Learn what 4-point inspection insurance requires, why it matters for older homes, and how it affects your coverage and premiums.
Table of Contents
- What's a 4-Point Inspection?
- What Does a 4-Point Inspection Cover?
- 4-Point Inspection vs. Full Home Inspection
- How to Prepare for Your 4-Point Inspection
- Florida-Specific Requirements and Regulations
- Impact on Homeowners Insurance
- Common 4-Point Inspection Findings and Red Flags
- 4-Point Inspection Costs and Timeline
- How to Choose a Qualified 4-Point Inspector
- Benefits of Getting a 4-Point Inspection
- What Happens After the Inspection
- Conclusion
- Frequently Asked Questions
Buying or refinancing an older home—especially anything built before 1980—puts you in a different game. Your insurance company won't budge without a 4-point inspection for insurance purposes. Homes over 25–30 years old? That's basically mandatory in most states now. And here's what matters: you either understand this process or you're leaving money on the table with delayed closings and rejected policies. For real estate investors and agents, this isn't a nice-to-have. It's the backbone of deal velocity and portfolio health.

What's a 4-Point Inspection?
Definition and Purpose
A 4-point inspection zeros in on four critical systems: roof, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC. That's it. Unlike a full home inspection that covers dozens of components, this is laser-focused on the systems most likely to tank your underwriting or spike your premiums — water damage, fires, structural failures tied to age or decay.
Here's what matters: the report becomes part of your insurance application. It directly determines whether you get approved, what you'll pay, and what exclusions show up on your policy. And don't confuse this with a complete property assessment. You still need a full investor insurance review and standard home inspection for the full picture of what you're actually buying.
Why Insurance Companies Require Them
Carriers live and die by risk assessment. Homes north of 25 years old carry documented higher claims rates — outdated electrical panels, aging roofs, polybutylene or galvanized plumbing, HVAC systems running on borrowed time. A 4-point gives underwriters hard, third-party proof of those risks.
Without it? They won't touch your deal. Most carriers won't even look at older properties blind. And with the insurance crisis heading into 2026, underwriting standards have tightened substantially.
Who Needs a 4-Point Inspection
You'll need one if any of this applies:
- Your home is 25 years old or older (some carriers set the threshold at 30 or 40 years)
- You're applying for a new homeowners insurance policy
- You're renewing a policy on a property that hasn't been recently inspected
- You're purchasing a property with a mortgage that requires insurance binders
- You're in Florida, where Citizens Insurance and many private carriers mandate it
If you're buying older rental properties or fix-and-flip projects, expect this routinely. It's table stakes when you're running the numbers using the 70 percent rule on acquisition decisions.
Back to topWhat Does a 4-Point Inspection Cover?

| System | Key Components Inspected | Common Red Flags | Typical Age Concerns |
|---|---|---|---|
| Roof | Materials, condition, age, visible damage, flashing | Missing shingles, active leaks, improper repairs, sagging | Shingles over 20 years; flat roofs over 10–15 years |
| Electrical | Panel type, amperage, wiring type, breakers, GFCI presence | Aluminum wiring, Federal Pacific/Zinsco panels, knob-and-tube, double-tapped breakers | Panels over 25–30 years; wiring pre-1970 |
| Plumbing | Pipe materials, water heater age/condition, visible leaks, drain conditions | Polybutylene pipes, galvanized steel, active leaks, water heater over 15 years | Galvanized pipes 40+ years; polybutylene installed pre-1995 |
| HVAC | Unit age, condition, type, filters, visible ductwork, functionality | Units over 15–20 years, missing service records, improper installation | Heat pumps and AC units over 15 years; furnaces over 20 years |
Here's the thing: inspectors look at these systems visually. They're not tearing into walls or doing destructive testing. What they document is what they can actually see and reach — so if you want accurate results, make sure all four systems are accessible before the inspector shows up. Otherwise you're flying blind on major rehab costs.
Back to top4-Point Inspection vs. Full Home Inspection

These two inspections do completely different jobs. Mix them up and you'll regret it — fast.
| Feature | 4-Point Inspection | Full Home Inspection |
|---|---|---|
| Systems covered | 4 (roof, electrical, plumbing, HVAC) | 200+ components across all systems |
| Scope | Limited, insurance-focused | Full buyer/seller protection |
| Time required | 30–60 minutes | 2–4 hours |
| Average cost | $75–$150 | $300–$600+ |
| Insurance requirement | Yes — required by carriers | No — optional but highly recommended |
| Best used for | Insurance underwriting, policy renewal | Purchase decisions, negotiations, full due diligence |
Here's what matters: a 4-point inspection won't make or break your investment decision. It answers one question — can an insurer write a policy on this property? That's it. It doesn't tell you if the foundation's failing, if there's hidden water damage in the walls, or if you're walking into a money pit.
And that's why you need a full inspection on every acquisition. Pair that with AI-powered due diligence platforms that flag systemic risks. You'll catch problems before you submit an offer — and that's when you've got leverage.
Back to topHow to Prepare for Your 4-Point Inspection

Pre-Inspection Checklist
- Locate and clear access to the electrical panel (remove items blocking it)
- Ensure attic access hatch is functional and accessible
- Clear the path to the water heater and main plumbing shut-offs
- Confirm the HVAC unit is operational and filters are accessible
- Secure any pets and ensure someone is present to grant roof/attic access
Documentation to Gather
Here's the reality: having permits and records ready can swing a borderline assessment in your favor. It's not optional if you're serious about portfolio protection.
- Roof permits and installation records (especially if recently replaced)
- HVAC service records and installation date
- Plumbing upgrade permits (critical if pipes were replaced)
- Electrical panel upgrade permits
- Previous inspection reports
Inspectors report only what they see. But you know what they can't see? The timeline of your upgrades. That's where documentation comes in. A permit showing you replaced 80% of the electrical panel last year? That changes the narrative. And don't overlook the bigger picture — this documentation discipline ties directly into your asset protection strategy across your entire portfolio.
Back to topFlorida-Specific Requirements and Regulations
Want to work in Florida? Get ready for 4-point inspections. Hurricanes, humidity, and a housing stock that's aging fast have collided with a brutal insurance market. The result? Nearly every home 30+ years old now needs a 4-point inspection to qualify for coverage through Citizens Property Insurance Corporation or any private carrier worth its salt in the state.
And here's the thing—Citizens doesn't just accept any form. They require a specific standardized document: the Citizens 4-Point Inspection Form. Only licensed Florida inspectors can complete it. That means a Licensed Home Inspector (LHI), General Contractor, Building Inspector, Engineer, or Architect. The form gets updated regularly, and using an outdated version? That's a silent deal-killer that'll delay your closing by weeks. Each system needs documented age, materials, and any visible deficiencies.
Permit requirements in Florida aren't suggestions.
Say a roof was replaced without a permit on your 40-year-old investment property. The inspector can't verify the materials or workmanship, so Citizens treats it as the original roof—meaning you're looking at a roof that's functionally 40 years old in their eyes. That kills insurability and tanks your exit strategy. Don't let this happen. Pull permits on every single Florida property before you close.
Back to topImpact on Homeowners Insurance

Here's the real deal: your 4-point inspection results directly move the needle on your insurance premium. Pass with flying colors — newer systems, no red flags — and you're looking at standard market rates. But show aging or problematic systems? That's when insurers get creative with penalties.
- Coverage exclusions (e.g., plumbing not covered due to polybutylene pipes)
- Higher deductibles on specific systems
- Policy denial requiring remediation before coverage is issued
- 30/60/90-day notices to repair or replace flagged systems
- Non-renewal on existing policies pending improvements
Want to flip this dynamic? Proactively upgrade. A new roof, fresh electrical panel, copper plumbing instead of that old polybutylene — these moves don't just pass inspection. They slash premiums by 15–30%. Now multiply that across a 20-property portfolio. Those savings add up fast.
And here's what most investors miss: this isn't just about one deal. Understanding how inspection results drive insurance costs is foundational to your entire investment thesis. That's exactly why you need a solid grasp of full real estate investor insurance strategy.

Common 4-Point Inspection Findings and Red Flags
| Severity Level | Description | Typical Examples | Impact on Insurance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pass | All systems in acceptable condition | Roof under 15 years, updated panel, copper plumbing, newer HVAC | Standard coverage at normal rates |
| Minor Issues | Systems functional but aging or with small deficiencies | Roof at 15–20 years, HVAC over 12 years, older but functional water heater | Coverage may be issued with notes; watch list for renewal |
| Major Issues | Systems with significant risk factors requiring attention | Roof over 20 years, Federal Pacific panel, galvanized pipes, HVAC 20+ years | Coverage conditioned on repairs; exclusions applied; higher premium |
| Fail | Systems present immediate risk or are non-functional | Active roof leak, knob-and-tube wiring, polybutylene pipes throughout, no HVAC | Policy denial pending remediation; may require re-inspection |
Here's what kills deals most often: Federal Pacific Stab-Lok electrical panels (straight-up fire hazard), polybutylene plumbing (fails constantly and you'll find it in just about every home built between 1978 and 1995), and roofs pushing 20–25 years. Want to avoid lowball offers later? Catch these during inspection and plug the remediation costs into your analysis upfront.
Back to top4-Point Inspection Costs and Timeline
| Region/State | Average Cost | Price Range | Factors Affecting Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Florida | $100 | $75–$150 | High demand, standardized form, competitive market |
| Southeast (GA, SC, NC) | $125 | $100–$175 | Growing requirement, moderate inspector availability |
| Northeast (NY, NJ, CT) | $175 | $125–$250 | Higher labor costs, older housing stock |
| National Average | $130 | $75–$250 | Location, inspector credentials, property size |
Here's what you're looking at for the actual inspection: 30 to 60 minutes on-site. Most inspectors turn around reports within 24–48 hours now, and they're usually digital with photos included. That matters because carriers accept them without pushback.
Need a re-inspection after you've knocked out repairs? Budget another $50–$100. And if you're stacking a wind mitigation inspection on top of the 4-point (which you probably should in Florida), you're hitting $150–$250 combined for both inspections.
Back to topHow to Choose a Qualified 4-Point Inspector

Here's the reality: not every inspector clears every carrier's underwriting. You need to vet them before you book.
- Florida license (if applicable): Licensed Home Inspector (LHI) number required
- Certifications: InterNACHI or ASHI membership signals training standards
- Carrier acceptance: Confirm your specific carrier accepts the inspector's credentials
- Turnaround time: 24–48 hours is standard; anything longer can delay closings
- Digital reports: Ensure they provide photo documentation, not just written descriptions
When you call an inspector, ask them straight up: "Do you use the current Citizens form?" and "Have you had reports rejected by carriers?" Watch for red flags. If they can't name their report format off the top of their head, that's a problem. Same with inspectors offering suspiciously low pricing or pushing you toward a specific outcome. And don't overlook turnaround time — a 72-hour report kills your closing timeline.
Building a solid inspector network isn't glamorous. But it's essential infrastructure. Think of it the same way you'd build a CRM system to manage your deal pipeline — it scales with your portfolio and keeps deals moving without friction.
Back to topBenefits of Getting a 4-Point Inspection
Yeah, insurance requires it. But there's way more to gain here than just checking a box.
- Deal clarity: You'll know exactly what you're buying before you close. No post-purchase shock when the HVAC dies in month two.
- Negotiation use: A failed or borderline report gives you leverage. You can drop your offer and justify every penny of it.
- Insurance cost savings: Document those upgrades — new roof, updated electrical, whatever — and your annual premiums can drop by $300, $500, sometimes more.
- Faster closings: Have the report locked in before you need it. No carrier delays. No waiting around at the finish line.
- Portfolio management: Catch systems before they crater. Regular inspections tell you which units are five years from needing a $15K HVAC replacement.
- Marketability: When you're ready to exit, a clean 4-point report is money in your pocket. Buyers and lenders both want to see it.
Agents especially need to get ahead of this. Order a pre-listing 4-point on any older home and you'll dodge one of the most common deal-killers in aging markets — the insurance red flag that tanks financing at closing. It's preventable. It's fixable. Don't let it happen to you.
Back to topWhat Happens After the Inspection
Your inspection report lands in your lap. Now what? It depends on what the inspector found. Pass the inspection? Great—that report heads straight to your insurer as part of your application. But if there are major findings, you've got three moves: fix the issues before you apply, apply anyway and eat the exclusions or higher premiums, or push back if you think the inspector got it wrong.
Want to dispute a finding? Here's how you win. Dig up documentation—permits, contractor invoices, photos—anything that proves the inspector's assessment is off base. Send this ammunition to the inspector (request a report amendment) and simultaneously to your carrier's underwriting team. They have appeal processes for exactly this reason, and they'll sometimes reverse a finding if you bring the receipts. Roof age disputes are the classic example. A permit showing you replaced the roof two years ago? That'll override an inspector's guess every single time.
Once you've fixed things, get that re-inspection scheduled immediately. And don't sleep on this—most carriers give you only 30–90 days to complete repairs. Juggling these deadlines across multiple properties is where real estate accounting and management software actually saves you money. Miss a deadline and you're looking at a policy cancellation.
Back to topConclusion
A 4-point inspection for insurance purposes is compact. But it's high-stakes. You're looking at property condition, insurability, and investment value all wrapped into one report that'll either clear the path forward or throw a wrench in your entire deal timeline. For real estate investors and agents grinding it out in older markets—especially Florida and the broader Southeast—this matters more than you might think. Know what inspectors are actually looking for. Understand what their findings really mean for your coverage options. And nail the preparation stage.
The cost to run one? Minimal. Maybe $300 to $500 depending on your market. But the ripple effects hit hard—insurance premiums can swing thousands of dollars annually, deal timelines compress or explode, and your negotiating position either strengthens or crumbles based on what that report says.
Here's what separates smart investors from the rest: they don't treat the 4-point inspection like a bureaucratic checkbox. They treat it like an intelligence-gathering tool. It informs smarter acquisitions. It's your roadmap to more profitable exits.
Back to topFrequently Asked Questions
How long is a 4-point inspection valid for insurance purposes?
Here's the thing: most carriers will accept a 4-point that's 3 to 5 years old, but some—especially for aging stock—demand a fresh one at renewal. Florida Citizens? They'll take reports up to 5 years old on homes under 50 years, though older properties might need something more recent. Before you submit an application, call your carrier and ask exactly what they need.
Can a seller provide a 4-point inspection report, or does the buyer need to order a new one?
Technically, you can use a seller's report if it's current and came from a carrier-approved inspector. But here's what actually happens in the field: most buyers and their agents order their own anyway. Why? It protects them. And if the seller upgraded systems since that inspection was done, a new report catches those improvements—which can mean better coverage terms.
What happens if I can't get insurance because of a failed 4-point inspection?
Failed the inspection? Don't panic. You've got real options here.
Fix the issues, reapply to standard carriers. Or go to your state's insurer of last resort—like Florida Citizens—which has more relaxed criteria on certain rejections. Surplus lines carriers are another path for higher-risk properties, but know this: they'll run you 20–50% above standard market rates. This is exactly why you flag insurability red flags during due diligence, before you close and get stuck holding the bag.
Do 4-point inspections apply to commercial real estate as well?
No—this is a residential play. 4-points apply to 1–4 unit properties only. Commercial and larger multifamily assets need property condition assessments (PCAs) or environmental studies instead, depending on what the lender or carrier wants. Some insurers do use similar underwriting on small commercial, but you've got to verify with them directly.
Can I perform a 4-point inspection myself to save money?
Not a chance. Carriers demand a licensed, independent professional—home inspector, licensed contractor, engineer, or architect, depending on your state. Your own assessment means nothing to underwriters. And honestly? A professional runs you $75–$100, so there's zero financial incentive to try DIY here anyway. All you'd do is delay your application.
Back to top