Real Estate Providers

The property inspection providers indexed at this domain cover licensed and credentialed inspection service providers operating across the United States. Each entry reflects a distinct firm or sole practitioner within the residential and commercial property inspection sector. The scope, data fields, and verification status of verified entries are described below to support accurate use by service seekers, real estate professionals, and researchers navigating the Property Inspection Network.


How to read an entry

Each provider presents structured data organized into fixed fields rather than free-form promotional text. The entry format is designed to support comparison across providers without requiring subjective interpretation.

A standard entry displays the following fields in order:

  1. Business name — The registered trade name or DBA under which the firm operates.
  2. License number and issuing state authority — Where the state mandates inspector licensing, the relevant credential number is displayed alongside the name of the issuing agency (e.g., the Texas Real Estate Commission under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1102, or the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation under 225 ILCS 441).
  3. Service type classification — Entries are classified as one of three types: residential general inspection, commercial property inspection, or specialty inspection (which includes categories such as mold assessment, radon testing, sewer scoping, and thermal imaging).
  4. Geographic service area — Defined at the county or metropolitan statistical area level, not by a radius estimate.
  5. Certifications held — Third-party credentials such as those issued by the American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) or the International Association of Certified Home Inspectors (InterNACHI) are verified separately from state licenses.
  6. Contact information — Business phone and website address only.

Entries for residential general inspectors differ from commercial property inspectors in one significant structural way: commercial entries may carry additional credentials under ASTM International Standard E2018, the standard guide for baseline property condition assessments, whereas residential entries reference state licensing thresholds and ASHI or InterNACHI certification standards. These two tracks are not interchangeable; an inspector credentialed only under a residential state license does not carry implied qualification to conduct ASTM E2018-compliant assessments.


What providers include and exclude

Providers are confined to property inspection services as defined within the scope described at the purpose and scope reference page. The provider network does not list:

The provider dataset does include inspection firms that operate in states with no mandatory licensing requirement. As of the National Center for Healthy Housing's tracking, 30 U.S. states maintained some form of mandatory home inspector licensing as of 2022; the remaining states permit unlicensed practice. Entries for firms in unlicensed states are marked with a field indicating "No state license required — voluntary certification only," and any held third-party credentials are displayed in that context.


Verification status

Entries carry one of three verification status labels:

Verification is performed against publicly accessible state licensing portals, including those maintained by agencies such as the Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC), the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), and the Virginia Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR). Entries are not legal certifications of any kind; verification status reflects only whether a stated license number matched a public record at the time of last review.

For further detail on how to interpret and use provider data accurately, see the resource usage reference page.


Coverage gaps

The property inspection providers dataset does not achieve complete national coverage across all 50 states at equal density. Known structural gaps include:

Coverage is an ongoing operational matter. Data quality in any provider network of licensed service professionals is constrained by the update frequency of underlying state agency databases, the participation rate of firms in voluntary markets, and the structural variation in how 50 separate licensing regimes define, classify, and publish credential records.