Buying a home is a big move. A home inspection makes sure it’s a smart one.

At Loop, we don’t believe in surprises after closing. We believe in clarity before it. Here’s exactly what to expect during a home inspection in North Carolina and how we guide you through it.


First: What a Home Inspection Actually Is

A home inspection is a professional evaluation of a property’s condition. A licensed inspector reviews the home’s major systems, structure, and visible components to identify potential issues.

It is not a pass-or-fail test.
It is information.

And information gives you leverage.

Whether you’re buying in Charlotte, Cornelius, or along Lake Norman, inspections are completed during North Carolina’s Due Diligence Period.


When the Inspection Happens

After your offer is accepted, you enter the Due Diligence Period. This is your window to:

  • Conduct inspections

  • Bring in specialists (if needed)

  • Negotiate repairs or credits

  • Walk away if something major surfaces

This timeline is strategic. Once due diligence ends, your leverage decreases. That’s why we schedule inspections immediately and move quickly.


What the Inspector Looks At

A general home inspection typically covers:

Structure & Foundation

  • Foundation condition

  • Framing

  • Crawl space or basement

  • Signs of settling or moisture

Roof

  • Shingle life expectancy

  • Flashing

  • Ventilation

  • Active leaks

Electrical

  • Panel condition

  • Wiring safety

  • GFCIs

  • Code concerns

Plumbing

  • Pipe condition

  • Water heater age

  • Water pressure

  • Drainage

HVAC

  • System age

  • Performance

  • Ductwork

Interior & Exterior

  • Windows and doors

  • Siding

  • Decks and porches

  • Grading and drainage

In North Carolina, crawl spaces and moisture are common themes. We pay close attention to those.


What’s Not Included (But Often Recommended)

Depending on the home, we may recommend additional inspections:

  • Radon testing

  • Termite inspection

  • Sewer scope

  • Septic inspection

  • Well water testing

Older homes and properties near the lake often require a closer look at specific systems. We advise based on the property, not a checklist.


Should You Attend the Inspection?

Yes. Always.

It typically takes 2 to 4 hours. Walking the home with the inspector gives you context you won’t get from the PDF report alone.

You’ll learn:

  • What’s urgent

  • What’s routine maintenance

  • What can wait

We’re there with you to translate it all.


What Happens After the Report

Inspection reports can feel overwhelming. They are thorough. They include photos. They list everything.

Here’s what we focus on:

  • Structural concerns

  • Safety issues

  • Major mechanical systems

  • Expensive repairs

Every home has a list. The goal is not to eliminate the list. The goal is to understand risk and negotiate intelligently.

Your options typically include:

  1. Request repairs

  2. Request seller credit

  3. Renegotiate price

  4. Move forward as-is

  5. Terminate during due diligence

We guide that strategy based on the property, the market, and your long-term goals.


Common Findings in Charlotte Area Homes

Across the greater Charlotte area, we frequently see:

  • Aging HVAC systems

  • Crawl space moisture

  • Roof wear

  • Minor electrical updates

  • Drainage grading issues

None of these automatically kill a deal. But they inform the decision.


What Does a Home Inspection Cost?

In North Carolina, buyers typically invest:

  • $400–$600 for a general inspection

  • $100–$200 for radon

  • $75–$150 for termite

It’s a small price to protect a major investment.


The Loop Perspective

At Loop, we don’t use inspections to create fear. We use them to create clarity.

A strong inspection process allows you to:

  • Buy confidently

  • Negotiate from strength

  • Avoid avoidable surprises

  • Understand what you’re stepping into

The goal isn’t perfection. It’s informed ownership.


Final Thoughts

A home inspection is not the stressful part of buying a home. It’s the strategic part.

When you know what to expect and have the right team guiding you, it becomes one of the most empowering steps in the process.

If you’re buying in Charlotte or the Lake Norman area and want to approach your purchase with clarity and confidence, we’re here to guide every step.