Here are two stories we have heard from inspectors using InspectionX about how their agents and buyers are using AI once they receive the report. Below, we break down what we have noticed them asking AI about the reports, and what you can do to make sure they have a good experience when that happens, and earn even more referrals.
Table of contents
Two stories from the field
Agent’s story
A few weeks ago, an agent told me about a new habit she’s picked up: every time she receives an inspection report, she pastes it straight into ChatGPT. Her goal is simple — pull out the major issues and generate a clean repair request she can send to the seller’s agent. She said the difference between reports can be pretty noticeable. When a report is clearly structured — with severity ratings, specific descriptions, and findings organized by sections and subsections — the AI usually produces a polished, professional repair request in seconds.
When the report is less structured or more vague, the output still helps, but she often has to spend extra time editing or filling in gaps. Her takeaway was simple: “The quality of the report determines whether I save time… or end up doing a bit more work to create my repair list. And the more time I save, the easier that inspector has made my life.”
— NC Inspector
Buyer’s story
I usually call my buyers a couple of days after the inspection to check in and see if they have any questions about the report. A first-time homebuyer I worked with recently told me that instead of reading through it, he copied and pasted the report into ChatGPT and asked questions like: “What are the most serious problems with this house?”
The AI pulled its answers directly from the report. Because the report had consistent ratings and clear, plain-language descriptions, the buyer got responses that were easy to understand and grounded in the actual findings. He told his agent he felt confident moving forward with the purchase. That kind of experience is what drives referrals, and other inspectors may never even know that interaction with AI happened.
— FL Inspector
Why your report quality determines your referrals
Agents judge your report by how easy it is to act on, not how thorough it is.
- Thoroughness is expected. Clarity is what earns the referral.
- A report they can scan in minutes and use to move the deal forward is one they remember.
Buyers remember how your report made them feel.
- They do not remember who found the most defects. They remember who helped them understand what they were buying.
- Plain language gets shared with family and forwarded to contractors. That word of mouth compounds over time.
Your report is now being read by AI.
- When someone pastes your report into ChatGPT, the structure and clarity of your writing directly determines the quality of the answers they get back.
- Clear, well-organized reports produce confident answers.
The deal has a timeline.
- Every hour between the inspection and the report is an hour the agent cannot move forward.
- Avoid taking up extra time from your clients on-site because you’re navigating software.
The experience of working with you matters as much as the report.
- Respond quickly, be flexible, communicate clearly on-site.
- The technical quality of your inspection is table stakes. The experience is what separates you.
What agents and buyers ask AI
Here is what we see buyers and agents asking when they paste your report into ChatGPT — and what determines whether the AI gives them a useful answer or a confusing one.
Questions buyers ask AI about your report
| Question the buyer asks AI | What makes the report answer it well | What makes the report answer it poorly |
|---|---|---|
| “What are the most serious problems with this house?” |
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| “What does the inspector mean by [technical term]?” |
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| “Is the roof going to need replacement soon?” |
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| “What should I ask the seller to fix?” |
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| “Summarize this report in simple terms” |
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Questions agents ask AI about your report
| Question the agent asks AI | What makes the report answer it well | What makes the report answer it poorly |
|---|---|---|
| “Generate a repair request from this report” |
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| “What are the major issues vs. minor issues?” |
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| “Summarize the major issues for the seller’s agent” |
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What the best inspectors do differently
The patterns we see across both tables is the same. The reports that work — for humans and for AI — share a few things in common.
A consistent rating system.
- Every finding has a well-defined severity level, applied the same way across the entire report.
- This is the single most important thing that determines how well your report performs when someone asks AI about it.
Plain language.
- Instead of “TPRV discharge pipe not extended to within 6 inches of the floor,” try “The pressure relief valve on the water heater is not properly routed, which is a safety concern.”
- Tell them what they need to know, not just the technical code reference.
Specific locations.
- “Leak observed” is not actionable.
- “Active leak at the supply line under the master bathroom sink” gives both the buyer and the AI something concrete to work with.
Decoupling of findings.
- Each finding should be its own entry with a clear description, location, and severity.
- This is what allows AI and agents to pull items into a repair request without rewriting anything.
Inspector created summary.
- A summary reviewed by you gives clients and agents exactly what they need to act on.
- It also gives AI a clear starting point when someone asks for a quick overview of the inspection or a repair list.
How to set up your software for success
The right software setup can do a lot of the heavy lifting so you can focus on inspecting.
Keep your comment library organized and current.
- Review your template regularly to make sure comments use language that is clear and helpful to buyers and agents.
- When you encounter something unexpected on-site, your software should let you create new comments on the fly without breaking your flow.
Make sure your report is easy to navigate.
- Set up your template so images and comments are grouped together — the reader should never have to guess which photo belongs to which finding.
- Look for software that gives agents and buyers the ability to filter, search, and navigate by severity, section, or keyword, so they can find what they need without pasting the PDF into ChatGPT in the first place.
Give agents a way to build a repair list right inside the report.
- If an agent can select the items they want, generate a repair request, and send it to the seller — all within your reporting platform — they never have to copy and paste into a separate document or ask AI to do it.
- That saves them time, and it keeps your brand in front of everyone involved in the transaction.
Use a consistent rating system and stick to it.
- Pick a set of severity levels that makes sense for your workflow and apply them to every finding, every time.
- This is the single biggest factor in how well your report performs when someone feeds it into AI.
Complete inspections efficiently and turn around reports quickly.
- Your reporting tool should let you complete the inspection in the same amount of time (or less) than if you were simply walking the property and taking photos.
- And by the time you finish the inspection, your report should be ready for delivery — or very close to it.
The inspectors we see growing fastest right now are not the ones spending money on ads. They are the ones whose reports are so quick and good that agents recommend them without being asked. If you are curious what that looks like in practice, we would love to show you.