By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Home Inspection Intake Forms: What Every Inspector Needs to Capture Before the Walk-Through

A home inspector who pulls up to a property without knowing the year it was built, whether it has a crawl space or a slab, or that the listing agent expects a 4-point insurance inspection on top of the general is going to waste time on-site, miss scope items, and look unprepared in front of a buyer who is about to make the largest purchase of their life. The inspection itself is the product. The intake is what determines whether that product is delivered efficiently and completely.

Too many inspection companies collect a name, an address, and a date. That is scheduling, not intake. A real home inspection intake form captures everything the inspector needs to prepare the right equipment, allocate the right amount of time, quote ancillary services accurately, and walk onto the property knowing exactly what they are dealing with. Here is what that form should include.

Client and property information: the foundation of every inspection file

Home inspections sit at the intersection of multiple parties with different interests. The buyer, the buyer's agent, the listing agent, and sometimes the seller are all involved. Your intake form needs to capture the full picture, not just a phone number and a closing date.

Client details. Full name, phone number, email address, and mailing address. Note whether the client is the buyer, the seller, or a third party such as a relocation company. If the client is acting through an entity — an LLC purchasing an investment property, for instance — capture the company name as well. The report and the pre-inspection agreement are going to reference this party, so getting the name right at intake matters.

Real estate agents. Capture both the buyer's agent and the listing agent — name, brokerage, phone, and email for each. The buyer's agent is typically your point of contact for scheduling and access, but the listing agent controls the lockbox, the alarm code, and the showing instructions. You need both.

Property address and type. Full address including unit number if applicable. Property type drives inspection scope and time allocation: a single-family detached home, a multi-family duplex, a condominium, a townhouse, and a manufactured or mobile home all present different structural systems, different access challenges, and different Standards of Practice considerations. A condo inspection typically excludes the roof, exterior walls, and common-area systems because those are the HOA's responsibility. A manufactured home requires HUD-specific structural evaluation. Your form should present these as clear selections.

Year built. This is not a nice-to-have — it is one of the most critical fields on the form. The year built tells the inspector what era-specific hazards to look for before they set foot in the house. A 1972 home means aluminum wiring, potential asbestos, and lead paint. A 1985 home means polybutylene plumbing. A 2005 home means possible Chinese drywall. We will cover era-specific concerns in detail below, but the intake form is where this data enters the file.

Square footage, stories, and foundation. Capture both livable square footage and total square footage (including unfinished basement, garage, and attic). Number of stories determines ladder and roof-access requirements. Foundation type — slab-on-grade, crawl space, full basement, or pier-and-beam — dictates what structural and moisture evaluation the inspector will perform and what equipment they need to bring. A crawl space inspection requires a moisture meter, coveralls, knee pads, and a high-powered flashlight. A slab inspection does not.

Occupancy status and access. Is the property occupied, vacant, or furnished but unoccupied (staged)? Occupied homes present scheduling constraints — personal belongings limit access to certain areas, and the inspector must work around the homeowner's presence. Vacant properties may have utilities shut off, which means HVAC and plumbing systems cannot be fully tested.

Access details should include: lockbox code, key location, whether the inspector must meet the listing agent on-site, gate or community access codes, and alarm information including the disarm code and the monitoring company's phone number. A crew that triggers an alarm because the lockbox code was captured but the alarm code was not is a preventable operational failure.

Inspection date, time, and closing date. The closing date drives urgency. If closing is in five days and the buyer needs the report to negotiate repairs, the inspector needs to know that when scheduling, not when delivering the report. Capture the closing date at intake so your office can flag tight turnaround files and prioritize report delivery accordingly.

Inspection type: general, specialty, and insurance-required

Home inspection is not a single service. It is a family of related services, and the scope, pricing, equipment, and time allocation differ substantially among them. Your intake form should present clear categories:

Systems to inspect: what the scope covers

The general home inspection scope follows Standards of Practice published by ASHI, InterNACHI, or your state licensing board. Your intake form should list the major systems so the client understands what they are paying for — and so the inspector can note any systems that are inaccessible or excluded:

Era-specific concerns: what the year built tells you

Experienced inspectors know that the year a home was built is a roadmap to the hazards they are likely to find. Your intake form should capture the year built early, and your internal processes should flag era-specific issues for the inspector to prioritize:

Report delivery and liability terms

The inspection report is the deliverable. Your intake form should establish the terms around it so neither you nor the client is surprised after the inspection:

Standards of Practice. Note which standards govern the inspection — ASHI Standard of Practice, InterNACHI Standards of Practice, or your state's specific standard if the state has adopted one. This sets the baseline for what is and is not included in the scope. Clients who understand that a home inspection is a visual, non-invasive evaluation of readily accessible systems — not a code compliance audit or a guarantee that nothing is wrong — are clients who have realistic expectations.

Scope limitations. Your intake should clearly note what is NOT included in a general home inspection: concealed conditions behind walls, under floors, or above ceilings; code compliance evaluation; environmental testing (unless specifically ordered as an add-on); engineering analysis; and systems that are shut down, winterized, or otherwise not operational at the time of inspection. The real estate transaction context requires these limitations to match what the real estate intake process itself captures — both sides of the deal need aligned expectations about what the inspection covers.

Pre-inspection agreement. Most inspection companies require a signed pre-inspection agreement before the inspection begins. This agreement typically includes limitation of liability (usually capped at the inspection fee), scope of the inspection, arbitration or mediation clauses, and the client's acknowledgment that the inspection is not a warranty or guarantee. Capturing the client's agreement to these terms at intake — before the inspector arrives — eliminates the awkward scenario of presenting legal documents at the property while the buyer's agent is checking their watch.

E&O insurance. Errors and omissions insurance protects the inspector if they miss a defect that later causes damage. Your intake should disclose that you carry E&O coverage and note your policy limits. This is both a professional credibility signal and a practical necessity — in many states, E&O insurance is required for licensure.

Report delivery. State the expected timeline (same-day, 24 hours, 48 hours), the format (PDF with photos, web-based interactive report, paper), and the number of photos included. Clients and their agents increasingly expect same-day delivery with extensive photo documentation. If your standard is 24-hour turnaround, the intake is where you set that expectation, not in a follow-up email after the buyer's agent has already called twice.

Re-inspection. If the buyer negotiates repairs based on the inspection report, a re-inspection verifies that the work was completed. This is a separate, paid service. Your intake should note the re-inspection fee and what it covers so the client is not surprised when they call back three weeks later and learn it is an additional charge.

Pricing and ancillary services

Home inspection pricing is more complex than a single flat fee because the ancillary services — radon, mold, WDO, pool — each carry their own price and their own scope. Your intake form should present the pricing structure clearly:

Building trust from the first interaction

A home inspector's reputation is built one report at a time, but the relationship starts before the inspection — it starts at intake. When a buyer or their agent receives an intake form that asks about the foundation type, the year built, the alarm code, and whether they want radon bundled with the general, they know they are working with someone who has inspected enough homes to ask the right questions. That thoroughness at the front end translates directly into confidence in the report at the back end.

If you are building documentation across a multi-trade operation, the Trade Services Bundle includes home inspection alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.

Home inspection intake forms — $12.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Property details, inspection type, systems checklist, era-specific hazards, report and liability terms, ancillary service pricing, and access logistics. Built for home inspection companies.

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