What Should I Expect During the Inspection Process?
René Hauck’s Guide for Buyers in Plainfield and Avon, Indiana – Hendricks County
After your offer is accepted, the inspection is your opportunity to fully understand the home’s condition before closing. It’s a key step in protecting your investment — and having a REALTOR® who knows what to look for makes all the difference.
Why the Inspection Step Matters
Whether you’re buying a ranch in Plainfield’s Trailside subdivision or a two-story in Avon’s Auburn Meadows subdivision, a thorough inspection helps you make confident decisions before moving forward. It’s the buyer’s chance to assess the property’s major systems — structure, roof, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and foundation — and identify any safety or repair concerns.
Understanding Your Inspection Period
Your inspection period begins the day after both parties sign the purchase agreement and includes weekends and holidays. It ends at 11:59 PM on the final day, unless another time is specified. During this window, you’ll need to complete all inspections, review reports, and submit any repair requests or responses in writing. If no written response is made within this timeframe, the property is considered accepted as-is by default, meaning you waive your right to request repairs or cancel based on the inspection.
Scheduling and Attending Your Home Inspection
A standard home inspection in Hendricks County takes about two hours. I always recommend my clients attend or, at minimum, be there for the final 30 minutes. This time allows you to ask your inspector questions directly, see any issues in person, take room measurements, and start planning furniture placement or improvements. I make it a priority to attend the last portion of the inspection so I can see potential issues firsthand and help you evaluate what truly matters versus what’s routine maintenance.
What the Inspector Actually Does
Keep in mind, an inspection is visual, not invasive. Inspectors don’t move furniture, open walls, or guarantee the future performance of systems. Instead, they evaluate the home’s current condition — a snapshot in time. Inspectors are much like family physicians: they identify general concerns and recommend specialists such as HVAC technicians, roofers, or foundation experts when further evaluation is needed.
You’ll receive a detailed report — often 30+ pages long — that categorizes findings into sections such as Major Issues, Minor Repairs, Safety Concerns, and Maintenance Suggestions. Each company’s format varies slightly, but most include a summary highlighting what needs attention right away.
Understanding Defects in Indiana
Under Indiana law, a defect is a condition that significantly affects the value of the property, impairs the health or safety of occupants, or, if not repaired, would shorten or adversely affect the expected normal life of the home. Routine maintenance and minor repairs typically don’t qualify as defects, and previously disclosed issues can’t be used as grounds to terminate the contract.
When we review your inspection report together, our focus will be on items that affect safety or have a significant impact on value. I’ll help you separate normal wear-and-tear from true defects that should be negotiated with the seller.
Submitting Your Inspection Response
Once the report is ready, both you and I will receive a digital copy. We’ll go over each section and decide which items you’d like the seller to address. I’ll then prepare a Buyer Inspection Response form that outlines your requested repairs or credits for your review and signature.
If the seller declines to make certain repairs, you can either terminate the contract and request a mutual release or waive those items and proceed to closing. In some cases, sellers may offer credits instead of physical repairs, especially when closing timelines are tight.
What About Additional Testing?
Some buyers choose optional add-ons such as radon testing, pest or termite inspections, or well and septic evaluations for rural properties. These add modest cost but can prevent expensive surprises later. If you requested a radon test, allow an additional few days for results.
How to Get the Most from Your Inspection
Here’s how to make the most of your inspection process:
• Schedule early — inspectors book fast, especially during spring and summer.
• Review your report promptly so we can respond before the deadline.
• Ask questions during the inspection — it’s the best time to understand the home’s systems.
• Keep expectations realistic — every home has minor flaws; focus on the big picture.
• Budget for maintenance — even move-in ready homes require ongoing care.
No home is perfect. The goal isn’t to eliminate every imperfection — it’s to ensure you understand what you’re buying and negotiate fairly based on condition.
After the Inspection
Once negotiations wrap up, you’ll either move forward with agreed-upon repairs or a financial credit or release the inspection contingency and continue toward appraisal and closing. From there, your lender, title company, and I will coordinate the remaining steps until your final walk-through and closing day.
Final Thoughts
The inspection is one of the most important checkpoints when buying a home in Hendricks County. It’s your opportunity to learn about the property, protect your investment, and approach closing day with confidence. If you’re preparing to buy in Plainfield, Avon, or the surrounding Hendricks County communities, I’ll help you interpret reports, negotiate repairs, and meet every deadline — keeping your transaction smooth from start to finish.
Contact René Hauck, REALTOR® with RE/MAX Advanced Realty, for local expertise you can trust through every step of your home-buying journey.


