Welcome

Tampa Bay’s Best Home Inspector

“Anyone else is just looking around.®”

Choosing the right home inspector can be difficult. Unlike most professionals, you probably will not get to meet me until after you hire me. Furthermore, different inspectors have varying qualifications, equipment, experience, reporting methods, and yes, different pricing.

One thing for sure is that a home inspection requires work, a lot of work. Ultimately a thorough home inspection depends heavily on the individual inspector’s own effort. If you honor me by permitting me to inspect your new home, I guarantee that I will give you my very best effort. This I promise you.

Richard Ingalls, CMI®, PO Box 3003, Holiday FL 34692Certified Master Inspector

Florida license HI5092 – Home Inspector Inspecting homes in Pasco, Pinellas, Hillsborough and Hernando Counties

Yes, I’d personally choose a CMI every time over every other inspector. ~ Nick Gromicko, InterNACHI Founder

Click on the “Have me call you…” button to contact me. I will quickly respond.

Have me call you.

Associations

internachi logo international association of professional contractors Tampa Bay InterNACHI Logo

What Really Matters in a Home Inspection


Watch this two minute video and then have me call you by clicking on the “Have Me Call You” button above.

Video transcript – “Buying a home? The process can be stressful. A home inspection is supposed to give you peace of mind, but often has the opposite effect. You will be asked to absorb a lot of information in a short time. This often includes a written report, a checklist, photographs, environmental reports, and what the inspector himself says during the inspection. All this, combined with the seller’s disclosure and what you notice yourself, makes the experience even more overwhelming. What should you do?

Relax. Most of your inspection will be maintenance recommendations, life expectancies for various systems and components, and minor imperfections. These are useful to know about. However, the issues that really matter will fall into four categories:

  1. major defects. An example of this would be a structural failure;
  2. things that lead to major defects, such as a small roof-flashing leak, for example;
  3. things that may hinder your ability to finance, legally occupy, or insure the home; and
  4. safety hazards, such as an exposed, live buss bar at the electrical panel.

Anything in these categories should be addressed. Often, a serious problem can be corrected inexpensively to protect both life and property (especially in categories 2 and 4).

Most sellers are honest and are often surprised to learn of defects uncovered during an inspection. Realize that sellers are under no obligation to repair everything mentioned in the report. No home is perfect. Keep things in perspective. Do not kill your deal over things that do not matter. It is inappropriate to demand that a seller address deferred maintenance, conditions already listed on the seller’s disclosure, or nit-picky items.”

3 Deadly Mistakes Every Home Buyer Should Avoid

costly mistakes every homebuyer should avoid

InterNACHI Residential Standards of Practice