Buying a home is probably the biggest purchase you’ll ever make. And the home inspection is your last line of defense before you commit. Yet most buyers spend more time choosing a restaurant for dinner than they do choosing the person who’s going to tell them whether their future home has hidden problems.
Home inspection is one part of protecting the asset. The Home Maintenance Guide for Homeowners connects inspections, contractor selection, budgeting, and upkeep.
Contributing experts
Lawrence and Caralee Storniolo of Affordable Home Inspections contributed home-inspection perspective for this article, including clarification around Florida inspector insurance expectations and real-world small-shop inspection practice.
Here’s how to find someone good — and what to watch out for.
What a Home Inspector Actually Does
A home inspector examines the major systems of a house: the roof, foundation, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and structural components. They’re looking for defects, safety hazards, and things that are nearing the end of their useful life. They don’t dig into walls or move furniture. It’s a visual inspection based on what’s accessible and visible at the time.
The report you get back is a snapshot of the home’s condition on that day. It’s not a guarantee that nothing will go wrong — it’s an informed opinion about what’s going right and what isn’t.
How to Find a Good One
Start with these basics:
- Check their license. In Florida, home inspectors must be licensed by the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). You can verify a license online in two minutes.
- Ask about experience. How many inspections have they done? Someone with 500+ inspections has seen things a newer inspector hasn’t.
- Read the sample report. Ask for one before you hire them. A good report is detailed, includes photos, and explains issues clearly. A bad report is vague and uses language designed to avoid liability rather than inform you.
- Ask what insurance they carry. In Florida, confirm the inspector carries required general liability coverage. Errors and omissions coverage can still be worth asking about, but it is not automatically required for every inspector or small inspection shop. If the inspector is doing builder or vendor work, ask whether additional insurance requirements apply to that assignment.
- Don’t just go with whoever your agent recommends. Some agents refer inspectors who are unlikely to kill deals. That’s not necessarily the inspector who’s best for you.
Red Flags to Watch For
Be cautious if an inspector:
- Won’t let you attend the inspection
- Rushes through the property in under two hours
- Gives you a verbal summary instead of a written report
- Offers to do repairs on issues they find (major conflict of interest)
- Doesn’t get on the roof or in the attic
How Much Should It Cost?
In Northeast Florida, a standard home inspection runs between $350 and $500 for a typical single-family home. Larger homes, older homes, and properties with pools, septic systems, or outbuildings cost more. Don’t shop on price alone — the cheapest inspector is rarely the most thorough.
The Inspection Is Not the Appraisal
People sometimes confuse these two. The inspector evaluates the condition of the home. The appraiser evaluates the market value. Both happen during the purchase process, but they serve completely different purposes. The inspector works for you. The appraiser works for the lender.
Bottom Line
A good inspector saves you from expensive surprises. A bad one gives you false confidence. Take 20 minutes to vet the person before you hand them a check — it could save you thousands down the road.
Related: The Home Maintenance Checklist That Protects Your Property Value
See also: How to Prevent Water Damage in Your Home
Keep Reading
- Is a Home Warranty Worth It? An Honest Breakdown
- 9 Home Improvements That Are Almost Never Worth the Money
- Do You Need Flood Insurance? What Every Homeowner Should Know
Sources reviewed
- HUD home inspection guidance for buyers
- American Society of Home Inspectors standards and buyer resources
- InterNACHI residential standards of practice
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau home buying inspection guidance
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 when a project decision affects safety, permits, energy cost, resale, or insurability and you want something sturdier than a contractor sales pitch.
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.
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.




