Lender-Required Property Inspections: FHA, VA, and Conventional Loan Standards

Mortgage lenders impose property condition requirements that go beyond a buyer's optional home inspection — and the standards differ substantially depending on whether the loan is backed by the Federal Housing Administration, the Department of Veterans Affairs, or a conventional (non-government-backed) program. Understanding which inspections and appraisal-level condition checks each loan type mandates helps buyers, sellers, and real estate professionals avoid last-minute closing delays caused by undisclosed property deficiencies. This page covers the regulatory frameworks behind each loan category, how lender-required assessments interact with the home inspection process overview, and the decision points that determine which additional specialist reports may be required.


Definition and scope

A lender-required inspection — more precisely, a lender-required property condition assessment — is any evaluation of a property's physical state that a mortgage lender or its insuring agency mandates before loan approval can proceed. These are distinct from a buyer's voluntary home inspection: they exist to protect the lender's collateral and, in the case of government-backed programs, to satisfy federal housing policy goals.

The three dominant frameworks in the United States are:

None of these frameworks replace the independent buyer home inspection described in the buyer vs. seller inspection framework — they operate in parallel, with different objectives and different consequences for non-compliance.


How it works

The lender-required assessment process follows a consistent sequence regardless of loan type:

  1. Appraisal order: The lender orders an appraisal from a state-licensed appraiser on the approved panel. For FHA and VA loans, the appraiser also serves as the compliance observer for MPR/MPS conditions.
  2. Property condition observation: The appraiser documents health-and-safety deficiencies, structural concerns, and systems in need of repair. FHA appraisers are specifically trained to identify conditions listed in HUD Handbook 4000.1, Section II.A.
  3. Condition flags and repair requirements: If the appraiser flags a deficiency, the lender issues a repair requirement. The seller or buyer must address the condition before closing, or the loan cannot fund.
  4. Re-inspection (if required): After flagged repairs are completed, the lender orders a re-inspection — typically a limited "repair completion" review — at borrower or seller cost.
  5. Specialist inspection triggers: Certain observed conditions (evidence of wood-destroying insects, active roof leaks, visible mold, failed well or septic systems) trigger mandatory specialist inspections. A pest report, for instance, is required on VA loans in termite-prone geographic zones per VA Pamphlet 26-7, Chapter 12.

For FHA loans, the appraisal is also tied to the property for 120 days (extendable to 240 days under certain conditions per HUD Handbook 4000.1), meaning a subsequent buyer using FHA financing within that window inherits the same appraisal report and any outstanding conditions.


Common scenarios

FHA — Deferred maintenance triggers: FHA's Minimum Property Standards require that a property be safe, sound, and secure. Peeling paint on homes built before 1978 is among the most frequently flagged conditions, because FHA properties must comply with HUD's lead-based paint regulations at 24 CFR Part 35. A lead paint inspection guide explains the testing process when this issue escalates beyond a cosmetic repair requirement. Active roof leaks, inoperable HVAC systems, and evidence of structural damage are also automatic repair requirements under Handbook 4000.1.

VA — Wood-destroying pest inspections: The VA mandates a wood-destroying pest (WDI) inspection in states classified as having a "very heavy" or "moderate to heavy" termite infestation probability, as mapped by the VA. In those zones, the pest inspection must be completed by a licensed pest control operator and the report submitted to the lender. Costs for treating active infestations are typically seller-paid on VA transactions. The pest and termite inspection process outlines what these reports include.

Conventional (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) — Appraiser discretion: Unlike FHA and VA, conventional guidelines do not maintain a fixed MPR checklist. Fannie Mae's Selling Guide (B4-1.3-06) instructs appraisers to report conditions that affect the property's safety, soundness, or structural integrity — but does not mandate specific inspector types. This means a conventional appraiser has more discretion, and lenders may add overlays (internal underwriting rules stricter than the agency minimum). A four-point inspection is commonly required by insurance underwriters — not the mortgage lender — on older homes, covering roof, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC.


Decision boundaries

The table below summarizes the key distinctions across loan types:

Factor FHA VA Conventional
Governing document HUD Handbook 4000.1 VA Pamphlet 26-7 Fannie Mae Selling Guide / Freddie Mac Guide
MPR checklist? Yes (explicit) Yes (explicit) No (appraiser judgment)
Pest inspection required? In some HUD-designated states Yes, in termite-zone states No mandatory requirement
Lead paint provisions? Yes, homes pre-1978 Yes, homes pre-1978 Appraiser flags visible deterioration
Appraisal portability 120–240 days, tied to property 6 months, tied to veteran Not transferable
Well/septic testing Required if observable issues or local requirement Required if not connected to public systems Appraiser-triggered

When a property has active foundation concerns, visible water intrusion, or a non-functional HVAC system, all three loan types will likely generate a repair requirement — though the mechanism differs. FHA and VA do so through codified MPR lists; conventional lenders do so through appraiser judgment backed by underwriting overlays.

Buyers selecting a loan type should understand that FHA and VA appraisals carry more prescriptive property condition scrutiny. Sellers listing homes in need of deferred maintenance may face more complex transactions with FHA or VA buyers than with conventional financing. This dynamic is a factor in listing strategy, as described in the pre-listing inspection guide.


References

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