Wind mitigation inspection Florida

What Is a 4-Point Inspection? What It Covers, When You Need It, and What Can Kill Coverage

OwnerHacks Editorial Team drafted this article for homeowners. Caleb Hollis then reviewed it for judgment, defensibility, and real-world housing relevance. Reviewer profileโ€ขEditorial team profileโ€ขEditorial policyโ€ขDisclaimer
Experience base: 20+ years around residential real estate and homeowner cost decisionsReview focus: valuation logic, Florida housing relevance, and practical cost riskBoundary: homeowner education only, not a property-specific appraisal or assignment result

Quick answer: a 4-point inspection is an insurance inspection focused on the four systems carriers worry about most, roof, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC. It is not a full home inspection. It is a risk screen that helps the insurer decide whether they will write the policy, require repairs, limit coverage, or walk away.

Buying, insuring, or rescuing an older house? Start with the Homeowners Insurance Guide for the bigger playbook.

If your problem is…What the 4-point tells the carrierWhat usually happens nextBest move
The home is older and you need insurance to closeWhether the four biggest loss systems look insurableApproval, repair demand, limited quote, or declinationGet the 4-point early, not after the lender deadline
You already had a general inspectionNot enough by itselfThe carrier may still demand a 4-pointDo not assume one inspection replaces the other
The roof or panel is aging outRemaining life and known red flags matter more than charmYou may get a repair list or lose carrier options fastPrice the repairs before you finalize the purchase
You are in FloridaUnderwriting is usually tighter and less forgivingOlder systems become a real leverage pointPair this with a wind mitigation report when it helps

Decision snapshot

Use this page when: an insurer, agent, or buyer mentions a 4-point inspection and you need to know what it checks, why it matters, and what can derail coverage.

Last updated
April 19, 2026

Why this changed
Added stronger underwriting-risk routing, clearer system-by-system framing, and named source proof around 4-point inspection use in homeowners insurance decisions.

Sources reviewed
Florida Office of Insurance Regulation consumer resources, insurer underwriting guidance for older homes, licensed-inspector 4-point report standards, and Florida homeowners insurance references.

What a 4-point inspection actually covers

The inspector is not trying to tell you every defect in the house. They are documenting whether the systems most likely to create large insurance losses look acceptable.

1. Roof

  • Age and material
  • Visible wear, leaks, soft spots, repairs, or missing coverings
  • Remaining useful life
  • Signs the carrier may view the roof as near failure even if it is not currently leaking

2. Electrical

  • Panel brand and service size
  • Aluminum, cloth, knob-and-tube, or other concerning wiring types where relevant
  • Open splices, double taps, unsafe conditions, missing covers
  • Evidence of outdated or known-problem components

3. Plumbing

  • Supply and drain pipe materials
  • Leaks, stains, prior water damage, corrosion
  • Water heater age and visible condition
  • Materials carriers often hate, like polybutylene in many markets

4. HVAC

  • System age and basic operation
  • Visible rust, leaks, or deferred maintenance
  • Whether the system looks near failure or unsafe

Fast decision table before you spend money

ScenarioUsually the right moveWhyWatch out for
You are buying a house around 20 years old or olderAssume a 4-point may be requiredMany carriers ask for one on older homesWaiting until days before closing
The house has an old roof or known panel issueGet quotes for repair or replacement before negotiatingInsurance approval may depend on itThinking you can solve it later with no cost impact
You just want to know if the house is generally soundGet a full home inspection tooA 4-point is narrower than a buyer inspectionUsing a 4-point as a full due-diligence substitute
You are already insured and carrier asks for one at renewalTreat it seriouslyRenewal problems can hit just as hard as purchase problemsAssuming long-time coverage guarantees renewal

What usually kills coverage or shrinks your options

  • Old roof with limited life left. A roof can be dry today and still be uninsurable in carrier logic.
  • Known-problem electrical equipment. Certain panels or unsafe conditions trigger instant resistance.
  • Polybutylene or visibly failing plumbing. Water-loss history makes carriers jumpy for a reason.
  • HVAC or water-heater issues that signal neglect. They can indicate deferred maintenance across the property.

Worked examples

Example 1: Older roof, otherwise clean house

You are under contract at $420,000. The general inspection is fine. The 4-point says the 19-year-old shingle roof has limited remaining life. Result: one carrier declines, two quote with conditions, one offers coverage only if the roof is replaced within 30 days. The house did not change. The insurance math did.

Example 2: Electrical panel surprise

The buyer thought the deal was routine. The 4-point identifies a panel brand carriers dislike plus visible double taps. Now the insurer wants repairs before binding. That turns a small inspection line item into a real closing negotiation.

Most common mistakes

  • Mistake 1: waiting until the lender or agent is already pushing for proof of insurance.
  • Mistake 2: confusing a clean general inspection with a clean underwriting file.
  • Mistake 3: budgeting for the house but not the insurance-related repairs required to make it insurable.
  • Mistake 4: forgetting that renewal underwriting can get stricter too.

How to use the report intelligently

  1. Read the four system findings line by line.
  2. Separate true deal-killers from fixable conditions.
  3. Get repair or replacement pricing immediately for anything the carrier may reject.
  4. Use those numbers in purchase negotiations or renewal planning.
  5. If you are in Florida, pair the 4-point with wind mitigation because one report can save you money while the other protects insurability.

Bottom line

A 4-point inspection is less about whether the house is lovable and more about whether it looks expensive to insure. The smartest move is to get ahead of the report, price the likely problem systems early, and treat insurability as part of the real cost of owning the property.

Trust + sources

Official resources and reference points

This page is homeowner education, not a property-specific appraisal, legal opinion, tax advice, or lender/carrier instruction. Use these to verify the coverage language, complaint path, and Florida-specific rules before you act on a denial letter, underwriting scare, or policy summary.

Decision path

Best next move if this article raised a coverage or premium question

Do not stop at one article. Open the main insurance guide, then compare your next move against a savings or claim-specific page while the policy is in front of you.

Why this article is worth trusting
Caleb Hollis reviewed this page. He reviews homeowner education on home value logic, cost realism, Florida housing questions, and decision quality.
Experience base: 20+ years around residential real estate and homeowner cost decisionsReview focus: valuation logic, Florida housing relevance, and practical cost riskBoundary: homeowner education only, not a property-specific appraisal or assignment result

See the reviewer profile and editorial team profile for who does what. OwnerHacks publishes homeowner education, not property-specific appraisal work, legal advice, tax advice, lending advice, or insurance advice.

OwnerHacks updates articles when rules, costs, or homeowner decision factors materially change. If something looks outdated, use our contact page and we will review it.

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