How to Write a Professional Home Inspection Report
Learn how to write clear, property-specific home inspection findings using accurate locations, useful photographs, understandable implications and practical recommendations.
Several shingles were cracked and displaced above the rear bedroom. Repairs are recommended to reduce the potential for moisture intrusion.
A Good Report Explains What the Client Needs to Know
The report should identify the observed condition, explain why it matters and provide a reasonable next step. The objective is not to impress the client with technical language but to communicate clearly and accurately.
The Five Parts of a Clear Home Inspection Finding
A complete finding should help the client understand exactly what was observed, where it is located and what should happen next.
Component
Identify the system or component being reported, such as the roof covering, electrical panel, water heater or HVAC system.
Location
State where the condition was observed, including the room, elevation, floor, attic area or exterior side.
Condition
Describe the visible condition accurately without guessing, exaggerating or making an unsupported diagnosis.
Implication
Explain the potential consequence, such as moisture intrusion, reduced performance, further deterioration or a safety concern.
Recommendation
Provide a reasonable next step, including repair, further evaluation, monitoring or correction by a qualified professional.
Write About the Home You Actually Inspected
Templates improve efficiency, but every finding must be reviewed and adjusted to reflect the actual component, condition, location and significance.
The condition was observed on the rear roof slope near the plumbing vent penetration.
The damaged shingles no longer appeared to provide consistent coverage around the affected area.
Continued exposure may contribute to deterioration of the roof decking or interior finishes.
The affected shingles and surrounding roof area should be evaluated and repaired as appropriate.
Replace Vague Wording with Useful Information
Generic statements create confusion and make it difficult for the client to identify the condition or understand its importance.
Weak Report Wording
- The roof component is not identified.
- The location is not provided.
- The visible condition is unclear.
- The potential consequence is not explained.
- The recommendation lacks useful direction.
Professional Report Wording
- The component is clearly identified.
- The exact location is included.
- The observed condition is explained.
- The implication is stated carefully.
- The recommendation provides a practical next step.
Use Photos That Help the Client Understand the Finding
Report photographs should support the written description, identify the location and clearly show the reported condition.
Show the Overall Location
Include a wider photo when necessary so the client can identify where the condition is located within the home.
Show the Deficiency Clearly
Use a closer photo to show the crack, leak, corrosion, improper connection or other reported condition.
Add an Annotation When Useful
An arrow or circle may help identify a small component, but annotations should not hide the surrounding condition.
Remove Unnecessary Photos
Avoid multiple near-identical photographs that make the report longer without improving the client’s understanding.
Use Classifications Consistently and Carefully
Classifications should help the client prioritize findings. Avoid making every issue appear urgent or using classifications that do not match the observed condition.
Maintenance or Minor Concern
A condition requiring routine maintenance, adjustment or minor repair that does not appear urgent.
Example: Loose door hardware, deteriorated sealant or a damaged window screen.Repair Recommended
A visible defect, deterioration or improper installation that should be corrected by an appropriate professional.
Example: Leaking plumbing connection, damaged roof covering or disconnected HVAC duct.Safety or Significant Concern
A condition presenting a potential safety hazard, substantial failure or significant risk requiring timely attention.
Example: Exposed energized wiring, unstable stairs or significant structural movement.Attic Access Restricted
The attic area above the garage was not entered because the access opening was blocked by stored belongings.
Crawlspace Clearance Limited
Portions of the crawlspace could not be accessed because the clearance was insufficient for safe entry.
Electrical Panel Not Opened
The panel cover was not removed because stored materials prevented safe access to the electrical panel.
HVAC System Not Operated
The cooling system was not operated because the outdoor temperature was below the manufacturer’s recommended operating range.
Use Terms Familiar to Clients in the United States
Consistent American terminology improves readability and helps homebuyers understand the systems described in the report.
Attic
Use attic when describing the accessible space below the roof.
Crawlspace
Use crawlspace for the accessible area beneath a raised floor.
Receptacle
Use receptacle or outlet when describing electrical connection points.
Electrical Panel
Use electrical panel, service panel or distribution panel.
Water Heater
Use water heater when reporting the domestic water-heating appliance.
HVAC System
Use HVAC when referring collectively to heating and cooling equipment.
Deficiency
Deficiency is commonly used for a reported condition requiring attention.
Homebuyer
Use homebuyer where appropriate when explaining report implications.
Review Every Home Inspection Report Before Delivery
A short quality-control review can identify missing findings, incorrect client details, unclear photos and template wording that does not match the inspected home.
Confirm Client and Property Details
Check names, property address, inspection date and report type.
Check All Selected Systems
Confirm that roofing, exterior, structure, electrical, plumbing, HVAC and interior sections are complete.
Review Finding Locations
Ensure every reported condition includes a clear and accurate location.
Review Photos and Captions
Confirm that images support the finding and show the correct condition.
Check Recommendations
Make sure recommendations are reasonable and match the reported deficiency.
Review Limitations
Confirm inaccessible areas and system limitations are clearly documented.
Remove Template Errors
Delete wording relating to components that were not present at the home.
Review the Final PDF
Check page layout, spacing, headings and photograph presentation before sending.
Home Inspection Report Writing
General guidance for home inspectors preparing professional reports in the United States.
What should a home inspection finding include?
Should every home inspection finding include a photograph?
Can home inspectors use saved report comments?
How should a home inspector describe a possible concealed problem?
Should minor maintenance items be included in the report?
Why should the final PDF be reviewed before delivery?
Improve Your Home Inspection Business
Continue with USA-focused training covering InspectOne, complaint management, marketing and pricing.
Home Inspection Software Training
Learn how to create inspections, add deficiencies and photos, manage templates and generate professional reports.
View InspectOne training →Handle Home Inspection Complaints
Learn how to preserve records, review complaints and respond to home inspection clients professionally.
Learn complaint management →Home Inspector Marketing and Pricing
Establish sustainable inspection fees and attract clients who value professional reporting.
Explore marketing and pricing →Create Clearer Home Inspection Reports with InspectOne
Organize findings, photographs, recommendations and inspection limitations through one streamlined home inspection reporting platform.
