New Construction Inspection: Phase Inspections and Final Walkthrough
New construction inspection encompasses a structured series of evaluations conducted at defined construction milestones, culminating in a final walkthrough before a buyer takes possession. Unlike resale property reviews, new construction inspections are designed to catch defects while walls are still open and systems remain accessible. The process operates alongside municipal building department oversight but serves a distinct, independent function that protects buyers' interests in ways that code-compliance inspections alone do not.
Definition and scope
A new construction inspection is a third-party evaluation performed on a property under construction or newly completed. The term covers two distinct categories: phase inspections (also called staged or progress inspections), which occur at specific construction milestones before work is covered or concealed, and the final walkthrough inspection, which occurs after all work is substantially complete but before closing.
The scope of these inspections is defined partly by reference standards published by the American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) and InterNACHI (International Association of Certified Home Inspectors). Both organizations publish Standards of Practice that identify the systems and components an inspector must evaluate. New construction inspections are generally scoped to the same systems covered in a standard home inspection process — structural components, roofing, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, insulation, and site drainage — but the timing of phase inspections allows access to elements permanently concealed in a finished home.
Critically, a municipal building inspector's code-compliance review and a third-party buyer's inspection are not interchangeable. Municipal inspectors verify minimum compliance with the applicable building code (typically the International Residential Code (IRC), published by the International Code Council). Third-party inspectors evaluate overall quality, workmanship, and conformance to plans — a broader mandate that can surface issues that technically pass code but fall below accepted industry standards.
How it works
Phase inspections follow construction sequencing. The specific checkpoints depend on the build schedule, but the standard framework includes the following stages:
- Pre-pour / foundation inspection — Conducted before concrete is poured for footings or the slab. Inspectors verify form placement, rebar sizing and spacing, and vapor barrier installation. Once concrete is poured, these elements become inaccessible. See the foundation inspection guide for detailed criteria.
- Pre-frame / rough-in inspection — Occurs after framing is erected but before insulation or drywall is installed. Covers framing member size and spacing, window and door opening reinforcement, and rough-in plumbing, electrical, and HVAC installations.
- Pre-drywall inspection — Specifically timed after mechanical rough-ins are complete but before wallboard is hung. This is the highest-value phase inspection because it allows direct visual access to wire gauges, pipe materials, duct sealing, insulation placement, and structural member condition simultaneously. The electrical system inspection and plumbing inspection components are significantly more thorough at this stage than after finish work.
- Insulation and air sealing inspection — Some inspectors and builders schedule a discrete check after insulation is installed but before drywall, verifying that insulation meets the R-values required under the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC). The 2021 IECC establishes prescriptive R-value requirements that vary by climate zone.
- Final walkthrough inspection — Performed after all trade work, finish materials, fixtures, and appliances are installed and the builder has completed their own punch list. The third-party inspector evaluates completed systems, functional components, and visible defects across all trades.
Each inspection generates a written report. Understanding how to read those reports is covered in detail on the property inspection report explained page.
Common scenarios
Scenario 1 — Buyer-commissioned phase inspections: A buyer purchasing from a production builder contracts an independent inspector at each stage. This is the most protective arrangement. The buyer pays separately for each visit, with phase inspection fees typically ranging from $150 to $300 per visit depending on geography and inspector credentials, while a final inspection ranges from $300 to $500 for a single-family home (fee ranges reflect published inspector association guidance from InterNACHI's fee survey data).
Scenario 2 — Final-only inspection: The buyer skips phase inspections and hires an inspector only for the final walkthrough. This is the most common but least protective arrangement. Defects in framing, rough-in plumbing, or insulation that were accessible during construction are now concealed and may only be detectable through infrared thermal imaging or invasive probing — if they are detectable at all.
Scenario 3 — Builder's inspection versus buyer's inspection: Some builders offer their own "quality assurance" inspection as part of the sales process. This does not replace an independent third-party inspection. A builder's inspector is employed by or contracted to the party with a financial interest in completing the sale, which represents a structural conflict of interest that independent inspector qualifications standards are specifically designed to eliminate.
Decision boundaries
The decision to commission phase inspections versus a final-only inspection turns on several structural factors:
- Access to the construction schedule: Phase inspections are only useful if the buyer receives advance notice of construction milestones. This requires a contractual provision in the purchase agreement, as builders are not obligated by default to provide this access.
- Contract stage: A buyer who is already in contract on a near-complete home cannot commission pre-drywall inspections retroactively. The decision to include inspection access rights must be made at contract execution.
- Builder type: Custom builders typically accommodate phase inspections more readily than high-volume production builders, who operate on tight schedules across dozens of simultaneous units.
- State licensing requirements: The inspector conducting new construction phase inspections should hold a valid state license where required. Licensing requirements vary by jurisdiction and are catalogued on the state home inspector licensing requirements page.
- Phase vs. final trade-offs: A pre-drywall inspection alone — if only one phase inspection is feasible — offers the highest return on investment because it captures rough-in work across all trades at a single visit. A foundation inspection is most critical on slab-on-grade construction where the slab itself conceals plumbing runs.
The final walkthrough inspection should be treated as a mandatory step regardless of how many phase inspections were conducted. No phase inspection eliminates the need for a final review of finished systems, grading, drainage, and installed appliances.
References
- American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) – Standards of Practice
- InterNACHI – Standards of Practice for Home Inspectors
- International Code Council – International Residential Code (IRC), 2021 Edition
- International Code Council – International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), 2021 Edition
- InterNACHI – Inspection Fee Survey