A move-out inspection is a comparison exercise: you walk the unit with the signed move-in checklist in hand and document what changed, room by room, with photographs that match your move-in photos.
In Washington, deposit deductions are only allowed for damage beyond ordinary wear that was documented on the move-in checklist, and you must deliver an itemized statement with supporting documentation within 30 days of move-out. Done methodically, the inspection produces deductions tenants rarely contest.
The most common mistake owners make is treating the move-out inspection as a standalone event, a fresh look at the unit to find everything wrong with it. That is backwards. The move-out inspection has no independent authority; everything it can do for you comes from the baseline you established at move-in.
Under RCW 59.18.260, you cannot collect a deposit at all without a written checklist describing the condition of the walls, paint, carpets and flooring, furniture, and appliances, signed and dated by both you and the tenant. And under RCW 59.18.280, you cannot deduct for damage to anything that was not documented on that move-in checklist. A gouged countertop is only chargeable if your checklist shows the countertop was in good condition when the tenant moved in.
So the move-out inspection is really the second half of a process that started a year or more earlier. If you ran a thorough move-in condition report, the move-out walk is fast and the conclusions are nearly automatic. If you did not, no amount of effort at move-out can recover the deductions you failed to set up.
This is the operational core of rental property inspections in Washington: every inspection in the lifecycle exists to feed the next one.
There are two walkthroughs worth doing at the end of a tenancy, and they serve different purposes.
The final move-out inspection happens after the tenant has returned keys and surrendered the unit. This is the official one: the unit is empty, nothing is hidden behind furniture or boxes, and the condition you photograph is the condition you will price. Schedule it within a day or two of key return so the record is fresh and nothing can be attributed to the turnover period. Because the tenancy has ended, no entry notice is required.
The pre-move-out courtesy walkthrough happens a week or two before the move-out date, while the tenant is still in possession. Because the tenant still holds the unit, this one is a formal entry: RCW 59.18.150 requires at least 2 days written notice stating the exact time of entry and a phone number, and the tenant may not unreasonably withhold consent.
Run the courtesy walkthrough. It is optional, and it is one of the highest-leverage habits in the whole turnover process. You walk the unit with the tenant, point out what would be a deduction if left as is, and give them the chance to fix it: patch the holes, clean the oven, haul the debris. Tenants who get that preview tend to return the unit in better shape and recover more of their deposit, which means:
Walk the move-out exactly the way you walked the move-in. Same route, same order, same checklist. If the move-in inspection went front door, entry, living room, kitchen, hall, bedrooms, bathrooms, then the move-out does too, so the two records line up item for item.
In each room, work the checklist line by line and photograph everything the same way you did at move-in:
The output is a set of matched pairs: move-in photo, move-out photo, checklist entry for each. That pairing discipline is the difference between a deduction you can defend in two minutes and one you have to argue. Name and store the files so each pair is findable a year later; "2BR-north-wall-movein" next to "2BR-north-wall-moveout" wins disputes that "IMG_4471" loses.
Washington law prohibits deducting for ordinary wear resulting from normal use of the unit. The judgment calls happen standing in the room, so it helps to carry the distinction as concrete pairs:
The honest test: would this condition exist if a careful tenant had simply lived here for this long? If yes, it is wear and you absorb it as a cost of doing business. If no, it is damage and it goes on the statement. For a deeper treatment with more examples, see our guide to what counts as normal wear and tear.
When a call is genuinely close, decide in the tenant's favor. A marginal $60 deduction is not worth the dispute that undermines confidence in your solid ones.
Washington does not let you put a round number next to "wall repair" and call it done. Under RCW 59.18.280, every deduction on the itemized statement must be supported by documentation:
Two pricing disciplines keep statements defensible. First, never charge more than the cost of fixing the damaged portion. A stained corner of carpet in one bedroom supports a charge for that repair or that room's portion, not new carpet for the whole unit. A crayon wall supports repainting that wall, not the house. Second, price from real numbers: an actual bid, an actual receipt, actual hours. Estimated-from-thin-air figures are the first thing a tenant's attorney or a small claims judge will pull apart.
The clock is short and the penalty for missing it is severe. You have 30 days from move-out to deliver either the full deposit refund or an itemized statement of deductions with the supporting documentation attached. Miss the deadline and you forfeit the right to withhold any of the deposit; a court can award the tenant up to twice the deposit for an intentional refusal to pay, plus fees.
This is why the inspection happens within a day or two of key return, not whenever the schedule allows. The 30 days has to cover the inspection, vendor estimates or invoices, assembling the statement, and delivery. An inspection done in week three leaves no margin. The full legal mechanics, including how the deadline runs and what the statement must contain, are covered in our complete guide to security deposits in Washington; this post is about the fieldwork that makes the statement easy to write.
Here is what the whole system buys you. When a tenant opens an itemized statement and sees, for each line, a move-in photo showing the item undamaged, a move-out photo showing the damage, and an invoice for the repair, there is nothing to argue with. The dispute that owners dread mostly does not happen, because the evidence answers the objection before it is raised.
The economics of getting this right are sharper in some cities than others. Seattle, Kirkland, Kenmore, Shoreline, and Auburn cap total move-in costs at one month's rent, so deposits there are smaller and every legitimate deduction is a larger share of a limited fund. With less cushion, you cannot afford to lose valid deductions to sloppy documentation.
No. Washington's deposit statute ties your right to deduct to the move-in checklist and your documentation, not to the tenant's attendance, and the final inspection typically happens after keys are returned and the unit is empty. That said, inviting the tenant to a pre-move-out courtesy walkthrough is good practice: it gives them a chance to fix issues before they become deductions, and a tenant who saw a problem flagged in person rarely disputes the charge later.
Only for damage, and only for the damaged portion. Paint faded by sunlight or dulled by years of normal living is ordinary wear and cannot be deducted. Crayon, smoke staining, large gouges, or an unauthorized color change can be charged if the move-in checklist documented the walls in good condition, but the charge covers repainting the affected walls, not refreshing the whole unit, and it needs an invoice or estimate behind it.
Respond in writing with the evidence: the matched move-in and move-out photos, the relevant checklist entries, and the invoices or estimates for each charge. Most disputes end there, because the documentation either holds or it does not. If the tenant pursues the matter further, these cases are typically heard in small claims court, where the side with the organized, dated record almost always has the advantage. For anything unusual, have a landlord-tenant attorney review before you respond.
This article is general information for Washington rental property owners, not legal advice. For questions about your specific situation, consult a landlord-tenant attorney.
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:
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.
This continuous record is the backbone of rental property inspections in Washington, from the move-in baseline through the move-out comparison.
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