What Is the DunRite AI Inspection Tool?
Traditional home inspections cost $300–$500 and require scheduling days in advance. The DunRite AI Inspection tool changes that entirely. Simply upload photos of any area of your home — a leaky ceiling, a cracked foundation wall, aging electrical panel, or worn-out HVAC unit — and our AI analyzes them in seconds.
What You Get in Every Report
Each inspection produces a structured report that includes:
- Overall Safety Rating (0–10 scale) so you know at a glance how urgent the situation is
- Identified Issues with severity levels (Low, Medium, High, Critical)
- Recommended Next Steps for each issue found
- Photo Annotations highlighting exactly where problems are located
Real-World Use Cases
Before Buying a Home
Upload listing photos or walkthrough images to spot red flags before you make an offer. Catch moisture damage, improper wiring, or structural concerns a casual walkthrough might miss.
During an Active Renovation
If your contractor has agreed to periodic photo updates, you can run AI inspections throughout the project to verify work quality at every stage.
Ongoing Home Maintenance
Run a seasonal inspection of your roof, gutters, basement, and HVAC. Catching small issues early prevents expensive repairs down the road.
How to Use It
- Navigate to AI Inspection in the sidebar
- Upload one or more photos of the area you want assessed
- Add a brief description of any concerns you have noticed
- Hit Run Inspection — results arrive in under 30 seconds
- Save the report to a project for future reference
Why Trust AI for This?
DunRite's inspection model is trained on thousands of real-world home inspection reports and construction defect case studies. While it does not replace a licensed inspector for legal purposes, it is an incredibly powerful first-pass tool that helps you prioritize repairs, ask better questions, and avoid being caught off guard.
"I uploaded photos of my basement after a heavy rain and the AI flagged a hairline foundation crack I had not noticed. Saved me from what could have been a $20,000 problem." — DunRite User







