Home inspections
TIPS provides TREC-licensed home inspections in North Texas.
This page is for home inspections in North Texas. TIPS provides TREC-licensed inspections and clear reporting that helps clients understand the home's condition and make the next move with more confidence.
This service is built for buyers, sellers, and owners who need a home inspection before making a purchase, listing, repair, or budgeting decision.
Option periods, pre-listing prep, owner updates, visible concerns, or any situation where a home inspection report is part of the decision.
This service is TREC-licensed in Texas and built to feel clear, direct, and useful from the first glance to the final report.
TIPS provides TREC-licensed home inspections in North Texas.
Useful for option periods, listing prep, and current owners who want a clearer read on the home's condition.
The goal is a clear report that helps the client move forward with a solid understanding of the home's condition.
The best home inspection conversations start with a little context so expectations, timing, and priorities are clear from the beginning.
Send the address and whether the inspection is tied to a purchase, listing, or general owner update.
Let TIPS know if the inspection needs to fit an option period, listing deadline, or another time-sensitive milestone.
Mention any visible issues, prior repairs, or questions you want included so the request has useful context from the start.
These are the decision points that tend to bring buyers, sellers, and owners to this page.
Used when a purchase decision depends on a home inspection and a usable picture of current condition.
Used when an owner or agent wants a home inspection before listing or negotiating around condition.
Used when a homeowner wants a home inspection before planning repairs, maintenance, or updates.
These answers help people understand fit without burying the page in unnecessary detail.
Yes. TIPS provides TREC-licensed home inspections in Texas.
Yes. A short explanation of the property and your goal is usually enough to start the conversation.
A good report should be clear, organized, and useful when it is time to make a decision, not padded with information that does not help.