11-Month Warranty Inspections

11-Month Warranty Inspections in the Yakima Valley and Tri-Cities

If you purchased a newly built home in the past year, there’s a deadline coming that most homeowners don’t think about until it’s too late. Most builders offer a one-year workmanship warranty on new construction, covering defects in materials and labor that show up in the first twelve months of ownership. Once that warranty expires, the cost of repairs falls entirely on you.

An 11-month warranty inspection is conducted before that deadline hits, giving you time to identify and document defects while you still have coverage to fall back on. At Arrowhead Inspections, we help homeowners throughout the Yakima Valley and Tri-Cities, including Kennewick, Richland, Pasco, Yakima, Sunnyside, Zillah, and Toppenish, get the most out of their builder warranty before the clock runs out.

What Changes in the First Year of a New Home

A newly built home settles, shifts, and reveals things that weren’t visible at closing. Concrete cures. Wood framing dries out and moves slightly. HVAC systems run through full seasonal cycles. Plumbing is used under real household demand. Grading and drainage get tested by rain and irrigation. All of these processes can expose defects that were present at construction but simply weren’t visible yet.

By month 11, a home has typically gone through at least one full seasonal cycle. That’s the window when issues related to thermal expansion, drainage, and settling tend to surface. Common findings at 11-month warranty inspections include:

  • Settlement cracking in drywall, especially around door and window frames, corners, and along ceiling-to-wall transitions. Some cracking is expected as framing dries out, but cracking patterns that suggest ongoing movement need to be documented and reported to the builder.
  • HVAC performance issues. Systems that weren’t properly commissioned or balanced at installation may struggle to maintain comfortable temperatures in rooms at the ends of duct runs, or may cycle more frequently than they should. A builder warranty covers these kinds of deficiencies if reported before expiration.
  • Roof and flashing defects. Improper flashing installation around penetrations, skylights, or valleys may not allow water infiltration until there’s been meaningful rain. Eastern Washington’s weather patterns mean some homes don’t face a serious rain event until late fall or winter, often well after closing.
  • Grading and drainage problems. Improper slope away from the foundation, drainage that’s directing water toward the home, or low spots that pool water near the structure are frequently identified in 11-month inspections. These are exactly the kinds of items builders are required to address under a one-year warranty.
  • Door and window alignment issues. Sticking doors, windows that won’t latch properly, and visible daylight at thresholds are all signs of settling or installation problems worth noting formally.
  • Plumbing and water heater concerns. Slow drains, water pressure imbalances, and improperly secured supply lines under sinks and behind appliances often go unnoticed for months before they cause a problem.

How the Warranty Inspection Process Works

We treat an 11-month warranty inspection with the same thoroughness as a standard home inspection. We walk the full property, including the exterior, roof, attic, all living areas, crawlspace or basement, garage, and all accessible mechanical systems, and produce a complete written report with photos documenting every finding.

That report becomes your formal record for submitting a warranty claim to your builder. Having documented findings from a licensed, independent inspector carries significantly more weight with a builder’s warranty department than a verbal complaint or a list of concerns you’ve written yourself. We make the process straightforward so you can submit your claim with confidence and on time.

Don’t Wait Until Month 12

The most common mistake homeowners make is assuming they have until the warranty expiration date to schedule an inspection. In practice, you need the inspection completed and the warranty claim submitted with enough time for the builder to review and respond, which typically means starting the process at month 10 or 11 at the latest. If you moved into a new home 10 to 11 months ago and haven’t had a warranty inspection scheduled, now is the time to act.

This service is particularly relevant for buyers who purchased new construction in the active development areas of Pasco’s Road 68 and Broadmoor corridors, Richland’s Horn Rapids and Queensgate neighborhoods, and growing residential areas throughout Kennewick and Yakima over the past couple of years.

Schedule Your 11-Month Warranty Inspection

Don’t let your builder’s warranty expire before you’ve used it. Arrowhead Inspections provides 11-month warranty inspections throughout the Yakima Valley and Tri-Cities. Call us at 509-408-0468 or schedule online today to protect the investment you made in your new home.