Home Inspection in Feasterville-Trevose, PA
Bob at All Seasons performs InterNACHI- and ASHI-certified home inspections across Feasterville and Trevose — covering the 1950s Cape Cods along Bustleton Pike, the 1960s-70s splits in Trevose, and everything in between.
Inspections typically scheduled within the week. Bob returns every call within 24 hours.
Feasterville-Trevose, Bucks County
What does a home inspection in Feasterville-Trevose include?
Feasterville-Trevose home inspections from All Seasons cost $375 for a standard single-family home, with your written report delivered within 24 hours. The two-community mix here is unusually demanding for inspectors: Feasterville's postwar Cape Cods carry original galvanized supply lines and cast iron drain stacks now six to seven decades old, while Trevose's split-levels from the late 1960s and early 1970s present a concentrated cluster of FPE Stab-Lok panels and aluminum branch wiring — two of the most consequential defects a.
Feasterville-Trevose sits in the lower portion of Bucks County, straddling Lower Southampton Township and Upper Southampton Township. The two communities share a commercial spine at the Bustleton Pike and Street Road (Route 132) intersection, but their housing stocks diverge sharply by decade and by section. Feasterville, the southern portion bordering Bensalem, developed primarily in the 1950s and into the early 1960s. The dominant forms here are Cape Cods and single-story ranchers on modest lots along streets like Pine Road, Byberry Road, and Davisville Road. These homes were built when galvanized steel supply piping was standard — and at 65 to 70 years of age, that pipe is at or past the end of its functional life. Galvanized corrodes from the inside out, narrowing the interior diameter progressively until water pressure drops at fixtures and rust-staining appears at tub and sink drains. Full replacement, not spot repair, is the correct response at this age. The drain, waste, and vent systems in the same homes are cast iron — which lasts longer than galvanized but still fails at joints and along horizontal laterals after six decades of service. Original electrical panels in these homes are often 60-amp fuse boxes that have never been upgraded, a liability for any buyer planning normal modern appliance loads. Trevose, the northern portion of the community extending toward County Line Road and Horsham, built out heavily during the 1965 to 1980 window. Split-levels, colonials, and ranchers line streets off Second Street Pike and Rocksville Road. This era introduced three specific hazards that appear with high frequency in this ZIP code. Federal Pacific Electric Stab-Lok panels were installed widely in residential construction from the mid-1960s through the mid-1970s, and Trevose's building boom fell squarely in that window. A 1967 or 1968 split-level in this area carries a very high probability of an FPE panel — breakers that fail to trip under overload, creating a fire risk that most insurers now treat as uninsurable without panel replacement. Aluminum branch circuit wiring was also used extensively during the same cost-driven era, coinciding precisely with copper price spikes in the late 1960s. Aluminum expands and contracts at a different rate than the copper terminals it connects to, loosening connections over time and creating arc and fire risk at outlets, switches, and fixtures throughout the home. A later 1980s townhome wave near Bustleton Pike brought polybutylene supply pipe — grey plastic pipe recognizable in the utility room, subject to chlorine degradation and fitting failure, and no longer insurable under some policies without replacement. The Neshaminy School District serves most of the Feasterville section, while parts of Trevose fall within the Council Rock School District — a boundary that matters substantially to families and affects resale values on otherwise comparable streets.
When I walk a 1967 Trevose split-level, I know before I open the electrical panel what I'm likely to find — and I go looking for it deliberately. My first stop in the utility room is the panel. If I see a Federal Pacific Electric Stab-Lok breaker box, that's a priority finding. FPE breakers are documented to fail to trip on overload, which means the one protection a breaker is supposed to provide — cutting power before a wire overheats — doesn't reliably work. I've seen these panels in homes that have sat for decades without incident, and I've seen them with breakers that have clearly overheated. Either way, I document it, photograph the label, and recommend evaluation by a licensed electrician with replacement as the likely outcome. Many insurance carriers in the Philadelphia suburbs now refuse to bind a policy on a home with an FPE panel, so this isn't an academic concern — it's a transaction issue. From the panel I follow the branch circuits. In a home built between 1965 and 1973, aluminum wiring is a real possibility. The tell at the outlets is whether the devices are rated CO/ALR — aluminum-compatible. Standard outlets installed with aluminum wire are a fire hazard at the connection point. I check representative outlets throughout the home and note any evidence of overheating, discoloration, or improper device ratings. Next I go to the supply lines. Even in a Trevose split from the late 1960s, I occasionally find galvanized supply surviving on a branch line or at a hose bib — and in the Feasterville Cape Cods on Pine Road or Byberry Road, galvanized is the norm. I run fixtures and check pressure at multiple points. Reduced flow at an upstairs bathroom while the kitchen is running is a strong indicator of internal corrosion narrowing the pipe. In the basement I inspect the cast iron stack — looking at horizontal runs for sag and joint separation, and at the condition of the hub-and-spigot connections. I'm also watching for grey polybutylene supply pipe in any home built in the 1980s, particularly in the townhome developments near Bustleton Pike. I've been doing this work as an InterNACHI-certified inspector long enough to know what each era of construction in lower Bucks County produces, and Feasterville-Trevose is one of the denser concentrations of era-specific risk I see in the region. If you're buying near the Trevose section, ask about the panel before the offer goes in. If you're buying in Feasterville, ask about the plumbing. I cover this entire area and work closely with buyers coming from surrounding communities — if you're also looking at homes in Langhorne, I cover that territory as well and can give you the same level of detail on what to watch for there. Call me at 215-938-9100 to schedule.
What does Bob check during a Feasterville-Trevose home inspection?
Bob approaches every Feasterville-Trevose inspection per ASHI and InterNACHI Standards of Practice. With 1950s–1980s mix of Cape Cods, ranchers, split-levels, and colonials across two adjacent communities housing stock dominant in Feasterville-Trevose, he focuses on the era-specific concerns that affect construction in Bucks County.
What are common issues in Feasterville-Trevose homes?
Based on 20+ years inspecting homes in Bucks County, these are the issues Bob finds most often in Feasterville-Trevose's 1950s–1980s mix of Cape Cods, ranchers, split-levels, and colonials across two adjacent communities housing stock:
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Inspections typically scheduled within the week. Bob returns every call within 24 hours.
Also Available: Mold Testing & Air Quality in Feasterville-Trevose
In addition to home inspections, Bob provides professional mold testing and air quality analysis for Feasterville-Trevose properties. PRO-LAB certified lab results starting from $275.
Learn About Mold Testing in Feasterville-TrevoseSchedule Your Home Inspection in Feasterville-Trevose
Same-week appointments available. Bob personally oversees every inspection — you always know who's walking through your home.
610-348-6728Mon–Sat, 7am–7pm • Urgent pre-closing available
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- Residential Home Inspection
- Pre-Listing Inspection
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- 11-Month Warranty Inspection
- WDI / Termite Inspection
- Radon Testing
Pricing for Feasterville-Trevose
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Why Choose Bob
Why do Feasterville-Trevose homeowners choose All Seasons?
You Always Get Bob
When you hire All Seasons, Bob personally oversees your inspection — start to finish. No corporate dispatch, no unknown inspector. You know exactly who's walking through your Feasterville-Trevose home.
InterNACHI Certified
InterNACHI Certified Professional Inspector with 20+ years of specialized expertise in Bucks County's 1950s–1980s mix of Cape Cods, ranchers, split-levels, and colonials across two adjacent communities housing stock.
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Common Questions
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Questions buyers and sellers in Feasterville-Trevose ask us most often — answered directly.