Can a buyer do their own inspection?
STOP: Thinking about inspecting your new home yourself? Read this first.
Can a buyer do their own inspection?
Short answer: Yes — but only as a supplement. A buyer can walk through and inspect a property, use a DIY home inspection checklist, or hire tools to check basics. That does not replace a licensed home inspector or an appraisal. If you skip the professional inspection, you take real financial and legal risk.
What a DIY inspection can and can’t do
- What you can do: spot visible issues (roof stains, cracks, mold, water stains), test faucets, run appliances, check breakers, and note odd smells. Use a home inspection checklist to stay thorough.
- What you can’t do: diagnose structural defects, hidden water damage, electrical hazards, HVAC failures, pest infestations, or code compliance. Professional inspectors use meters, thermal cameras, and experience to find things you’ll miss.

Appraisal vs. Inspection — know the difference
An appraisal values the property for the lender. It’s about market value. An inspection evaluates condition and safety. Appraisals don’t replace inspections. If your mortgage lender orders an appraisal, you still need a home inspection to protect your investment.
Risks of doing it alone
- Missed defects that cost thousands later.
- No official report to use in contract negotiations.
- Insurance or mortgage problems if undisclosed issues surface.
- Limited legal protection if problems are discovered after closing.
Benefits of a professional inspection
- Detailed report you can use to negotiate repairs or price concessions.
- Expert identification of safety and structural issues.
- Peace of mind to move forward confidently.
Smart process for a buyer who wants to be hands-on
- Do your DIY walkthrough first — bring a checklist and smartphone photos.
- Always hire a qualified, licensed home inspector for a full inspection.
- Attend the inspection. You’ll learn and see issues firsthand.
- Review the formal report. Use it to reopen negotiations or request repairs.
- If the mortgage requires an appraisal, don’t assume it replaces inspection.

Recommendations — practical, no-nonsense
- Hire a licensed inspector with strong reviews and clear sample reports.
- Spend $300–$800 for a thorough inspection — cheaper than one major repair.
- Use DIY checks to prepare, not to replace professionals.
- Include an inspection contingency in your purchase offer to protect your deposit and allow time for evaluation.
Bottom line
You can inspect a home yourself to learn and prepare. Don’t rely on it to protect your money. A professional inspection plus an appraisal gives you evaluation and valuation. That combo reduces risk, gives negotiation power, and protects your future.
For a trusted local perspective on inspections, appraisals, and how to structure offers with the right contingencies, contact Tony Sousa at tony@sousasells.ca or call 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for resources and sample inspection checklists.



















