Why Home Inspectors Don’t Cite Code — And Why “Standards” Still Matter
Homebuyers often ask why home inspectors don't cite code in their inspection report. Some inspectors ask the same thing, especially since so much of their training is based on code. The answer is simple: Texas home inspectors are trained with code principles, but they are required to inspect using the TREC Standards of Practice (SOP), not enforce building codes. Understanding this distinction helps buyers make better decisions and helps inspectors write clearer, more valid reports.
What Building Codes Are (and Why They Matter)
Building codes are minimum safety rules for how homes must be built, covering structure, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and fire protection. Most come from the International Code Council (ICC), which publishes model codes like the IRC, IPC, IECC and NEC.Codes evolve every three years as engineers, builders, and safety experts update them based on new research and real‑world failures. The State, Counties and Cities are then free to adopt these codes into law, often on different cycles and with amendments.This means a home built in 1998 may have been perfectly compliant then, even if it wouldn’t meet today’s standards. This variability is one of the reasons home inspectors don’t cite code.
Why Texas Inspectors Don’t Cite Code
1. TREC’s SOP not the code book is the legal requirement
Inspectors are licensed by the State just like electricians, plumbers, HVAC contractors and others. As such, they must report defects based on performance, safety, and function. The SOP is a consumer‑protection document, not a construction standard. It requires inspectors to identify·
· Deficiencies,
· Unsafe conditions,
· Items not performing as intended.
It never requires determining code compliance.
2. Inspectors are not code officials
Only the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) can enforce code. Citing code can imply authority the inspector does not have.
3. Code varies by city and by year
Without knowing the exact code cycle in effect when the home was built, citing code becomes unreliable and potentially misleading.
4. Reports must be consumer‑friendly
TREC requires clear, plain‑language reporting. Code citations are technical and confusing for most buyers.
Why Inspectors Still Learn Code
Even though inspectors don’t enforce code, code knowledge is the backbone of understanding how systems should perform. It helps inspectors recognize unsafe or improper conditions and explain why something matters, all without stepping into enforcement.
Inspectors translate code‑based understanding into TREC‑compliant language such as:
· “Not performing as intended”,
· “Does not meet current safety standards”
· “May pose a hazard”
This keeps reports accurate, valid, and easy for buyers to understand.
What This Means for Homebuyers
You get a report focused on safety, function, and performance, not legal jargon. You don’t need to interpret code books. Instead, you get actionable guidance when a good inspector tells you:
· What the issue is,
· Why it matters,
· What the next step should be
What This Means for Inspectors
You stay within your legal scope of the SOP, communicate clearly, and still demonstrate deep technical knowledge rooted in modern building standards.
Final Thoughts
Texas home inspectors walk a unique line: trained with code‑based principles but required to report using TREC’s consumer‑focused Standards of Practice. This balance protects homebuyers while keeping inspectors within their legal scope.
When you see the phrase “does not meet current standards,” it’s not a dodge, it’s the correct, compliant, and professional way to communicate a defect.




