By Brian Hutchinson on Monday, 24 April 2023
Category: CAHPI Blog

Getting Your Home Ready for Inspection

If you are planning to sell your home, there is a strong likelihood that it will need a professional home inspection, either as part of the listing process or as a buyer's due diligence.

At the Canadian Association of Home & Property Inspectors (CAHPI), we want this inspection to go well for you.To have the most appeal to your future Realtor® and prospective buyers, there are some things you can consider before you even list the home for sale:

The above advice will start you on the path to a happier home inspection experience. But when the home inspector arrives, they will be looking for additional measures that allow them to thoroughly inspect the home to the CAHPI Standards of Practice. If an inspector is unable to inspect a requisite component, that fact will be noted in their report; possibly leaving a prospective buyer to wonder what has been missed. These measures should be taken to allow the professional home inspector access to all the critical components of the home:

In most of Canada's provinces (British Columbia and Alberta being the present exceptions), there are no requirements for the licensing and regulation of professional home inspectors. In response to this serious lack of regulatory oversight, CAHPI was formed to establish qualifications similar to those required for home inspector licenses in regulated jurisdictions. CAHPI members must pass a rigorous exam, a report verification process, and partake in a mentoring requirement to earn the designation of National Certificate Holder (NCH)®. There is a further requirement of having completed at least 250 fee-paid inspections to qualify for our top designation of Registered Home Inspector (RHI)®. Our members must adhere to our Standards of Practice and Code of Ethics, engage in ongoing education, and also show proof of professional and general liability insurance to remain in good standing.

These points are raised to reassure homeowners that CAHPI qualified home inspectors represent the best in the business. After you prepare your home for inspection, a CAHPI professional home inspector will move through your home with care and consideration. Most homeowners wisely elect to be absent when their home is inspected. The work the inspector does is very thorough, and most sellers are uncomfortable with that degree of scrutiny, even when they have prepared their home well. Your absence will also make the purchaser and their Realtor®, who will most often be present during the inspection, feel more comfortable asking the inspector questions related to their findings.

CAHPI inspectors do not "pass" or "fail" homes. Rather, they act as educators; showing the buyers and their Realtors® important shut-off points in the home and acquainting them with safety issues and deficiencies which may impact their purchase decision.If you have prepared your home well and followed the advice of your real estate professional, a home inspection will reassure a prospective purchaser that they understand more fully what they will be buying.

Create access to critical components, repair apparent deficiencies ahead of the inspection, and try to ensure that the home inspector is a member of CAHPI.