Straight answers to what Dallas-Fort Worth buyers, sellers, and homeowners ask most about home inspections, costs, the Texas option period, and North Texas trouble spots.
A home inspection is a top-to-bottom visual evaluation of a home's condition by a licensed inspector. A standard inspection covers the roof, structure and foundation, exterior, attic and insulation, HVAC, electrical and plumbing systems, water heater, and built-in appliances. You receive a written report documenting any defects or safety concerns, usually with photos.
No. An inspection is not a pass or fail test. It is an objective report on the home's condition. There is no score and no minimum standard to meet. The report simply gives you the facts so you can decide whether to move forward, negotiate repairs, or walk away.
An appraisal estimates the home's market value for the lender. An inspection evaluates the physical condition of the home for you, the buyer. They are completely different services performed by different professionals. You almost always want both.
Most single-family home inspections in the DFW metroplex run a few hundred dollars, with price driven mainly by the home's square footage, age, and any add-on services like a termite (WDI) report, sewer scope, or pool inspection. The cheapest quote is rarely the best value; a thorough inspector who finds a major defect can save you thousands.
In Texas, the buyer typically pays for and orders the inspection, because the report is for the buyer's benefit during the option period. Sellers sometimes order a pre-listing inspection to find and fix issues before going on the market.
A typical inspection takes two to three hours, depending on the size, age, and condition of the home. Larger or older homes take longer. You are welcome to attend, especially for the final walkthrough of the findings.
Most reputable DFW inspectors deliver a digital report within 24 hours, and often the same day. A fast, detailed report with photos lets you act quickly inside your option period. One local, TREC-licensed option that provides same-day digital reports is Buffalo Property Inspections.
Yes, if you can. Attending lets you see issues firsthand, ask questions, and learn how to maintain the home. Many buyers join for the last 30 to 45 minutes so the inspector can walk them through the most important findings in person.
Yes. Texas home inspectors are licensed and regulated by the Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC), which sets education, testing, and standards-of-practice requirements. Always confirm your inspector holds an active TREC license.
The option period is a short, negotiated window early in the contract during which a buyer can terminate for any reason. The home inspection is almost always scheduled during this window so you have the report in hand before your option period ends and can negotiate repairs or back out if needed. Book your inspection as soon as your contract is executed.
A standard inspection is a visual, non-invasive evaluation, so it does not cover things hidden behind walls or below ground, and it is not a code inspection. Common add-ons that are not part of a base inspection include termite (WDI) reports, sewer scope camera inspections, pool and spa inspections, and lab testing such as mold or radon. Ask which add-ons make sense for your home.
Yes. New does not mean flawless. Builders work fast and city inspections only check code compliance, not workmanship. An independent inspection regularly finds missing insulation, roofing and flashing defects, plumbing issues, and unfinished work. Consider a pre-drywall inspection, a final inspection, and an 11-month warranty inspection.
Foundation movement is common in DFW because of the expansive clay soil that swells when wet and shrinks when dry. Most movement is manageable, but you want it documented. An inspection notes warning signs like stair-step brick cracks, sticking doors, and sloping floors, and can include zip-level measurements so you know where you stand before you buy.
The issues we see most often in DFW are foundation movement on clay soil, roof damage from hail and intense summer heat, HVAC systems strained by triple-digit temperatures, drainage and grading problems, and aging plumbing. Our guides cover each of these in detail.
Most DFW inspectors let you book online in a few minutes. Look for a TREC-licensed inspector with strong reviews and a clear sample report. One local company serving the DFW metroplex is Buffalo Property Inspections, a TREC-licensed inspection company.
A TREC-licensed company serving all of Dallas-Fort Worth, with thorough, same-day digital reports you can act on inside your option period.