We're headquartered in Farmington Hills and Oakland County is our home turf. From Bloomfield Hills estates to Pontiac bungalows to brand-new Novi subdivisions, we inspect every kind of property in this county every week.
Oakland County has one of the most varied housing stocks in Michigan — Birmingham Tudors and Royal Oak craftsman bungalows from the 1920s sit blocks away from teardown-and-rebuild new construction. Inspectors who don't know the era of the home you're buying will miss things.
We pay particular attention to the issues that come up over and over in Oakland County: galvanized supply piping in pre-1960 Birmingham/Royal Oak homes, knob-and-tube remnants behind newer drywall in Pontiac and Hazel Park, asbestos siding and vermiculite attic insulation in mid-century Berkley/Ferndale homes, and chronic water-intrusion issues in the original Bloomfield Hills walkout-basement designs.
On the newer end — Novi, Northville, Rochester Hills, and Auburn Hills subdivisions built in the last 15 years — the inspection focus shifts to builder defects: missing insulation, undersized HVAC ductwork, improper attic ventilation, and grading issues that drive water at the foundation.
Yes — we inspect throughout Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Bloomfield Township, and West Bloomfield every week. These are some of our most common service areas. Older estate homes in this area get our extended inspection due to their age and complexity.
We can typically inspect any property in Oakland County within 24–48 hours of booking. Most of the county is within a 30-minute drive of our Farmington Hills office, so we have flexible scheduling Monday–Saturday.
Yes. We inspect new construction throughout Oakland County including Novi, Rochester Hills, Lake Orion, and the Toll Brothers / Pulte / Robertson developments. We strongly recommend booking before final walkthrough so you can require fixes from the builder.