5 Red Flags Before Inspection: What to Watch For During Your Remodel
Most homeowners assume the city inspector will catch anything seriously wrong with their remodel. That assumption is partly right — but it puts all the protection at the end of the process, when problems are hardest and most expensive to fix.
The best time to catch a red flag is before the inspector arrives. Here are five warning signs worth acting on immediately.
Red Flag #1: The Contractor Wants to Close Walls Before the Rough Inspection
This is the single most dangerous pattern in residential remodeling. Rough-in inspections exist for one reason: to review electrical, plumbing, and framing work while it is still visible. Once drywall goes up, that window is gone.
If a contractor tells you the inspector "can just check it at final" or pressures you to let them close up before the inspection is scheduled, stop work. A skipped rough inspection means concealed defects — missing nail plates, improper plumbing slope, unsupported duct runs, unapproved framing cuts — may not surface until something fails years later. At that point, fixing it means cutting open finished walls.
What to do: Ask for the inspection record before authorizing any work that will be covered. Passed rough inspection, then proceed.
Red Flag #2: The Contractor Says You Don't Need a Permit
Permit-less work means no staged inspections, no correction notices, no official record, and no legal close-out. For a homeowner, that creates three problems:
- Hidden defects stay hidden. Nobody reviews the work while it's open.
- Sale complications. Unpermitted work often surfaces in title searches or buyer inspections and can block a sale or force after-the-fact permits.
- Insurance exposure. A claim related to unpermitted work may be denied.
Some small repairs genuinely don't require permits. But if the scope involves electrical panels, structural changes, plumbing rough-in, HVAC, or additions, a permit is almost certainly required. If a contractor is discouraging you from pulling one, the most common reason is that they don't want an inspector reviewing their work.
What to do: Verify permit requirements directly with your local building department — not through your contractor.
Red Flag #3: The Same Trade Keeps Failing Inspection
One failed inspection is sometimes just incomplete work or a scheduling mistake. A pattern of failures on the same trade is different. It usually signals one of three things: the contractor doesn't understand the approved scope, they're rushing stages before they're ready, or the work itself doesn't comply.
Each failure means a reinspection. Each reinspection takes time. And each correction may involve ripping out work that was just installed. By the third failure on the same items, you're watching a process that has lost control.
Watch for these patterns on correction notices:
- The same items flagged repeatedly
- Work installed differently from the approved plans
- Inspections requested before visible stages are complete
What to do: Request copies of all correction notices in writing. Don't rely on a verbal summary from your contractor.
Red Flag #4: The Contractor Asks for Payment Before the Inspection Passes
Progress payments should follow verified progress. If the rough plumbing failed inspection, the rough plumbing milestone is not complete — regardless of how many hours were worked.
Paying a draw before the relevant inspection passes removes your only leverage at exactly the moment you need it most. Contractors sometimes frame this as a cash-flow issue or a matter of trust. It isn't. It's a contract control question. Work that hasn't been approved by an inspector hasn't been verified.
What to do: Review your contract's payment schedule. Tie draws to passed inspection milestones, not to calendar dates or hours worked.
Red Flag #5: Field Changes Don't Match the Approved Plans
Building permits are issued for a specific scope of work shown on approved drawings. When the field work changes — a beam size, a window location, a vent route, a structural opening — and those changes aren't reflected on revised plans, the inspector may not be able to approve the work at all.
Unapproved field changes are surprisingly common. A contractor makes a practical adjustment without flagging it. The inspector arrives and finds conditions that don't match the permit drawings. Now the homeowner faces a permit revision, possibly new engineering, and additional review time — plus a delayed project.
What to do: Before any scope change is made, ask whether it requires a plan revision or permit amendment. Get confirmation in writing.
Why This Matters Before the Inspector Arrives
Inspectors review a lot of projects with limited time on site. They catch what they can see on the day they visit. The homeowner who has been watching for red flags throughout construction — collecting correction notices, tracking inspection milestones, tying payments to approvals — is in a much stronger position than the one who shows up at final wondering what went wrong.
Permits and inspections are a layer of protection, not a guarantee. Use them actively.
Have a question about your specific project? Ask Jaspector — most questions answered within 24 hours.