Professional Home Inspection in Limerick, PA
All Seasons Home Inspections brings InterNACHI and ASHI certification and 20+ years of Montgomery County experience to Limerick Township's 1990s–2000s subdivisions — where EIFS moisture intrusion and polybutylene plumbing are the two findings that change deals. From $375. Report in 24 hours.
Inspections typically scheduled within the week. Bob returns every call within 24 hours.
Limerick, Montgomery County
What does a home inspection in Limerick include?
A home inspection in Limerick, Montgomery County is a top-to-bottom evaluation of the home's structure, systems, and components — from the roof and attic down to the foundation and crawlspace. In Limerick's predominantly 1990s–2000s colonial subdivisions, that means paying close attention to synthetic stucco cladding (EIFS), original polybutylene supply piping, and the grading behavior of homes built on former farmland. Bob documents every finding with photos and delivers your full report within 24 hours.
Limerick Township is not old-house territory. Unlike Norristown's Victorian-era rowhouses or Phoenixville's early-twentieth-century mill-worker streets, Limerick is a fast-growth suburban township whose population more than doubled between 1990 and 2010 — going from roughly 6,600 residents to over 18,000 as former agricultural fields along the Route 422 corridor were platted into subdivision after subdivision. Faircrest Estates, The Hamlet, and dozens of similar developments defined the landscape: two-story colonials on quarter-acre lots, center-hall floor plans, attached two-car garages, and, critically, exterior cladding choices that were fashionable in the early 1990s and have since proven problematic at a near-systematic level. The single most consequential finding in 1990s–2000s Limerick colonials is EIFS — Exterior Insulation and Finish System — commonly called synthetic stucco. Builders in the Spring-Ford area embraced EIFS through the late 1980s and into the mid-1990s because it allowed quick installation, clean lines, and excellent insulation values. What those same builders and buyers did not fully appreciate was that first-generation EIFS was a barrier system: it was designed to keep water out, not to drain it when it inevitably got in. Water enters at window and door penetrations — at the head flashing, at the corners where sealant has cracked, at utility penetrations that were never properly integrated. Once inside the cladding assembly, it has nowhere to go. The substrate — typically OSB sheathing — holds moisture, and over the course of five to fifteen years, that moisture destroys the sheathing and begins to affect wall framing. The damage is invisible from the exterior. The home looks fine. The EIFS looks intact. A moisture meter tells a different story. Polybutylene supply piping is the second era-specific hazard. PB pipe — identifiable by its grey color and the plastic or copper insert fittings at joints — was installed widely in new construction from the late 1970s through 1994 and into 1995 in some markets. Homes in The Hamlet and similar Limerick developments from the late 1980s to mid-1990s are primary candidates. PB reacts over time with chlorine compounds in municipal water, becoming brittle and prone to failure at the fittings. Insurance carriers have become increasingly reluctant to write policies on PB-plumbed homes, and lenders are aware of the issue. Replacement is the only real fix. The third consistent finding pattern is grading and drainage. When you build on former farmland — land that was compacted, graded, and then disturbed again by construction activity — you end up with settled fill around foundations, stoops that have dropped away from the house, window wells that collect rather than shed water, and basement or crawlspace conditions that reflect poor lot drainage more than any defect in the foundation itself. Limerick homes along the Lewis Road and Limerick Center Road corridors, as well as in Spring-Ford School District subdivisions near Route 422, show this pattern consistently. The homes are not old, but they are not without serious inspection findings — and buyers who assume that a 1997 colonial does not need a thorough inspection are routinely surprised.
I've walked through dozens of Limerick Township colonials over the years, and I'll tell you exactly what I'm thinking from the moment I pull into the driveway. I'm looking at the exterior cladding before I even open my inspection bag. If there's EIFS on the façade, I already know where the morning is going: every window corner, every door frame, every utility penetration gets the moisture meter. Not a quick pass — a deliberate probe at the high-risk spots where sealant joints age and fail. I've read elevated moisture at the head of a second-floor window in a home that had zero visible exterior damage. The sealant looked fine from the ground. The meter showed the OSB behind the cladding was at twenty-two percent moisture content. That kind of finding does not show up on a walk-through. It shows up when you use the right tools in the right places. In the utility room, I'm checking the supply piping color. Grey fittings and grey pipe — that's polybutylene, and I document it clearly in the report with photographs. Buyers in Limerick Township are sometimes surprised because the home feels newer and they expected newer materials. But a 1992 or 1993 build in The Hamlet or Faircrest Estates is old enough to have PB plumbing, and that's information a buyer needs before they reach the settlement table, not after. I hear it often from buyers in this part of Montgomery County: 'It's a newer home, how much could be wrong?' That's the assumption that costs people money. The 1990s suburban colonial is its own inspection category with its own failure modes. EIFS moisture intrusion, polybutylene pipe, and drainage issues from construction on former agricultural fill are not exotic findings here — they are the standard findings. I inspect for them methodically because I know from experience that they are present at a rate that makes assumption dangerous. Grading gets a thorough evaluation too. I'm looking at how the lot sheds water, whether the stoops have settled and created a gap at the threshold, whether window wells are draining or holding. On homes built on what used to be farm fields, soil compaction is inconsistent and settlement is common. That doesn't always mean foundation failure — often it's cosmetic or correctable — but it needs to be documented accurately so buyers understand what they are purchasing. All Seasons is InterNACHI and ASHI certified. I carry the training and the tools — including calibrated moisture meters and thermal imaging when conditions warrant — that make an inspection in a Limerick Township colonial worth the investment. Your full photo report is in your hands within 24 hours. I also serve nearby communities including Phoenixville and Norristown across Montgomery County.
What does Bob check during a Limerick home inspection?
Bob approaches every Limerick inspection per ASHI and InterNACHI Standards of Practice. With 1990s–2000s housing stock dominant in Limerick, he focuses on the era-specific concerns that affect construction in Montgomery County.
What are common issues in Limerick homes?
Based on 20+ years inspecting homes in Montgomery County, these are the issues Bob finds most often in Limerick's 1990s–2000s 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 Limerick
In addition to home inspections, Bob provides professional mold testing and air quality analysis for Limerick properties. PRO-LAB certified lab results starting from $275.
Learn About Mold Testing in LimerickSchedule Your Home Inspection in Limerick
Same-week appointments available. Bob personally oversees every inspection — you always know who's walking through your home.
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Get a Free EstimateInspection Services in Limerick
- Residential Home Inspection
- Pre-Listing Inspection
- New Construction Inspection
- 11-Month Warranty Inspection
- WDI / Termite Inspection
- Radon Testing
Pricing for Limerick
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Why Choose Bob
Why do Limerick 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 Limerick home.
InterNACHI Certified
InterNACHI Certified Professional Inspector with 20+ years of specialized expertise in Montgomery County's 1990s–2000s housing stock.
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Your detailed, photo-rich inspection report delivered the same day. No waiting — so you can make decisions within your contract timeline.
Expertise
From the Blog
What should Limerick homebuyers know about inspections?
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How do I schedule a home inspection in Limerick?
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Common Questions
What are common home inspection questions in Limerick?
Questions buyers and sellers in Limerick ask us most often — answered directly.