Smart Start Home Inspections

Home Inspection Glossary

Plain-English definitions for common home inspection terms, findings, systems, and buyer questions.

SmartStart OS Live
Home Inspection Glossary

How the workflow works

See the connected flow in plain English before you change anything in the business.

How to use this workflow

Simple instructions keep the next step obvious for inspectors, office staff, and buyers.

Independent home inspection guides for smarter buyers and homeowners.15 practical guides across buying, red flags, systems, and maintenance.13 support, policy, and glossary pages readers can reach in one click.
Smart Start Home InspectionsIndependent guides for smarter home decisions

Glossary

Home Inspection Glossary

Plain-English definitions help readers move through reports, walkthroughs, and repair discussions without getting stuck on jargon.

Editorial illustration for Glossary.

Inspection contingency

The contract window that lets a buyer inspect the home and renegotiate, request repairs, or walk away under the deal terms.

Deferred maintenance

Wear, neglect, or aging that did not happen overnight but can still turn into a bigger repair bill after move-in.

Active leak

Moisture that is still entering a system or room now, not just an old stain from a resolved event.

GFCI and AFCI

Safety devices that reduce shock or fire risk in specific outlets and circuits, especially in kitchens, baths, garages, and bedrooms.

Settlement vs movement

Settlement can be older and stable; active movement means the structure may still be shifting and needs closer review.

End of service life

A system can still be working today while being close enough to replacement age that the budget conversation changes now.

How to use Smart Start

Start with the page that matches your stage

  • Start with the article, checklist, or red flag that matches your actual stage instead of reading everything in order.
  • Use the buyer guides before the walkthrough, the issue guides after the report, and the maintenance pages after move-in.
  • Treat the ebook and checklist pages as tools that extend the guides, not as replacements for the education itself.
  • Keep the final walkthrough, glossary, and support pages close so you can verify terms, timing, and next steps quickly.