How do I become a home inspector?

Getting started in the home inspection business will always be slow and gradual, especially with today’s R/E mess. Many newcomers to this profession get very frustrated during that first year and some finally throw in the towel and return to construction work or to their previous occupation (yours being Heath Care). Selling your HI services to R/E agents before you have actual field experience is not easy, but it has been performed by nearly everyone who is an experienced home inspector today.

Instead of worrying about your lack of inspection experience, your better off telling people about your related knowledge and experience – such as contracting or whatever it was you did previously that relates to Home Inspections. Tell them about your certifications and any other professional credentials that might apply to Home Inspections. Tell them about your commitment to do excellent work. But don’t say you are a “continual learner” because that infers that you have not yet sufficiently learned about Home Inspections. And don’t ever tell them that you’re an “overachiever” because many agents are afraid of home inspectors who might “kill the deal” by being overly zealous. But when someone asks you how many inspections you’ve performed, just tell them the truth and let the chips fall as they will. Most people, however, won’t even ask if you act professional enough to make them think you’re GOOD.

R/E Agents are used to newby inspectors coming into this field all the time. At first, you may be dismissed as just another home inspector. But gradually, if you’re GOOD, you’ll get inspection orders – a few here, a few there. And if the R/E agents really like your work, they’ll call on you and refer you again, and again. And little by little, you’ll become an experienced Home Inspector.

But while you’re gaining that valuable experience, you’ll be missing property defects that would be discovered by a more experienced Home Inspector. These undisclosed conditions will result in callbacks, monetary claims and possibly a major lawsuit. So be sure to carry Errors-and-Omissions insurance, and do all you can to continually advance your HI education. The more you know and the more you practice, the more effectively you’ll serve your customers, the more protected you’ll be from liability, and the more often you’ll be recommended to home Buyers on a continuing basis.

If you make the wise decision of attending a professional home inspection school, you will see many ads that say you can make hundreds of dollars a day as a Home Inspector. The home inspection schools always print many of these ridiculous ads and what they claim is simply not true. They paint a bright rosy picture about the HI profession and how easy it will be for you to make a ton of money virtually overnight. Bullshi+… If you believe that story, I’ll tell you another, if your gullible enough to listen.

What these HI schools and the various companies’ (selling Home Inspection courses) won’t tell you is how difficult it is to be successful in this business, especially with today’s real slow R/E market. Some National HI schools make it sound so easy to get started overnight. They simply explain how easy it would be to start doing one or two home inspections a day with little or no effort. Don’t allow then to fool ya. The HI business is like any other professional business. It takes dedication, strong finances and a lot of time to become very successful.

Many HI schools do not tell you about the massive liability side of the home inspection industry. The home inspection industry is and always will be a very high liability profession. Every single home you inspect, is a potential lawsuit for you. It doesn’t matter that you may be the most thorough home inspector in your area. Home Inspectors are sued over things that the homeowners thought they should have found whether or not you could actually see the defect or not. There’s an old saying in this business. It’s not IF you get sued, but WHEN you get sued. So if you can’t live under this sort of pressure, you’d be best off looking elsewhere for a different profession.

All it takes is a ladder, a flashlight and pickup truck…right?

Well, guess what? Here’s more bad news, and I apologize but it’s the absolute truth. Like most legitimate businesses, it takes a little more than a few simple tools. A new home inspector is going to need about $5000 worth of tools just to get started in this business. Then there is the issue of insurance. Errors & Omissions Insurance will cost a new inspector (if you can even get it) anywhere from $3,000 to $4500 per year. Then there’s General Liability Insurance that will run you anywhere from $500 to $1500 per year. In some states, you can’t even get started without this insurance.

Do you have a rainy day fund?

I hope so, because it will absolutely rain on your parade! Just like any new business, the 1st year or two will be very rough. It may take you anywhere from 6 months to 2 years to even get to the point where you’re bringing in a hefty steady income. Many Home Inspectors came into this business by doing home inspections on the side or on a part time basis. That is the exact approach I would advise any new inspector to take. Don’t quit your day job just yet!

What about the Real Estate Agents?

The schools make it sound like there’s a R/E agent behind every tree just waiting for good ole’ you. Odds are that R/E agents have their favorite Home Inspector already and they’re not likely to use a newbie Home Inspector because they do not know what to expect from you as of yet. It will take you many months up to a year or more before you’ll be getting regular referrals from your favorite real estate agents. Don’t count on them to feed your family when you first start your HI business. This industry can be very rewarding in many ways, however it’s likely to leave a sour taste in your mouth if you enter thinking that it’s a pushover to get started in this industry. I’ve seen way to many good people go broke trying to get started in the HI business because home inspection schools and trainers left them unprepared for what they were about to face in the real world.

I really wish you all the Luck in your career decision and whatever your goals may be. After hearing me tell you the real truth about this industry and you are still truely thinking of dedicating yourself to become an HI, the first thing you should do is join iNACHI](http://www.nachi.org/membership.htm) and then participate in this MB on a daily basis. You’ll be amazed at how much you can learn in a single day.[/font]

Getting started in the home inspection business will always be slow and gradual, especially with today’s R/E mess. Many newcomers to this profession get very frustrated during that first year and some finally throw in the towel and return to construction work or to their previous occupation (yours being Heath Care). Selling your HI services to R/E agents before you have actual field experience is not easy, but it has been performed by nearly everyone who is an experienced home inspector today.

Instead of worrying about your lack of inspection experience, your better off telling people about your related knowledge and experience – such as contracting or whatever it was you did previously that relates to Home Inspections. Tell them about your certifications and any other professional credentials that might apply to Home Inspections. Tell them about your commitment to do excellent work. But don’t say you are a “continual learner” because that infers that you have not yet sufficiently learned about Home Inspections. And don’t ever tell them that you’re an “overachiever” because many agents are afraid of home inspectors who might “kill the deal” by being overly zealous. But when someone asks you how many inspections you’ve performed, just tell them the truth and let the chips fall as they will. Most people, however, won’t even ask if you act professional enough to make them think you’re GOOD.

R/E Agents are used to newby inspectors coming into this field all the time. At first, you may be dismissed as just another home inspector. But gradually, if you’re GOOD, you’ll get inspection orders – a few here, a few there. And if the R/E agents really like your work, they’ll call on you and refer you again, and again. And little by little, you’ll become an experienced Home Inspector.

But while you’re gaining that valuable experience, you’ll be missing property defects that would be discovered by a more experienced Home Inspector. These undisclosed conditions will result in callbacks, monetary claims and possibly a major lawsuit. So be sure to carry Errors-and-Omissions insurance, and do all you can to continually advance your HI education. The more you know and the more you practice, the more effectively you’ll serve your customers, the more protected you’ll be from liability, and the more often you’ll be recommended to home Buyers on a continuing basis.

If you make the wise decision of attending a professional home inspection school, you will see many ads that say you can make hundreds of dollars a day as a Home Inspector. The home inspection schools always print many of these ridiculous ads and what they claim is simply not true. They paint a bright rosy picture about the HI profession and how easy it will be for you to make a ton of money virtually overnight. Bullshi+… If you believe that story, I’ll tell you another, if your gullible enough to listen.

What these HI schools and the various companies’ (selling Home Inspection courses) won’t tell you is how difficult it is to be successful in this business, especially with today’s real slow R/E market. Some National HI schools make it sound so easy to get started overnight. They simply explain how easy it would be to start doing one or two home inspections a day with little or no effort. Don’t allow then to fool ya. The HI business is like any other professional business. It takes dedication, strong finances and a lot of time to become very successful.

Many HI schools do not tell you about the massive liability side of the home inspection industry. The home inspection industry is and always will be a very high liability profession. Every single home you inspect, is a potential lawsuit for you. It doesn’t matter that you may be the most thorough home inspector in your area. Home Inspectors are sued over things that the homeowners thought they should have found whether or not you could actually see the defect or not. There’s an old saying in this business. It’s not IF you get sued, but WHEN you get sued. So if you can’t live under this sort of pressure, you’d be best off looking elsewhere for a different profession.

All it takes is a ladder, a flashlight and pickup truck…right?

Well, guess what? Here’s more bad news, and I apologize but it’s the absolute truth. Like most legitimate businesses, it takes a little more than a few simple tools. A new home inspector is going to need about $5000 worth of tools just to get started in this business. Then there is the issue of insurance. Errors & Omissions Insurance will cost a new inspector (if you can even get it) anywhere from $3,000 to $4500 per year. Then there’s General Liability Insurance that will run you anywhere from $500 to $1500 per year. In some states, you can’t even get started without this insurance.

Do you have a rainy day fund?

I hope so, because it will absolutely rain on your parade! Just like any new business, the 1st year or two will be very rough. It may take you anywhere from 6 months to 2 years to even get to the point where you’re bringing in a hefty steady income. Many Home Inspectors came into this business by doing home inspections on the side or on a part time basis. That is the exact approach I would advise any new inspector to take. Don’t quit your day job just yet!

What about the Real Estate Agents?

The schools make it sound like there’s a R/E agent behind every tree just waiting for good ole’ you. Odds are that R/E agents have their favorite Home Inspector already and they’re not likely to use a newbie Home Inspector because they do not know what to expect from you as of yet. It will take you many months up to a year or more before you’ll be getting regular referrals from your favorite real estate agents. Don’t count on them to feed your family when you first start your HI business. This industry can be very rewarding in many ways, however it’s likely to leave a sour taste in your mouth if you enter thinking that it’s a pushover to get started in this industry. I’ve seen way to many good people go broke trying to get started in the HI business because home inspection schools and trainers left them unprepared for what they were about to face in the real world.

I really wish you all the Luck in your career decision and whatever your goals may be. After hearing me tell you the real truth about this industry and you are still truely thinking of dedicating yourself to become an HI, the first thing you should do is join iNACHI](http://www.nachi.org/membership.htm) and then participate in this MB on a daily basis. You’ll be amazed at how much you can learn in a single day.

I know a guy who purchased an IR camera and instantly became qualified to teach it, all over America. What’s your point?

I know a guy who became a new home inspector and a INACHI Certified home inspector and instantly starting offering new inspectors like himself ride alongs and writing education courses.

This has to be the best “come back” of the year.:slight_smile:

It was pretty funny.

Anyway, if you are trying to start a “traditional” home inspection business where all you offer is home inspections for real estate agents who have buyers… forget it (unless you really understand marketing). Too few traditional buyers these days. Investors coming out of the wood work though. Anyway…

If I was going into the business right now, and was technically weak, in a weak residential real estate market… I’d go into commercial inspections. Commercial inspections requires almost no technical knowledge at all, you simply act in the same way a General Contractor does in arranging all the qualified subcontractors, scheduling, marketing, etc.

Furthermore, with the soft business environment, 2009 will be the year of the commercial inspection. More business will trade hands than any other time in history. More commercial property will trade hands than any other time in history.

Hence www.nachi.org/comsop.htm and www.nachi.org/commercialcourse.htm

Anyway, take my advice for what I charged you for it.

P.S. Consider offering and marketing annual home inspections this winter to home owners who aren’t selling. Explain that you will keep a record of each inspection for use when they do go to sell. Also visit www.OverSEEit.com

Hi. Nick;

I have reservations to that statement.

In some areas of the Country and even Maine, what you describe above would be what I call a suitcase Contractor.
They are a one man show in the field and have at the most two laborers and maybe one carpenter and most of the time they are full of BS.

That is how they operate.
To inspect a Commercial Property, you can not be down in this category.

The cost implemented in hiring professionals to do the job of an inspector that is technically weak would outway the economics for the client and the client would choose to hire one that can do at least 20% of the work.

Sub Contracting for Inspections on Commercial jobs should be set to the limitation of HVAC, Electrical, and maybe Roofing Contractor depending on the Geographic Area.

There are 16 Divisions not including sub-parts to the AIA Docouments in Building a Commercial Project.
Your statement of technically weak would therefore require 16 sub-contractors and the General to market and fill in the report.

I believe anyone with this type of technical deficiency, should wait for another Home Inspection. JMHO

Marcel :slight_smile: :smiley:

I know a Level III Thermographer who has years of experience with 60K IR
camera who is asking me how to use the infrared camera to do a home inspection.
Why? Because he said that a person with many years of construction knowledge
and training can do more with an IR camera than he could, who had very little
construction background, even though he is a master in the infrared field and has
a 60K IR camera. When you figure that out call me.

BTW… this Level III thermographer had been doing infrared scan for a long time and,
he just wanted to see what all the “home inspection” buzz was about, so he took a course
about using the infrared camera for building inspections. Half way through the course he
said that all the construction knowledge was too intense and he would be glad when the
class was over.

As for the comment about the hair dresser becoming an inspector in an unlicensed
state, you already know what that implies and choose to ignore it. I suspect the
hair dresser and yourself have similar political views on the benefits of no
requirements being put on inspectors. …:mrgreen:

I don’t know anything about AIA documents, sorry. I only know www.nachi.org/comsop.htm If you are performing a commercial inspection to ASTM or AIA or some other document, disregard everything I’ve said and God Bless ya.

Anyway… this from www.nachi.org/comsop.htm 4.3 (2nd sentence very important):

It takes a couple years to become a great home inspector. It would take me about a day to train a blind man to be a good commercial inspector.

This is because the best commercial inspectors aren’t performing any portion of the inspection that they aren’t qualified to inspect and they very likely aren’t inspecting everything in the InterNACHI Standard of Practice (see 4.3 above).

The document you want to inspect to is www.nachi.org/comsop.htm MODIFIED by the scope of work document.

I’m going to make this really easy for InterNACHI members. I’m building an international network for all of us. www.nachi.org/cominspect.htm Give me a little more time and I’ll show you where I’m goin’ with this one.