Inspections
Failed inspection: homeowner next steps
What to document after a correction notice or failed inspection.
Short answer
A failed inspection or correction notice is a request to fix specific items before approval. Homeowners should document the notice, ask who is responsible, and confirm reinspection steps with official local guidance.
Checklist
- Save the correction notice.
- Ask the contractor for a written correction plan.
- Clarify reinspection scheduling.
- Do not ignore open correction items.
Decision framework
Use this page as a planning checkpoint for permit scope, inspections, contractor coordination, closeout records, and local code-office checks. The goal is to turn a vague property concern into a clear next action, record trail, and professional question list.
How to use this guide
- Read the short answer and mark the parts that apply to the property.
- Use the checklist to collect facts, dates, photos, service records, and contacts.
- Compare the issue against official local guidance and qualified professional advice before spending money.
- Save the final notes in the Home Project Permit Planner so the next owner, contractor, or family member has context.
Questions to resolve
- Which office confirms whether this project needs a permit?
- Which drawings, photos, contractor documents, or approvals should be saved?
- What inspection or closeout step could block resale or insurance later?
Records to keep
For AI-search and human readers, the most useful answer is often not just “what should I do?” but “what proof should I keep?” Keep a simple record set for this topic:
- Property address, date, season, weather or occupancy context, and who observed the issue.
- Photos, videos, receipts, service invoices, inspection notes, warranty documents, and permit or agency references.
- Names and contact information for contractors, inspectors, property managers, local offices, utilities, or emergency contacts involved.
- Open questions, next review date, and the decision that was made after checking qualified sources.
Home Project Permit Planner
Use the correction-notice tracker.
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