Rusted water heater in a dim basement with corroded pipes
Pristine lake view through French doors of a vacation cabin
Cracked foundation concrete with visible structural damage
Cheerful listing photo of a wraparound deck on a vacation home
Thermal imaging showing heat loss in magenta around window frames
Hand pressing a moisture meter into a wooden windowsill
Beautiful sunset view from a wooden dock over a mountain lake
Close-up of deteriorating wood rot and damage in floor joists
Gorgeous mountain A-frame cabin surrounded by pine trees
Vacation Home Inspections

 

Before you wire a down payment on a lakeside dream, let a sharp eye find the rot the listing photos never showed.

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0%of inspections find something that needs fixing
$0average saved on final purchase price
0%of buyers renegotiate after inspection results
0+point checklist, vacation-property specific
The Listing·Listed at $685,000
Beautiful lakeside cabin with wraparound deck and mountain views in the listing photos
"Turnkey lakeside retreat — move-in ready"
What We Found
Corroded water heater and mineral-encrusted pipes found during inspection of vacant cabin
Mineral Buildup
Corrosion
Case 01Lakeside CabinLake Tahoe, CA
Cosmetic

The water heater that sat empty for eleven months.

The listing said turnkey. The water heater said otherwise. Hard water mineral deposits had calcified the heating element and the supply lines showed the kind of corrosion you only get when a property sits unoccupied for most of the year — cold water sitting in pipes, expanding, and slowly eating the fittings from the inside. Not a disaster. But not free.

Repair estimate$3,800
Renegotiated

Buyer used the report to negotiate $8,200 off the asking price — covering the water heater replacement, a new pressure relief valve, and a plumber's inspection of the full supply line.

Case 02Mountain A-FrameBlue Ridge Mountains, NC
Structural

The deck that looked solid until you checked the joists.

Mountain properties in wet climates develop their worst problems slowly, invisibly. The deck looked perfect in the listing photos — freshly stained, no visible rot. Below the surface, the rim joist had been wicking moisture for years. The wood was soft to the probe in three places. Vacationers use decks constantly. A failing joist under a hot tub in peak season doesn't end with a renegotiation.

Structural repair estimate$12,400
Bought with Confidence

Seller agreed to full deck reframing before close. Buyer purchased knowing the structural issue was remediated — and knowing every other system had been evaluated by someone who wasn't trying to sell the property.

The Listing·Listed at $425,000
Charming mountain A-frame cabin with snow-dusted pine trees and cozy exterior in listing photo
"Cozy A-frame — perfect ski rental investment"
What We Found
Cracked foundation concrete and structural damage visible in crawlspace of mountain cabin
Settlement Crack
Moisture Intrusion
The Listing·Listed at $598,000
Bright coastal cottage with ocean view and cheerful white exterior in listing photos
"Established rental income — 87% occupancy"
What We Found
Moisture meter reading showing dangerous moisture levels in wall cavity of coastal cottage
Mold Colony
94% Moisture
Case 03Coastal CottageOuter Banks, NC
Safety Hazard

What thrives in a shuttered bathroom nobody opened since August.

The second bathroom had been closed off between rental seasons. Nobody opened it during the listing. When we did, the moisture meter read 94% in the wall cavity behind the shower. The mold colony was established — black, extensive, and the kind that triggers remediation requirements, not a caulk gun. The HVAC system had been circulating air through that space for months. Guests had been sleeping in it.

Remediation estimate$18,500
Walked Away

Seller declined to remediate before close. Buyer walked. The inspection didn't save money — it saved sanity. Two months later, the property relisted at $72,000 less with a mold disclosure.

Case 04Beachfront BungalowGulf Shores, AL
Catastrophic

The elevated foundation the seller called "standard coastal construction."

Coastal elevation is standard. Corroded steel piling straps, a rotted sill plate on the seaward side, and a sewer line showing significant salt intrusion are not. The listing agent called it "typical coastal character." Our report called it a structural engineering review, a full sewer scope, and a contractor estimate that came in at $31,000 before we even addressed the electrical panel — which had never been upgraded from the original 1987 installation and sat in a salt-air crawlspace for 38 years.

Minimum repair estimate$31,000+
Renegotiated $25K Credit

Buyer negotiated a $25,000 credit at close plus seller-funded structural engineering report. The inspection fee was $650. The return on that $650 was $25,000 in direct savings — before accounting for what those issues would have cost post-close with no leverage.

The Listing·Listed at $875,000
Stunning beachfront bungalow with direct Gulf access and beautiful sunset views in listing
"Direct beach access — strong rental history"
What We Found
Severely deteriorated foundation pilings and structural damage found beneath beachfront property
Piling Corrosion
Sill Plate Rot
Salt Exposure

By the time you've read four stories, the inspection fee feels like the cheapest line item in the deal.

86% of inspections find something. The ones that don't still give you confidence nothing was hidden.

200 things we look at.
All of them matter.

Vacation properties fail differently than primary residences. Our checklist is built for properties that sit empty, see heavy turnover, and age in coastal or mountain climates.

Roof & Exterior

38 points
  • Shingle condition & age
  • Flashing & sealants
  • Gutters & drainage
  • Chimney plumb & mortar
  • Siding, trim & caulking

Electrical Systems

32 points
  • Panel capacity & labeling
  • GFCI in wet areas
  • Outlet & switch function
  • Smoke & CO detectors
  • Hot tub & dock wiring

Plumbing

29 points
  • Water heater age & condition
  • Supply line corrosion
  • Drain & waste lines
  • Moisture meter readings
  • Well & septic (if applicable)

HVAC

24 points
  • System age & capacity
  • Filter condition
  • Duct integrity
  • Thermostat function
  • Seasonal stress evaluation

Structure & Foundation

41 points
  • Foundation cracks & settlement
  • Crawlspace moisture
  • Floor joist condition
  • Deck & porch framing
  • Sagging or soft spots

Safety & STR-Specific

36 points
  • Deck load & railing integrity
  • Pool & dock safety
  • Lock & latch function
  • Vacation rental wear patterns
  • Mold & air quality

Download the Full 200-Point Checklist

The complete PDF — every item we inspect, organized by category, with notes on what failure looks like and what it costs.

Schedule Your Walkthrough

The inspection fee is the
cheapest insurance you'll ever buy.

Most clients save $8,000–$25,000. Some save themselves from a catastrophic mistake entirely. A 2–3 hour walkthrough pays for itself before escrow closes.

Vacation & Short-Term Rentals

Beachfront bungalows, mountain A-frames, lakeside cabins — properties that sit empty 11 months a year develop problems nobody notices until it's expensive.

200-Point Checklist

Roof, foundation, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, decks, docks, crawlspaces, and every system that carries the load of short-term rental use.

Flat-Rate Pricing

No surprises. Full written report with photos delivered within 24 hours. Price quoted upfront before we schedule.

"86% of inspections find something that needs fixing. The question is whether you find it before or after you close."

Request a Walkthrough

No commitment. We'll confirm availability and quote before scheduling.