A buyer\'s guide to what a Irving home inspection covers, what it costs, and the North Texas issues worth watching for.
Buying or selling a home in Irving? Knowing how a home inspection works helps you make a confident, well-informed decision. Irving is a centrally located city spanning older established neighborhoods and the master-planned Las Colinas district, so the homes here can present a wide range of conditions, from foundation movement on expansive clay soil to roofs worn by North Texas hail and heat.
Irving sits in Dallas County. Irving ranges from 1960s and 1970s homes in its older central neighborhoods to the 1980s-and-newer development of Las Colinas and Valley Ranch.
Neighborhoods and communities where buyers commonly request inspections include Las Colinas, Valley Ranch, Hackberry Creek, University Hills, and Plymouth Park. Older central Irving homes often have aging roofs, HVAC, and cast-iron or galvanized plumbing, while Las Colinas and Valley Ranch homes are newer but still benefit from a close look at roofs and foundations on North Texas clay.
A standard inspection is a thorough visual evaluation of the home\'s major systems and components, typically including:
The inspector documents findings in a written report with photos, so you can prioritize repairs and negotiate during your Texas option period. For a full walkthrough, see what a home inspection covers in DFW.
Local conditions shape what an inspector pays closest attention to here:
Most single-family inspections in the Irving area run a few hundred dollars depending on size, age, and any add-on services. Learn more in our DFW inspection cost guide. When you are ready, you can schedule a home inspection with Buffalo Property Inspections, a local TREC-licensed company serving Irving.
A TREC-licensed company serving all of Dallas-Fort Worth, with thorough, same-day digital reports you can act on inside your option period.