
If you're considering an independent spray foam inspection, it helps to know what you're actually paying for. Here's what a documented inspection report typically includes.
A report should identify exactly where each measurement or sample was taken — often shown against a simple floor plan or photo reference — so the findings are traceable, not just a general summary.
Depending on which services were performed, this includes thickness measurements at each sample point, adhesion/pull-test results, and moisture readings — recorded as specific numbers, not general impressions.
Clear photographs of each sample location, along with any visible defects (discoloration, gaps, staining), give visual evidence to accompany the written measurements.
Where a specification or original quote is available, the report compares actual findings against what was specified — showing clearly where the installation meets, exceeds, or falls short of what was promised.
Alongside the technical data, a good report includes a summary written in plain language — so the findings are usable by a homeowner, not just a specialist.
An inspection report documents findings — it doesn't resolve a dispute, guarantee a legal outcome, or replace advice from an attorney if your situation escalates that far. It's the factual foundation those conversations are built on.
Want to know what's included for your specific situation? Spray Foam Testing Services offers documented inspection reports — reach out to discuss scope and scheduling.
No installation. No referrals. No upselling.