Home inspection franchise owner reviewing a digital report in a client’s living room
Inspections Over Coffee — Home Inspection Franchise FAQ
Inspections Over Coffee®

Home Inspection Franchise FAQ

Straight answers on earning potential, startup costs, territories, training, and how our coffee-powered systems help you scale.

Profitability

Is the Home Inspection Business Profitable in the U.S.?

Yes. Most inspectors earn roughly $60k–$90k per year, with higher upside as you add services and build referral networks. Fees tend to be higher in high-demand states (e.g., CA/NY) and lower in value-oriented markets (e.g., TN/KY).

Investment

How Much Does a Home Inspection Franchise Cost in the U.S.?

Expect $40k–$70k depending on territory size and support. High-transaction states like TX or FL can accelerate payback; smaller markets require steadier referral building. Our systems are designed to maximize ROI in any region.

Startups

Can I Start My Own Home Inspection Company?

Yes—many states require licensing, plus insurance, marketing, and operations. Franchising accelerates the ramp-up. Competitive states (e.g., CA) reward brand strength; less saturated states (e.g., TN) reward local presence.

Red Flags

What Is the Biggest Red Flag in a Home Inspection?

Structural/foundation defects and roof failures carry the highest repair risk. Regions add nuances: FL—water intrusion/storm damage; Midwest—freeze/thaw foundation issues. Training + regional expertise = better protection for clients.

Revenue

Is There Money in Home Inspections?

Typical fees run $350–$600 per inspection (often $700+ in CA; ~$300 in some TN markets). Add-ons—radon, mold, sewer scopes—can add $100–$300 each and materially lift revenue per job.

Licensing

Do You Need a License to Be a Home Inspector?

About 30 states require licensing (e.g., TX/NY require education, exams, CE). Others (e.g., CO) currently do not. We guide franchisees through state-specific requirements to stay compliant.

Reality Check

Downsides of Being a Home Inspector?

Liability risk, physical demands, and some weekends. Higher-cost states can mean higher liability; lower-fee states may require more volume. Insurance, training, and solid systems mitigate these.

High Earners

What Type of Inspectors Earn the Most?

Multi-service operators (radon, sewer, thermal, commercial). In CA/NY, packaged services often push income past six figures; smaller markets may rely on more add-ons to match revenue.

Career Value

Is Becoming a Home Inspector Worth It?

For flexibility + independence, yes. U.S. average sits near $70k with top operators exceeding $100k. High-value states yield higher fees; value markets offer lower startup cost and competition.

Top Pay

What Is the Top Pay for a Home Inspector?

Roughly $100k–$150k+ for owners who run efficient operations and multiple services. Smaller states may cap closer to ~$80k unless you diversify and scale.

Upsells

How Can Inspectors Make Extra Money?

Add radon, mold, sewer scopes, energy audits—often +$100–$300 each. In high-fee markets, total ticket can exceed $1,000 with add-ons.

Agents vs Inspectors

Do Inspectors Make More Than Real Estate Agents?

Sometimes. Agents are commission-based and can out-earn inspectors in hot markets; inspectors enjoy steadier per-job fees even when sales cool.

Growth

Is Home Inspecting a Growing Field?

Yes—growth tracks real estate activity. TX and FL show strong opportunity; smaller states rely more on relationships and community referrals.

Geography

What State Pays the Most?

Higher averages: CA, NY, MA (often $600+ per inspection). Lower averages: TN, KY, AL (~$300). Profitability still depends on ops and services—not price alone.

Appraisers

Inspectors or Appraisers—Who Earns More?

Both average ~$60k–$80k. Inspectors typically earn more per hour due to faster job turnover; top appraisers in high-value states may edge higher.

Lifestyle

Do Inspectors Have Good Work–Life Balance?

Generally yes. Most complete 1–3 jobs/day with flexible scheduling. Peak seasons (e.g., CA) run longer days; slower markets run lighter—often with lower income.

Insurance

Do Inspectors Need Insurance?

Yes—General Liability + E&O. Typical range: ~$750–$1,500/yr depending on coverage and state risk profile.

Capacity

How Many Homes per Day?

Commonly 1–3, depending on size, add-ons, and drive time. Dense metros (CA/NY) often support more; rural markets may do fewer due to distance.

Risk

What Are the Risks?

Liability claims, physical strain, and exposure to hazards (mold/asbestos). Higher-cost states increase claim severity—insurance and thorough reporting reduce exposure.

Self-Employment

Can I Work for Myself?

Absolutely. Large states are more competitive (franchising helps); smaller markets reward local relationships. Franchising provides brand, systems, and training to stabilize growth.

Premiums

How Much Is Home Inspection Insurance?

About $750–$1,500/year on average; higher in high-risk states. Coverage typically includes GL and E&O to protect you and your clients.

Insurance Inspectors

What Not to Say to a Home Insurance Inspector?

Avoid guessing, downplaying, or exaggerating issues. Stick to facts to prevent coverage disputes—critical in high-risk states (e.g., FL storms).

Carriers

Which Insurance Companies Don’t Require Inspections?

Some waive inspections for newer homes or small policies (more common in lower-risk, lower-cost states). High-risk states (CA/FL) usually require them; waivers can mean limited coverage or higher premiums.

Lawsuits

Why Do Inspectors Get Sued?

Alleged misses on major defects (foundation, roof, mold). High-cost states see larger claims. Strong SOPs, photos, and E&O are your shield.

Eligibility

What Disqualifies You from Being an Inspector?

State-specific: certain convictions, unmet licensing standards, or lack of insurance. Stricter states (e.g., TX/NY); more lenient states (e.g., TN). We guide candidates through requirements.

Demographics

What Is the Average Age of a U.S. Home Inspector?

Mid-50s on average—many enter as a second career from construction, engineering, or real estate. Younger cohorts are growing in fast-growth states.

Inspections Over Coffee — Franchise Details

How much does an Inspections Over Coffee franchise cost?
Our tiered franchise fee aligns with city size: $7,797–$14,397. Smaller towns aren’t overcharged; larger cities reflect greater marketing potential. Your exact figure appears in Exhibit M of the FDD.
What’s included in that fee?
Your legal franchise license, a launch-ready branded website, Google Business Profile setup, CRM + automations, inspection software, industry-specific AI tools, and onboarding/training with year-one business & marketing support.
Is the fee negotiable?
No. It’s fixed by tier for fairness and compliance. We do offer programmatic incentives: $600 discount for pay-in-full and $1,000 for qualifying veterans/first responders—standardized and disclosed.
What if my city grows or shrinks?
Your tier locks at signing based on current census/third-party data. No retroactive adjustments.
Can I upgrade territory later?
Yes. You can add adjacent or new markets via a new agreement and fee; your original market remains intact. Multi-market operators benefit from cross-referrals and shared marketing.
How is territory defined?
You receive a Market Visibility Zone (MVZ)—exclusive marketing rights within a defined city/radius. We limit overlap to avoid intra-brand competition while allowing you to serve clients outside the MVZ when it makes sense.
What are royalties and ongoing costs?
A flat monthly royalty by population tier (no % of sales). Year 1: no platform/marketing fee. From Year 2: a Performance Marketing & Platform Fee funds SEO, CRM, and automation so the system keeps compounding.
What training and support do I get?
Hybrid training: self-paced modules, live coaching, and optional ride-alongs/regional events. We cover methodology, sales, marketing, AI/automation, and operations—with support beyond launch.
Do I need a license first?
Not always. Requirements vary by state; we map your path and help you complete licensing quickly and correctly.
What tech is included?
Website, CRM, email/SMS automations, inspection/reporting software, AI tools, and optimized local listings—maintained and upgraded centrally.
Can I bring my own tech?
No. Standardization protects performance and supportability. We iterate the stack based on operator feedback and roll improvements system-wide.
What if I sell, renew, or exit?
Transfers are permitted with approval and training for the buyer (standard transfer fee). Renewals are optional with updated terms. A defined 3-year buyout clause may apply for early exits if you’re in good standing—see your agreement.
Can I run this part-time?
Many owners start part-time. Automation reduces admin, but growth follows involvement—the more you engage, the faster you scale.

General Franchise FAQ (Beyond Our Brand)

Can I negotiate a franchise agreement?
Usually limited. Systems favor uniform contracts for compliance. Experienced counsel may secure addenda around territory clarity, renewals, or transfers—don’t expect sweeping rewrites.
Why do some franchisors skip Item 19 earnings?
Liability and data variation. Without robust, supportable numbers, many omit FPRs. Your best insight comes from validation calls with current (and former) owners.
What does “mutual evaluation” really mean?
Both parties are vetting fit. You assess training, support, values, and transparency; the franchisor checks capital, coachability, and brand protection.
What if the franchisor goes bankrupt?
In Ch.11, operations may continue under court oversight; in Ch.7, assets (including your license) may be sold. Read Item 4 and ask contingency questions.
Why pay royalties if I’m not profitable?
Royalties are tied to revenue, not margin—funding brand and platform. Some systems offer early “royalty holidays”; ask before you sign.
Why is territory language vague?
Flexibility and legal protection. Demand maps/ZIPs and ensure the agreement matches all promises.
Do I own my customers?
Typically, the franchisor owns the data/IP. Understand CRM control, marketing permissions, and what transfers at exit.
Can the franchisor change fees or standards later?
Often within defined ranges. Expect vendor, tech, and standard updates to protect brand performance.
How do I validate well?
Call a range of owners (new, mature, multi-unit, and alumni). Ask about worst months, support responsiveness, and whether they’d repurchase.
Still deciding? Book a franchise call and we’ll map the path—from licensing to your first 100 inspections.