Operations

Property Management Inspection Checklist: Move-In, Move-Out & Annual

March 7, 2026 · 15 min read · By PropertyCEO

Property inspections are your first line of defense against costly damage, liability claims, and security deposit disputes. Yet most property managers either skip inspections entirely, rush through them, or document them so poorly they're useless in a dispute.

A thorough, well-documented inspection protects the owner's investment, establishes tenant accountability, and gives you legal evidence if things go sideways. It's not optional — it's one of the most important things you do as a property manager.

Here's a complete property management inspection checklist for every type of inspection you'll conduct.

The Three Types of Property Inspections

💡 The move-in inspection is the most important document in any security deposit dispute. If you don't have a detailed, photo-documented move-in inspection, you'll lose nearly every dispute — regardless of the actual damage.

Move-In Inspection Checklist

Conduct this inspection with the tenant present when possible. Both parties should sign the completed report. Take photos of every room, every surface, every appliance — even if it looks perfect. "It looked fine" is not evidence. Photos are.

General — Every Room

For each room in the property, check and document:

Kitchen

Bathrooms

Exterior (If Applicable)

Systems

Move-Out Inspection Checklist

Conduct the move-out inspection within 24-48 hours of the tenant vacating. Use the same checklist as move-in, but now you're comparing against the move-in report.

The Comparison Process

  1. Print or open the move-in report — Go room by room, item by item.
  2. Note changes: For each item, document whether the condition is the same, better, or worse than move-in.
  3. Distinguish normal wear and tear from damage:
    • Normal wear: Faded paint, worn carpet in traffic areas, minor scuffs on walls, loose door handles from use
    • Tenant damage: Holes in walls, stained/burned carpet, broken fixtures, missing items, pet damage, unauthorized modifications
  4. Photograph everything: Take comparison photos from the same angles as move-in photos. Side-by-side documentation is powerful evidence.
  5. Estimate repair costs: Get vendor quotes for any damage that will be deducted from the security deposit.

Additional Move-Out Items

💡 Security deposit disputes are the #1 source of tenant lawsuits against property managers. A thorough, photo-documented move-in and move-out inspection is your best defense. Without it, courts typically rule in the tenant's favor.

Annual (Routine) Inspection Checklist

Annual inspections aren't about catching tenants doing something wrong. They're about identifying maintenance issues early before they become expensive problems. Frame it that way to tenants: "We're checking on the property's condition to make sure everything is working for you."

Notice Requirements

Most states require 24-48 hours written notice before entering a tenant's unit for a routine inspection. Check your state's landlord-tenant law. Include the date, time window, and purpose in your notice.

What to Look For

Safety & Compliance

Water Damage & Moisture

HVAC & Mechanical

Exterior (If Applicable)

Lease Compliance

Documentation Best Practices

The inspection is only as good as your documentation. Follow these rules:

Photography Guidelines

Inspection Software vs. Paper

Paper forms work but don't scale. Use inspection software for properties beyond 50 doors:

Report Distribution

Systematize Your Entire Operation

The Growth Playbook includes downloadable inspection templates, SOPs for every property management workflow, and the systems used by PMs managing 500+ doors.

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Inspection Frequency Guidelines

Common Inspection Mistakes

  1. Skipping the move-in inspection: This is the most expensive mistake in property management. Without a baseline, you can't prove anything at move-out.
  2. Not enough photos: "Walls in good condition" isn't evidence. 20 photos of the same wall from different angles is evidence.
  3. Not distinguishing wear from damage: Worn carpet in a hallway after 3 years is wear. A burn hole in the carpet is damage. Learn the difference or you'll lose every deposit dispute.
  4. Inconsistent scheduling: If you inspect some properties annually and others never, you're exposing yourself to liability. Be consistent.
  5. Not acting on findings: An inspection that identifies a leak but doesn't result in a repair is worse than no inspection — it's documented negligence.

Start Here

If you're not doing systematic inspections today, start with the basics:

  1. Implement move-in/move-out inspections immediately. Use the checklist above. Take photos. Get tenant signatures.
  2. Schedule annual inspections for all properties. Send notices, block time on your calendar, and get through your entire portfolio in the next 90 days.
  3. Get inspection software. zInspector starts at $10/month. It's the best ROI tool in property management.

Every inspection you conduct is insurance against disputes, liability, and costly surprises. The hour you spend inspecting a property today could save you thousands tomorrow.

Related reading: The Complete Property Management Checklist · Property Management Agreement Guide · How to Grow Your Property Management Business