive and proactive homeownership.
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