An annual rental inspection is a scheduled, documented walkthrough of your rental property while the tenant is living in it. It catches small problems before they become expensive ones, records the home's condition mid-tenancy, supports your habitability duties under Washington law, and confirms the lease is being followed.
In Washington, it requires at least 2 days' written notice to the tenant under RCW 59.18.150, and a good one ends with a photo report and a prioritized maintenance plan.
Why an Annual Rental Inspection Exists
Most expensive repairs start as cheap ones. A slow drip under a kitchen sink costs a few dollars in parts the day it starts; a year later it can mean a rotted cabinet base, damaged flooring, and a mold remediation bill.
The annual rental inspection exists to find those problems while they are still small. It serves four distinct purposes for an owner:
- Early detection. Leaks, failing seals, clogged gutters, and neglected filters get caught and fixed before they cascade into structural or moisture damage.
- Mid-tenancy documentation. The move-in condition report captures day one. The move-out inspection captures the end. An annual visit fills the long gap in between, so condition changes can be dated and attributed fairly. Our guide to rental property documentation covers how to make those records hold up.
- Habitability and insurance support. Washington owners have ongoing duties under RCW 59.18.060 to keep the home fit for habitation: weathertight, structurally sound, with plumbing, heating, and electrical systems in good working order. A documented annual inspection shows you are actively meeting those duties, and many insurance carriers look favorably on, or expect, regular documented inspections of tenant-occupied homes.
- Lease compliance. An unauthorized pet, an occupant who never appeared on the application, or smoking inside the unit all surface during a walkthrough long before they surface as damage at move-out.
This post covers the operational side of annual inspections. For the full legal and seasonal picture across every inspection type, see our pillar guide to rental property inspections in Washington.
What an Annual Inspection Is Not
An annual inspection is not a gotcha visit, and treating it like one is the fastest way to sour a good tenancy. The goal is to protect the property and the tenancy, not to catch someone out.
It is also not a license to enter whenever you feel like checking in. Washington law is specific here:
- RCW 59.18.150 requires at least 2 days' written notice before entering to inspect, and the notice must state the exact time or times of entry and include a phone number the tenant can call.
- The tenant may not unreasonably withhold consent, but the law also prohibits excessive entries. The right of access cannot be used to harass a tenant.
- Each violation of the entry rules can cost the owner up to $100, and a pattern of improper entries damages trust far more than it damages your wallet.
One thorough, well-documented annual inspection accomplishes more than four casual drop-ins, and it keeps you squarely inside the law. A good tenant who pays on time and cares for the home should experience the inspection as a service visit, not surveillance.
The Lawful Process: Notice, Scheduling, and Respect
Done correctly, the process is simple and predictable:
- Written notice at least 2 days ahead. State the date, the exact time window, the purpose, and a contact phone number. Email or text can work if your lease establishes that as an agreed notice method; when in doubt, deliver written notice the traditional way as well.
- Schedule cooperatively. Offer a window that works for the tenant. Many tenants prefer to be home; others would rather you come while they are at work. Either is fine. Flexibility costs you nothing and buys goodwill.
- Respect the home. It is your property, but it is the tenant's home. Inspectors should announce themselves, wear shoe covers or wipe feet, never open dressers, closets with personal effects, or personal storage, and never comment on housekeeping style unless it crosses into a safety or lease issue.
- Document the visit itself. Note the date, who attended, and how notice was given. If the tenant declines a proposed time, reschedule in writing rather than forcing the issue.
For reference, the same statute allows entry to show the unit to prospective tenants or buyers with 1 day's notice, but the annual inspection falls under the 2-day rule.
What a Thorough Annual Rental Inspection Covers
A drive-by is not an inspection. A real annual rental inspection works room by room and system by system. Here is what ours looks for.
Kitchen and bathrooms:
- Under-sink plumbing: supply lines, shutoff valves, P-traps, and disposal connections, checked by hand for moisture, not just by eye.
- Caulking and grout around tubs, showers, and counters. Failed caulk is the cheapest repair on this list and the source of some of the most expensive water damage.
- Exhaust fans actually moving air, since bathroom moisture that has nowhere to go ends up in the walls.
- Signs of slow drains or recurring clogs the tenant may have stopped mentioning.
Mechanical systems:
- Water heater: age, signs of rust or weeping at fittings, condition of the pan and the relief valve area.
- Furnace filter: condition and size on hand. A choked filter strains the blower motor and shortens the life of the system.
- Visible electrical: panel access, scorching at outlets, overloaded power strips.
Safety equipment:
- Smoke detection devices in every required location, tested. Washington requires them in rental units under RCW 43.44.110: the owner is responsible for installation, the tenant is responsible for maintenance including batteries during the tenancy, and the owner must confirm they are operational at turnover before a new tenant moves in. Fines for noncompliance run up to $200, and up to $5,000 if a fire later causes property damage, injury, or death.
- Carbon monoxide alarms, which the state building code requires in residential occupancies under RCW 19.27.530, with battery maintenance resting on the tenant during the tenancy.
- Handrails, deck railings, and stair condition.
Exterior and envelope:
- Gutters and downspouts, plus a ground-level look at the roof for lifted shingles, moss, and debris.
- Drainage: water should move away from the foundation, not pool against it. In the Puget Sound climate this single item prevents more damage than almost any other.
- Decks and porches: soft boards, loose fasteners, post bases.
- Vegetation against siding, which traps moisture and invites pests. Branches and shrubs should be trimmed back off the structure.
Many of these exterior items overlap with seasonal preparation; our winterization checklist for your rental property covers the fall-specific version in detail.
Reading the Signs: What Small Clues Reveal
The checklist finds problems. Experience finds the problems behind the problems.
- Slow leaks announce themselves as a faint ring on the cabinet floor, swollen particleboard, or a musty smell under a sink, often months before any visible drip.
- Moisture and mold precursors show up as condensation staining on window sills, peeling paint in bathroom corners, or a tenant-placed dehumidifier running constantly. Each is a prompt to find the moisture source now, not after spots appear.
- Filter neglect is a leading indicator. If the furnace filter is gray and matted, it is worth asking what other small maintenance habits have slipped, and worth making filter delivery or replacement part of the plan.
- Hoarding and safety issues are rare but serious: blocked exits, combustibles near heat sources, or pathways narrowed by belongings. These get documented factually and addressed through a compliance conversation, because they put the tenant and the structure at risk.
An inspector who only photographs what is broken misses the point. The annual visit is your one structured chance each year to read where the property is heading.
The Report an Owner Should Receive
If your annual rental inspection ends with "everything looked fine" in an email, you did not get an inspection. You should receive:
- Date-stamped photos of every room, every mechanical system, and every noted condition, good and bad.
- Condition ratings by area, so this year's report can be compared against last year's and against the move-in record.
- Recommended maintenance with priorities: what needs attention now (active leaks, safety items), what should be scheduled this season (caulking, gutter cleaning, filter program), and what to budget for ahead (water heater nearing end of life, deck refinishing).
- Lease compliance notes, stated factually, with photos where relevant.
That document does double duty. It drives your maintenance decisions, and it becomes part of the property's condition record alongside the move-in checklist, protecting you at deposit time and any time condition is disputed.
From Findings to a Maintenance Plan, Not a Conflict
The report is only useful if it turns into action, and how it turns into action determines whether the tenant experiences the inspection as positive or adversarial.
Triage the findings. Safety and active-water issues get work orders immediately. Seasonal items get scheduled. Capital items go into next year's budget conversation. Nothing sits in the report unassigned.
Separate maintenance from compliance. A failing water heater is the owner's job. An unauthorized cat is a lease conversation. Mixing the two in a single message makes the tenant defensive about both. Handle repairs as service, and handle violations as a clear, professional notice with a path to cure, following the lease and Washington law.
Communicate before, during, and after. The before-message sets the tone: when we are coming, what we look at, and what we never touch (personal belongings, closed personal storage, anything unrelated to the condition of the home). The after-message closes the loop: thank the tenant, list the repairs you are scheduling, and tell them what to expect. Tenants who see inspections produce repairs start reporting problems earlier, which is exactly what you want.
How Sagareus Handles Inspections
Every tenancy is bookended by a documented, photographed condition report, and we never skip the one at move-in. The move-in condition report is the single most valuable document you own. It decides every deposit dispute, so we take the time to do it right rather than rush it. Here is how we run it:
- A signed move-in baseline. Before a resident takes possession, we record the property's condition in detail, photograph it, and have the resident sign off. That is the line that separates pre-existing wear from resident damage later.
- A move-out compared against that baseline. When the resident leaves, we inspect, photograph, and test the unit against that signed baseline. Charges have to be supported by the before and after, not by assumption.
- A recorded video walkthrough at turnover. Continuous footage gives spatial context that single photos cannot, and it holds up as evidence.
Comments stay factual and neutral, because these reports are read by owners, residents, and sometimes a judge. An annual inspection is part of the service, so problems get caught while they are small.
You get a defensible record at both ends. We make sure it is never the document we wish we had.
The annual inspection is included in our percentage-based management service for every property we manage. You can read more on our inspection services page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my tenant refuse the annual inspection?
Not unreasonably. Under RCW 59.18.150, a tenant may not unreasonably withhold consent when the owner gives proper written notice at least 2 days ahead stating the time of entry and a phone number. In practice, work with the tenant's schedule and reschedule once if asked; document any pattern of refusals in writing before considering further steps.
How long does an annual rental inspection take?
For a typical single-family home, plan on roughly 45 minutes to an hour; small multifamily units often take less per unit. A thorough inspection with photos takes longer than a walkthrough, and that extra time is where the value is.
What happens if the inspection finds lease violations?
Document the violation factually with photos, then address it separately from any maintenance findings. Most issues, like an unauthorized pet, are resolved with a written notice and an opportunity to cure, such as registering the pet under the lease's pet terms or removing it. Serious or repeated violations should be reviewed with counsel before any termination notice is served.
Does an annual inspection replace move-in and move-out inspections?
No. The move-in condition report is legally tied to your ability to hold a security deposit in Washington, and the move-out inspection settles the deposit. The annual inspection is the documented checkpoint between them, and all three together create a continuous condition record.
This article is general information for Washington rental owners, not legal advice. For questions about a specific tenancy or entry dispute, consult a landlord-tenant attorney.
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