Real Estate Roof Inspection Checklist for Maryland & Virginia
A general home inspector's 10-15 minute roof check is not enough for a real estate transaction. A HAAG-certified 60-90 minute forensic inspection produces an attestation letter the lender, insurer, and closing attorney will accept, supports price negotiation when defects exist, and protects the buyer from inheriting an undisclosed problem.
A real estate transaction is the wrong place to discover a hidden roof problem. The general home inspector's brief roof check is built for visible issues, not the forensic ones a HAAG-certified inspector catches: sealant bond failure, decking moisture, attic ventilation non-compliance, flashing fatigue, fastener back-out. This checklist walks Maryland and Virginia buyers through the 12 items to verify before signing, sellers through the 5 documents to assemble before listing, agents through the 5 curb red flags that warrant escalation, and everyone through how a JDH forensic inspection integrates with FHA/VA loan certification and insurance carrier policy issuance.
Jim Dodson
Owner, JDH Remodeling · HAAG Master Certified Inspector #992109047
I have spent 39 years on Maryland and Virginia roofs, the last 21 under JDH's roof. The HAAG Master Level credential I hold (cert #992109047) is recognized by lenders, insurance carriers, FHA, and VA. That credential is also why JDH's inspection report carries enough weight at the negotiating table that real-estate agents in MD/VA routinely request it before listing or before contingency closes. I wrote this guide because the wrong roof inspection at the wrong moment kills more deals than asking price, and the right one accelerates them. See JDH's forensic inspection process for what we actually deliver on a pre-transaction inspection.
I am not paid by any manufacturer to recommend their product. Every brand example in this guide is from JDH's installed portfolio: Owens Corning roofing, ProVia entry and storm doors, James Hardie fiber-cement siding, VELUX skylights, and Leaf Relief gutter protection.
The HAAG Master credential is the same one held by the majority of insurance adjusters and warranty-claims field inspectors. That is what makes this guide actionable: every loophole and rider below is the language manufacturers and adjusters use when they evaluate a warranty claim on a Maryland or Virginia roof.
What to verify, document, or flag - by role - before any MD or VA real estate closing
Read these in order. They are the same seven conversations a HAAG-certified inspector has with a homeowner at the kitchen table before any contract gets signed or any shingle gets ordered.
Why a general home inspector's roof check is not enough for a real estate transaction
Most home inspectors spend 10 to 15 minutes on the roof. Some use binoculars from the ground. Some do a brief drone overflight. A few walk it. None of those approaches matches what a HAAG-certified forensic inspector does in 60 to 90 minutes, and the gap matters most in exactly the transactions where money is changing hands.
What a general inspection covers
Visible exterior condition. Obvious missing or damaged shingles. Surface debris. Visible flashing condition at penetrations the inspector can see. A note on roof age if the seller disclosed one. That is the deliverable. It is appropriate for a quick condition assessment; it is not adequate for a 30-year asset that will pass through multiple parties.
What a HAAG-certified forensic inspection adds
Hand-lift sealant bond testing at multiple shingle locations. Moisture-meter readings on decking through the attic. Net-free vent area calculation against manufacturer warranty specifications. Photographic and video documentation of every penetration's flashing condition. Application of the PCC Method (Problem, Cause, Consequence) to each finding. Delivery of the report before the inspector leaves the property, formatted for adjuster, lender, and insurer review.
Why this matters at closing
Both Maryland and Virginia have consumer protection frameworks that treat material defects discovered post-closing as potentially actionable, but only when documented. A forensic inspection report becomes the buyer's protection if a problem surfaces later; it also becomes the seller's protection against unjustified post-closing claims. The general home inspection report does neither.
The 12-item buyer checklist for a Maryland or Virginia pre-purchase inspection
Use this checklist during the contract's inspection contingency window (usually 7 to 14 days after acceptance). Each item is either present (move on) or missing (request from seller, schedule independently, or use as a contingency-walk reason).
Document checklist (12 items)
The full 12-item checklist is in the role matrix table further down this page. Top 6 to verify first:
- HAAG-certified inspection report from within 12 months (or schedule one yourself within contingency window).
- Roof attestation letter with current condition + remaining life estimate.
- Original installation contract dating the install and naming the contractor.
- Manufacturer warranty PDF + transferability terms in writing.
- Attic ventilation calculation showing manufacturer-spec compliance.
- Insurance carrier roof acceptance letter confirming the carrier will write or renew.
If any of the top 6 are missing, schedule a JDH inspection yourself within the contingency window. JDH inspections are free for the buyer when JDH is engaged as the buyer's inspector; attestation letters are included in the standard deliverable.
MD Home Improvement Commission - verify any contractor named in the seller's docsThe 5-document seller package that closes faster and avoids price renegotiation
Sellers who pre-assemble a complete roof package close faster, face fewer post-inspection negotiations, and rarely lose deals on roof-related contingencies. Five documents are the standard package in Maryland and Virginia.
1. Original installation contract + repair invoices
Dates the install, names the installing contractor (so the buyer can verify warranty transferability), and shows any subsequent repair history. Even if the installation was 15 years ago, the document chain confirms what was actually installed vs. what the listing claims.
2. Manufacturer warranty PDF + transferability documentation
Pull the actual warranty PDF for the shingle line installed. Mark the depreciation schedule, transferability clauses, and any required transfer fees. Transferable warranties measurably add resale value; non-transferable warranties subtract from it but can sometimes be activated for the new owner via the manufacturer's contractor portal.
3. Recent HAAG-certified inspection report
Within 12 months ideally, within 6 months even better. The report should include the PCC Method applied to every finding, photographic evidence, remaining useful life estimate, and an attestation letter formatted for lender or insurer review. JDH provides the full package in a single deliverable.
4. Attic ventilation calculation
Documents that the attic meets manufacturer ventilation specifications (typically 1 sq ft of net free vent area per 150 sq ft of attic floor space, balanced intake and exhaust). Ventilation non-compliance voids most manufacturer warranties and is a common buyer pushback issue.
5. County building permit history
Pulled from the county online portal. Confirms the install date of record and any subsequent permitted work. A complete permit history settles many disputes that would otherwise require expensive forensic reconstruction.
The 5 curb red flags every real estate agent should escalate to a forensic inspection
A real-estate agent's initial walkthrough is a fast assessment, not a forensic inspection. But five visible patterns reliably predict deeper problems on a roof. Any one of them warrants escalating to a HAAG-certified inspection before the contract goes hard.
Red flag 1 - Heavy granule accumulation in gutter splash zones
Granules separating from shingles into the gutters indicate accelerated decay. Heavy accumulation on a roof claimed to be under 15 years old is a contradiction the inspection needs to resolve. See the roof age inspection guide for how this signal interacts with claimed install dates.
Red flag 2 - Visible sagging along ridge or eaves
Decking deflection visible from the ground is rarely cosmetic. It indicates moisture-weakened OSB or plywood, often correlated with attic ventilation deficiency. Replacement-only condition almost always.
Red flag 3 - Missing or lifted shingles
A single lifted shingle could be storm damage. A pattern across multiple slopes indicates sealant strip failure (an age and install-quality marker). Lifted shingles on the ridge or hip lines specifically suggest poor install quality even if recent.
Red flag 4 - Moss or algae streaking on slopes facing prevailing weather
Gloeocapsa magma (the dark vertical streaks) thrives in MD/VA humidity. Heavy streaking on a roof under 15 years old often indicates an attic ventilation deficiency creating chronic moisture conditions. Streaking on premium shingles with built-in algae resistance (e.g., OC Streak Guard) is even more suspicious.
Red flag 5 - Color-mismatched patches
Recent repairs in a different shingle color indicate the roof has been failing in spots. The forensic inspection needs to determine whether the underlying cause has been addressed or whether the patches are cosmetic. Pattern of patches over time is often a stronger replacement signal than a single major failure.
Schedule a JDH inspection for any listing showing one or more of these patternsHow FHA and VA loan certification works for an aging roof
Both FHA and VA loan programs have specific roof requirements. Buyers who do not address them before underwriting almost always face closing-table delays. The fix is straightforward when caught early.
The 2-to-3-year remaining-useful-life requirement
FHA requires the roof to have a minimum of 2 years of remaining useful life. VA requires similar but interprets case-by-case. The lender's appraiser flags any roof that does not visibly meet this threshold. A credentialed inspection report verifying remaining useful life is the easiest way to clear the flag without triggering repair requirements.
When repair certification is required
If the roof does not meet the remaining-life threshold, the loan can still proceed with a repair scope completed before closing. JDH provides VA/FHA-compliant repair certification as a standard service, including the documentation lenders require: scope of work, contractor licensure verification (MD HCI), proof of OSHA-compliant safety practices, and post-repair attestation letter.
Timing matters
Buyers: get the inspection done DURING the contingency window, BEFORE underwriting begins. The lender's appraisal happens after underwriting starts; if it flags the roof at that point, every day of delay is expensive. Sellers: pre-listing inspection paired with any required repairs done before the home goes on the market removes this entire risk category from the transaction.
Insurance carrier acceptance is a parallel question
Many MD/VA carriers will not write new policies on roofs over 15 to 20 years old without recent inspection documentation. Buyers should secure carrier acceptance in parallel with FHA/VA certification, not sequentially. The same JDH inspection report serves both purposes.
VA DPOR Contractor License LookupThe Role Matrix: What Each Party Needs from the Inspection
Buyers, sellers, agents, lenders, and insurers each pull different things from the same JDH inspection report. The matrix maps role to needed deliverable.
| Party | What they need from the report | When they need it | How JDH delivers it |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buyer | Full forensic report + photographic evidence + remaining useful life estimate + cost-to-cure for any defects | During inspection contingency window (7-14 days post-acceptance) | Photo + video report delivered before inspector leaves property; email follow-up within 24 hours |
| Seller | Same forensic report + attestation letter formatted for listing disclosure + ventilation calculation | 30 to 60 days before listing | Pre-listing inspection package including disclosure-ready summary |
| Buyer's agent | PCC Method documentation usable in price negotiation; clear defect-by-defect cost-to-cure | Immediately after inspection completes | Negotiation-ready PDF with each finding tied to dollar value |
| Listing agent | Disclosure-aligned summary + transferable warranty confirmation + permit history | Before MLS listing goes live | Listing-prep package matching MD/VA disclosure statement format |
| Lender (FHA/VA) | Attestation letter confirming 2-3 years remaining useful life OR repair certification scope | Before underwriting flags the appraisal | VA/FHA-compliant attestation letter as standard deliverable |
| Insurance carrier | Current condition documentation + ventilation compliance proof | At policy issuance or renewal | Carrier-formatted attestation letter accepted by major MD/VA carriers |
Every party in the transaction draws from the same forensic inspection. JDH delivers all role-specific formats from a single 60-90 minute inspection. See the 7-phase inspection process for what happens on-site.
What to check by roofing material
Different materials fail in different ways. Use this quick-reference table when assessing what the listing actually has on the roof. Detailed analysis is in the roof age inspection guide.
| Material | Expected MD/VA lifespan | Top failure signals | Pre-transaction red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asphalt shingle (architectural) | 25-30 years | Granule loss in gutters, sealant strip failure (hand-lift test), curling edges | Heavy granule accumulation on a roof claimed to be under 15 years old |
| Asphalt shingle (3-tab) | 20-25 years | Brittle edges, bond failure, color fade | Any visible curling or lifting indicates near end-of-life |
| Standing-seam metal | 40-70 years | Sealant joint failure at panel seams, fastener oxidation, panel oil-canning | Visible seam separation or rust streaks on panels |
| Screw-down metal (exposed fastener) | 25-40 years | Gasket washer failure under screw heads, backed-out screws, panel uplift | Widespread gasket failure - water entry at every screw |
| Slate (natural) | 75-150 years | Individual slate cracking, copper flashing fatigue, slipped tiles | Multiple cracked tiles or any flashing failure (replacement cost is high) |
| Tile (clay or concrete) | 50-100 years | Broken or slipped tiles, mortar failure at ridges, structural deck loading | Any structural sag - tile is heavy and decking failure is dangerous |
Lifespan ranges reflect JDH HAAG-certified inspections across Southern Maryland and Northern Virginia. For deeper coverage on each material's aging patterns see the roof age inspection guide; for the forensic methodology see the roof inspection process.
Want the 12-item buyer checklist plus this materials reference as a printable PDF? Bring your contract to a free JDH inspection and we will deliver both alongside your on-roof report.
How to Order a Pre-Transaction Roof Inspection
A six-step process for buyers, sellers, and agents to order, receive, and use a HAAG-certified pre-transaction roof inspection. The full inspection itself takes 60 to 90 minutes on-site.
Schedule the inspection within the timing window
Buyers: book within the contract inspection contingency window (usually 7-14 days after acceptance). Sellers: book 30-60 days before listing. Agents: when listing prep starts, include the inspection request alongside the home inspection.
Specify the deliverables at booking
Request: HAAG-certified inspection report, attestation letter for lender/insurance, remaining useful life estimate, ventilation calculation, and (if applicable) VA/FHA repair certification scope. Confirm the inspection includes attic interior, not just on-roof.
Walk the roof with the inspector if possible
Buyer-paid inspections: meet on-site if you can. Hear the findings live. Ask about anything you saw on initial walkthrough. The 30-minute investment shortens later document review by hours.
Receive the report before the contingency window closes
JDH delivers the photo and video report before leaving the property. Email follow-up with the attestation letter within 24 hours. Confirm everything you ordered in step 2 is in hand before contingency expiration.
Cross-reference the report against the seller disclosure
Pull the seller's disclosure statement roof section. Compare line-by-line against the inspection findings. Any defect in the report not on the disclosure is grounds for renegotiation or rescission depending on MD or VA contract terms.
Use the report in negotiation or close
Clean report: provide to lender + insurer for policy issuance. Findings present: agent uses PCC Method documentation to justify price adjustment, seller credit, or required pre-close repair. Either way, the same report supports the eventual close.
Why Inspection Findings Matter
A JDH HAAG Master Certified walkthrough of the PCC Method (Problem, Cause, Consequence) on a Southern Maryland roof. The same documentation a manufacturer needs to honor (or deny) a warranty claim.
From the JDH Remodeling channel · PCC Method on a real Southern Maryland roof.
Buyer, seller, or agent? Get an inspection that survives every party's review
One inspection. Every deliverable: HAAG-certified report, attestation letter, ventilation calculation, VA/FHA certification scope if needed. Photo and video report in hand before the inspector leaves. Free for homeowners in our MD and VA service area.
Real Estate Roof Inspection FAQ
Is a general home inspector's roof check enough for a real estate transaction?+
Usually no. A general home inspector typically spends 10 to 15 minutes on the roof using binoculars or a brief drone pass. That is a visual assessment, not a forensic one, and it almost never includes attic ventilation calculation, hand-lift sealant testing, or moisture-meter decking checks. For a 30-year asset, the difference matters. JDH's HAAG-certified pre-purchase inspection runs 60 to 90 minutes and produces an attestation letter the buyer's lender, insurer, and closing attorney will all accept.
What is a roof attestation letter and who needs one?+
A roof attestation letter is a formal document signed by a credentialed inspector that states the roof's current condition, remaining useful life estimate, and any required repairs. Lenders, insurance carriers, and FHA/VA loan programs commonly require one on homes with roofs over 10 to 15 years old. JDH provides attestation letters as part of the standard inspection deliverable, free for homeowners and $250 for third-party requesters.
Should the buyer or the seller pay for the pre-transaction roof inspection?+
JDH inspections are free for homeowners in our Maryland and Virginia service area, so the cost question often resolves itself. When a fee applies (third-party requests for an attestation letter), buyer-paid is the norm in MD/VA but the closing agreement can shift cost to the seller as part of negotiation. The more important question is timing: a pre-listing inspection paid by the seller often prevents price negotiations later, while a pre-purchase inspection paid by the buyer protects them from inheriting an undisclosed problem.
What documentation should a seller assemble before listing in Maryland or Virginia?+
Five documents: (1) the original installation contract and any subsequent repair invoices; (2) the manufacturer warranty PDF with depreciation schedule and transferability terms; (3) the most recent HAAG-certified inspection report (within 12 months); (4) the attic ventilation calculation showing compliance with manufacturer spec; (5) the county building permit history showing the install date. Sellers who pre-assemble this package close faster and rarely face roof-related price negotiations.
What red flags should a real-estate agent watch for on a roof during initial walkthrough?+
Five red flags from the curb: heavy granule accumulation in gutter splash zones (decay indicator), visible sagging along ridge or eaves (decking failure indicator), missing or lifted shingles (sealant strip failure), moss or algae streaking on slopes facing prevailing weather (often correlates with ventilation problems), and any patch of shingles that color-mismatches the rest (recent repair indicator). Any of these warrants a forensic inspection before the contract goes hard.
Can a roof inspection report be used in price negotiations?+
Yes, and they routinely are. A HAAG-certified inspection report with the PCC Method (Problem, Cause, Consequence) applied to each finding documents specific defects with photographic evidence and cost-to-cure estimates. That is the document buyers' agents use to justify price reductions or seller credits. It is also the document sellers can use to push back on lowball offers if the inspection comes back clean. The credibility of the report determines its negotiating weight.
How does FHA or VA loan certification work for an aging roof?+
Both FHA and VA loan programs require any roof that does not have at least 2 to 3 years of remaining useful life to be repaired or replaced before closing. The lender's appraiser flags this; the buyer then needs a credentialed inspection to verify the roof meets the threshold OR a repair scope to satisfy it. JDH provides VA/FHA-compliant roof repair certification as standard, including the documentation lenders require. Get this done before underwriting starts to avoid closing-table delays.
How soon before listing or contract should the inspection happen?+
Within 6 months ideally, within 12 months at the outside. Roof conditions change with seasons and weather; an inspection report from a year ago no longer reflects current condition after a storm season. For sellers, schedule the inspection 30 to 60 days before listing so any repair work can complete before the first showing. For buyers, schedule within the contract's inspection contingency window (usually 7 to 14 days after acceptance).
Save the JDH Real Estate Roof Inspection Checklist to your AI assistant
Click any button below to open the prompt in ChatGPT, Gemini, or Bing. Your assistant will remember the checklist so the next time you or someone you know is buying, selling, or listing a home in MD or VA, the right inspection questions surface automatically.
Related Guides & Services
Seven verifiable signals that separate a real contractor from a storm chaser. Pairs with this warranty guide.
Read guide →What insurance covers vs what your warranty covers, and how the two interact at claim time.
Read guide →Warranty-related scams are the #2 category. Spot them before signing.
Read guide →Inspection, repair, replacement, financing - JDH's full roofing scope.
View service →Process, materials, warranties, and pricing for a full MD/VA roof replacement.
View service →0% APR options and lender comparison for warranty-eligible installs.
View service →Fiber-cement and engineered wood siding with HZ5 transferable warranty.
View service →NFRC-rated windows with manufacturer warranty + JDH workmanship coverage.
View service →ProVia Platinum-tier doors with transferable warranty.
View service →JDH's home county. Local code + coastal-rated warranty installs.
View area →Owner, HAAG Master Certified Inspector #992109047, third-generation builder.
Meet Jim →Every license, certification, and manufacturer tier JDH holds. All verifiable.
View credentials →Get the inspection every party in your transaction will acceptHAAG-certified. Attestation-ready. Lender + insurer approved.
A HAAG Master Certified inspector will walk your roof, review the manufacturer and contractor warranty documents alongside the physical scope of work, and mark every loophole, prorated cliff, and missing rider before you sign anything. Free, 90 minutes on-site, no obligation. If a competitor's contract has a roof-over, a missing wind rider, or a non-transferable workmanship clause, we will tell you exactly what to ask them to add in writing.
- 90 minutes on-site · warranty PDF reviewed alongside the roof scope
- Depreciation schedule, transferability terms, and rider exclusions called out
- HAAG Master Certified inspector · same credential as warranty-claims field staff
- OC Platinum Preferred · access to manufacturer-backed extended workmanship that survives the contractor
Schedule a Free Pre-Transaction Inspection
HAAG-Certified · 90-Minute On-Roof · No Pressure
From the JDH Team When you're ready to take the next step, work with our family-run Maryland and Virginia trade shop. JDH backs every job with our full Maryland and Virginia roofing services and flexible roofing financing options for every homeowner.