Specialty Homes

4 Tips for Vacation Rental Inspections

More space and privacy. Flexible check-ins and outs. More amenities. Cost savings for longer stays and larger groups. Authentic local experiences. A chance to prepare your own meals. Kid and pet friendliness. These are just some of the reasons why travelers are opting for vacation rentals over hotels.

“There’s been a big shift in the vacation rental landscape,” said Danielle Finch of HomeToGo, a vacation rental site, in an interview with Forbes. “The majority of vacation homes now offer more standardized amenities, akin to what you would find in a hotel, while also providing a more personalized and authentic experience.”

As vacation homes increase in popularity among travelers, they also gain traction with investors. You may find yourself inspecting more properties buyers are purchasing not for themselves, but for visitors.

When doing vacation rental inspections, or inspections of homes buyers are purchasing with the intent to list as short-term rentals, your standards don’t change. You’re still performing a visual, non-invasive examination of the property’s systems and components. However, to provide a better service to your clients, it helps to consider that short-term rentals will be utilized more like hotels than homes.

“Think about how the property is being used,” said Nick Gromicko, founder of the International Association of Certified Home Inspectors (InterNACHI). “The person buying the property isn’t buying a home. They’re buying a business.”

Here are four tips to cater your inspections of vacation rentals.

1. Understand how travelers live differently.

When people vacation, they want to unwind. For many, that means practicing different etiquette or habits than they do at home.

“Maybe the deck is getting old. Normally, a homeowner doesn’t use their deck, pool, or hot tub very often. But all that is used constantly when the property’s an Airbnb,” Gromicko said.

Like amenities, appliances may work harder for vacationers, too. Owners and their cleaning staff have to clean between each visitor, which means lots of sheets and towels being laundered. Folks with longer stays are also more likely to do more dishes and wash more clothes when they pack lighter.

By understanding how travelers inhabit short-term rentals differently, you can make better recommendations during your vacation rental inspections. Let’s take Gromicko’s example of the aging deck. Without predicting the deck’s life expectancy (that’s outside your standards of practice), you can warn clients that the vacationers’ frequent use of the deck may result in it failing faster–particularly in moisture-rich areas where wet wood rot is common. You can then let them know what type of maintenance they may need to extend the deck’s life before it fails.

2. Pay special attention to safety.

One of the top reasons buyers get vacation rental home inspections is to discover what’s potentially unsafe in their future homes. For people buying short-term rentals, safety is an even bigger concern.

“As a business owner, they have a responsibility to their guests more so than to themselves. I mean, if your buyer falls off their own steps and sprains an ankle, it’s not as big a deal as if their renter does the same and sues because the steps were dangerous,” said Bert Hull of Knoxville Engineered Home Inspections in Tennessee on an InterNACHI forum.

A word of warning: Some standards of practice and home inspector insurance policies have exclusions for evaluations of safety alone as these are the jobs of safety inspectors, not home inspectors. When judging a system or component to be a risk to potential buyers and tenants, that safety concern must be connected to damage, deterioration, improper installation, or another tangible defect or deficiency within your inspection standards.

With vacation rental inspections Jeff Clark of Trident Inspection Group in California pays special attention to safety features, looking for things like:

  • Smoke and carbon monoxide detectors.
  • Water temperatures for scalding potential.
  • Anti-tip brackets on heavy appliances and furniture.
  • Emergency lighting.
  • Posted floor plan showing escape routes.

If Clark doesn’t see safety items like the ones above, he recommends the buyers invest in them.

3. Recommend fail-safes for seasonal or frequently vacant properties.

Inspecting a short-term rental property on the beach or by a ski resort? Such properties are likely to experience seasonality, which can lead to frequent vacancies. Vacant properties can experience additional problems like unidentified clogs or leaks. In older properties, cast iron waste lines underneath slabs can potentially crack, corrode, and rust during vacancies, Clark said.

When inspecting a short-term rental property that’s been vacant for a while, run more water to ensure there aren’t clogs or other types of damage. To help owners manage vacancies, let them know where the water shut off valves are. Also, encourage them to install flow meters and moisture detectors to alert them of leaks that occur while they’re away.

To upsell clients, Gromicko encourages vacation rental inspectors to offer home monitoring services in which inspectors periodically visit and monitor vacant homes to uncover and prevent potential damages. Be sure to obtain a signed agreement specific to the duties you’ll be performing prior to beginning your monitoring services. And double check that your insurance policy covers the tasks you plan to perform. Learn more about home monitoring here.

4. Suggest a maintenance plan or vacation rental inspection checklist.

As a home inspector, you’ve likely distributed your fair share of maintenance checklists to clients—either as an add-on to your reports or via tips on your social media profiles. As an additional form of customer service, Gromicko and Clark recommend a vacation rental maintenance guide, like this one from Lodgify

If you’re handing out vacation rental inspection checklists, don’t forget to add annual inspections! For extra credit, you can also call out potential long-term or maintenance costs the owner may experience based on your short-term vacation rental inspection findings.

Claims don’t take vacations.

Whether you’re inspecting a dreamy desert retreat in Arizona or a cozy alpine cabin in Colorado, we have the coverage you need. With perks like pre-claims assistance, model pre-inspection agreements, and deductible discounts, it doesn’t get better. 

Claims don’t take vacations, and neither should your insurance. Complete our 10-minute application to receive a free quote.

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Stephanie Jaynes

Marketing Director Stephanie Jaynes simplifies complex insurance and legal concepts to help home inspectors protect their livelihood and avoid unnecessary risk. Her articles have appeared in publications like the ASHI Reporter, CREIA Inspector Magazine, and the InspectorPro Blog. She’s been a guest on NACHI TV, Spectora Spotlight, The ASHI Online Learning Center, The Successful Home Inspector Podcast, Today’s Home Inspector, and the Home Inspection Authority Podcast. Stephanie received her Bachelor of Arts from Mills College with a major in creative writing and a minor in journalism. She has also earned her Certified Insurance Counselor (CIC) designation from The National Alliance for Insurance Education & Research. Outside of work, Stephanie enjoys trying new recipes and taking walks with her husband and sons.

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