A rental inspection checklist is a standardized, room-by-room list of every item an owner examines and documents during a property inspection: structure, surfaces, appliances, plumbing, electrical, and safety equipment.
One well-built master checklist serves all four inspection types a rental property needs: the move-in inspection, the annual or mid-tenancy inspection, the seasonal or drive-by check, and the move-out inspection. The same items get checked every time; only the depth, the legal weight, and the comparison point change.
This guide gives you that master checklist, zone by zone, plus the method for using it consistently. It is built for Washington owners with one to thirty units, and it reflects how our team inspects more than 800 units across the Puget Sound region. For the full picture of why, when, and how to inspect, start with our pillar guide to rental property inspections in Washington.
One Rental Inspection Checklist, Four Inspection Types
Owners often keep four different forms for four different inspections. That is a mistake. When the move-in form and the move-out form list different items, you cannot compare condition line by line, and comparison is the entire point.
Build one master checklist and adapt how you use it.
Move-in inspection
The move-in inspection establishes the baseline condition of the unit before the tenant takes possession, and in Washington it is the one inspection with direct legal weight. RCW 59.18.260 prohibits collecting a security deposit unless the rental agreement includes a written checklist describing the condition of walls including paint and wallpaper, carpets and other flooring, furniture, and appliances, signed and dated by both parties.
Run the full master checklist at maximum depth here. Every line you document now is a line you can rely on at move-out.
Annual or mid-tenancy inspection
The annual inspection is a health check on an occupied unit. You are looking for deferred maintenance, slow leaks, unreported damage, lease compliance issues like unauthorized occupants or pets, and safety equipment that has drifted out of service.
Use the same master checklist, but shift your attention from cosmetic baseline items to systems, moisture, and safety. Because the unit is occupied, this inspection requires proper entry notice, covered below.
Seasonal or drive-by inspection
Seasonal checks are exterior-only passes, often done from the curb or during a vendor visit, timed to the Puget Sound weather calendar: gutters and drainage before the fall rains, hose bibs and exposed pipes before the first freeze. Run only the exterior zone of the master checklist, and run it from the route a passerby would take so you also catch curb appeal and security issues.
Move-out inspection
The move-out inspection is the mirror image of move-in. You walk the same checklist in the same order and compare each line against the move-in record to separate tenant-caused damage from ordinary wear and tear. In Washington, deductions that are not supported by the move-in checklist are prohibited, so the quality of your move-out inspection is capped by the quality of your move-in documentation.
The Master Rental Inspection Checklist, Zone by Zone
Work the zones in the same order every time: outside first, then in the front door and through the unit, systems and safety last. Here is every item.
Exterior
- Roofline: missing or lifted shingles, sagging, moss buildup, flashing condition
- Gutters and downspouts: attached, clear of debris, discharging away from the structure
- Siding and trim: cracks, rot, peeling paint, gaps at penetrations
- Visible foundation: cracks, settling, efflorescence, standing water at the base
- Drainage and grading: soil sloping away from the building, no pooling after rain
- Decks, porches, and railings: rot, loose boards, rail stability, stair condition
- Walkways and driveway: trip hazards, heaving, cracking
- Vegetation: branches touching the roof or siding, shrubs blocking vents or crawl space access
- Fences and gates: leaning sections, rot at posts, latch function
Entry and common areas
- Exterior doors: close and latch fully, weatherstripping intact, no daylight at the edges
- Locks and deadbolts: operate smoothly, rekeyed since the last tenancy
- Windows and screens: open, close, and lock; screens present and undamaged; no failed seals
- Walls and paint: condition noted wall by wall, including wallpaper where present
- Flooring: carpet condition, hard surface scratches and gaps, transitions and thresholds
- Lighting: every fixture and switch tested, bulbs working
- Smoke detection and carbon monoxide alarms: present and tested in this zone (full requirements under Safety items below)
- Handrails on interior stairs: secure, no movement
Kitchen
- Range and oven: every burner and the oven element tested, door seal intact
- Range hood or over-the-range microwave: fan and light working, filter clean
- Refrigerator: cooling at both compartments, gaskets sealing, no leaks at the water line
- Dishwasher: run a short cycle, check for leaks at the door and under the unit
- Garbage disposal: runs without grinding or humming, no leaks at the connection
- Under-sink plumbing: trap and supply lines dry, no corrosion, no soft cabinet floor
- Counters: burns, cuts, separation at the backsplash, failed caulk at the sink
- Cabinets and drawers: doors aligned, hinges tight, interiors clean and dry
- Ventilation: exhaust actually moving air, not just making noise
Bathrooms
- Toilet: flushes fully, refills and stops, no movement at the base, no leaks at the supply
- Sink and faucet: drains freely, no drips, stopper works
- Tub and shower: drains freely, diverter works, showerhead flow normal
- Caulking and grout: intact at the tub surround, no gaps or mildew staining
- Ventilation fan: runs and moves air; this is your number one mold defense in our climate
- Water pressure: run hot and cold together and note any drop
- Signs of moisture: soft flooring at the toilet base, staining on the ceiling below, musty odor
Bedrooms and living areas
- Windows and egress: every sleeping room window opens fully and can serve as an emergency exit
- Closets: doors on track, rods and shelves secure
- Flooring: carpet wear and stains, hard surface damage, noted room by room
- Outlets and switches: tested in each room, cover plates intact, no scorching or looseness
- Walls, ceilings, and doors: holes, stains, door hardware and stops
Systems
- Furnace or heat source: fires and heats, filter checked and replaced if dirty, area around it clear
- Water heater: no leaks or corrosion at fittings, temperature set sensibly to limit scald risk, seismic strapping in place where local code requires it; in our earthquake-prone region, strapping is standard practice even where not mandated
- Electrical panel: visual check only; no rust, scorching, double-tapped breakers, or missing knockouts; label legible
- GFCI outlets: press the test button at kitchen, bathroom, garage, and exterior locations and confirm they trip and reset
- Washer and dryer connections: hoses sound (braided preferred), no drips at the valves, dryer vent clear and exhausting outside
- Crawl space and attic access: hatch accessible, quick look for moisture or pests if conditions allow
Safety items
- Smoke detection devices: Washington requires them in all rental dwelling units, and installation is the owner's responsibility under RCW 43.44.110; the tenant maintains them during the tenancy, including batteries, and the owner must confirm they are operational before each new tenant moves in
- Carbon monoxide alarms: required in residential rental units under Washington's building code rules (RCW 19.27.530); test each one
- Fire safety notice: Washington owners must give tenants a signed written notice about the smoke detection device and the tenant's duty to maintain it (RCW 59.18.060)
- Fire extinguisher: present if you provide one, gauge in the green, not expired
- Egress paths: exits not blocked by storage or furniture
- Stair and deck railings: re-verify under load, not just by sight
- Address numbers visible from the street for emergency responders
How to Use Your Rental Inspection Checklist
The checklist is only half the system. The other half is method, and method is what makes your records hold up months or years later.
- Walk the same route every time. Exterior, entry, kitchen, bathrooms, bedrooms, systems, safety. A fixed route means nothing gets skipped and every inspection is comparable to the last.
- Pair every line with photos. Shoot wide for context, then close for detail, in the same order as the checklist so each photo maps to a line item. Our guide to rental property documentation covers the full photo standard, including timestamps and file organization.
- Use condition ratings, not adjectives. Rate each line on a fixed scale such as New, Good, Fair, or Poor, and add a short note only when the rating needs explanation. "Fair: two nail holes, west wall" beats a paragraph.
- Date and sign everything. At move-in and move-out, both you and the tenant sign and date the completed checklist, and the tenant gets a copy. For annual and seasonal inspections, sign and date your own record the same day.
- Store it where you can find it. The move-in checklist you cannot locate at move-out might as well not exist.
The Legal Hooks, Briefly
This post covers the operational craft; the law sits underneath it at two points, and both are worth knowing cold.
The move-in checklist is legally load-bearing. Under RCW 59.18.260, you cannot collect a security deposit without a written, signed move-in checklist, and under RCW 59.18.280 you cannot deduct at move-out for damage that was not documented on it. The deposit refund and itemized statement, with supporting documentation, are due within 30 days of move-out. Our guide to security deposits in Washington walks through the full legal framework.
Occupied inspections require entry notice. RCW 59.18.150 requires at least 2 days written notice to enter for an inspection, stating the exact time or times of entry and a phone number the tenant can call. Showing the unit to prospective tenants or buyers requires 1 day notice. Tenants may not unreasonably withhold consent, but excessive or improper entries expose the owner to penalties of up to $100 per violation.
Quick Reference: The Checklist at a Glance
Save or print this summary and expand each zone using the full lists above.
- Exterior: roof, gutters, siding, foundation, drainage, decks and rails, walkways, vegetation, fences
- Entry and common: doors and locks, windows and screens, walls, flooring, lighting, alarms, handrails
- Kitchen: each appliance individually, under-sink plumbing, counters, cabinets, disposal, ventilation
- Bathrooms: fixtures, caulk and grout, fan, water pressure, moisture signs
- Bedrooms and living: window egress, closets, flooring, outlets, walls and doors
- Systems: furnace and filter, water heater, panel visual, GFCI test, laundry connections
- Safety: smoke and CO alarms, fire safety notice, extinguisher, egress paths, railings, address visibility
- Method: same route, paired photos, fixed condition ratings, signatures and dates, organized storage
If you would rather have a professional team run this system for you, annual inspections are included in our management service. Learn more about our property inspection services.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I inspect my rental property?
At minimum: a full inspection at move-in, a full inspection at move-out, one annual inspection during the tenancy, and seasonal exterior checks in fall and spring. Longer tenancies make the annual inspection more important, not less, because small problems have more time to compound.
Do I need the tenant present during an inspection?
For move-in and move-out, yes in practice: Washington requires both parties to sign the condition checklist, and walking the unit together prevents disputes later. For annual inspections, the tenant does not have to be present, but you must give at least 2 days written notice stating the exact time and a contact phone number, and the tenant may not unreasonably refuse entry.
Is a rental inspection checklist legally required?
For move-in in Washington, yes if you collect a security deposit. RCW 59.18.260 requires a written checklist describing the condition of walls, flooring, furniture, and appliances, signed and dated by both parties, before any deposit can be collected. Annual and seasonal inspection checklists are not legally mandated, but they are the operational backbone of protecting the property.
Can I use the same checklist for every inspection type?
Yes, and you should. One master checklist used at different depths keeps every inspection comparable. Run it in full at move-in and move-out, focus on systems and safety at the annual, and run only the exterior zone for seasonal checks.
This article is general information for Washington rental property owners, not legal advice. For questions about a specific situation, consult a landlord-tenant attorney.
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.
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