Sample report walkthrough

Sample Inspection Report

See the AI-assisted report format HomeScope generates versus InspectForge’s multi-tier templating. This page walks through exactly what a buyer, agent, and inspector each receive when a HomeScope inspection is delivered — and how that same deliverable maps to the three published InspectForge tiers.

No mock-up. The fields below mirror the live report schema shipped in production. The only thing redacted on a real report is the home address and client PII; structure, sections, severity grades, and summary behavior are identical.

Section A

What’s in a HomeScope report

Every HomeScope report ships with four first-class sections. These aren’t optional add-ons gated behind a higher tier — they are the default output at $89/mo. The inspector fills the field data from the mobile capture app on site; the platform composes the deliverable into a single client-ready PDF before the buyer opens the portal link.

1. AI-assisted executive summary
The top of the report is a three-to-five paragraph plain-English summary written by the LLM from the inspector’s raw field notes and flagged items. It covers the property’s overall condition, the top three priority items, and an explicit “items safe to defer” list so the buyer’s agent can triage negotiation quickly. The inspector reviews, edits, and signs off — the AI never publishes directly.
2. Severity-graded issue list
Every finding is tagged at one of four severities: Safety, Major, Minor, or Monitor. Severity is a structured field, not free-form text, so the client PDF renders a consistent legend and the agent summary pulls the right rows into the negotiation memo. Safety and Major items roll up to the AI summary by default.
3. Photo annotations
Each finding carries one or more inline photos with inspector markup — circle, arrow, and short caption. Annotations are stored as overlay layers on the original image so the PDF renderer can composite them at print resolution without pixel rot. No third-party watermark; no ad overlay.
4. Client-ready PDF download
The PDF is generated server-side via headless Chromium and mirrors the portal view one-to-one. Buyers receive a share link and a download link; agents can forward the PDF without an account. The document is self-contained — no external stylesheet, no tracker beacon, no login wall.

Section B

How it compares to InspectForge Starter, Pro, and Business

InspectForge publishes three sticker tiers at $39 Starter, $69 Pro, and $99 Business per month. Their annual plans (new in 2026) are $369, $659, and $949 per year, up to roughly 21% off sticker. What the sticker tiers do not publish is how many inspector seats each plan includes, nor how template depth scales across the three — the archive.org snapshots we reviewed describe “advanced templates” at Pro and “unlimited templates” at Business without naming the Starter cap.

CapabilityHomeScope $89/moInspectForge (3 tiers)
Inspector seats included at base price2 seats, flatStarter: 1 seat; Pro / Business seat caps not published
AI executive summaryDefault on every reportNot a published feature on any tier
Template depthSingle schema, all sections includedTiered: Starter base, Pro “advanced”, Business “unlimited”
Annual lock-in required for discountNo — $89/mo month-to-monthYes — up to 21% off requires 12-month prepay
Stripe Connect invoice-link payoutsBuilt in — 5% application fee, $10/invoice capNot shipped on any tier

Pricing source: InspectForge public pricing page (2024 archive.org snapshot for monthly tiers; 2026 annual pricing reviewed on the live page). HomeScope pricing is the $89/mo base rate documented at /pricing. The HomeScope report schema described above is the default format shipped in production — see the side-by-side comparison on the main vs-InspectForge page.

Section C

Try it free

The fastest way to evaluate a HomeScope report format is to generate one. Sign-up is free, no credit card required. Run a real inspection against the production template, pull the PDF, and forward it to your agent or buyer to sanity-check the format on their end. If the output does not land cleanly, cancel inside the billing portal — no annual commitment.

If you’re still price-comparing, the four-vendor TCO calculator on the pricing page models second-seat cost, Stripe Connect routing, and portal-ad overhead across HomeScope, Spectora, InspectForge, and Hive. The calculator inputs are the same constants referenced on this page, so the report-format walkthrough and the pricing model stay grep-consistent across the site.