An 11-month warranty inspection is a comprehensive evaluation of your new build home performed just before your builder's 1-year materials and labor warranty expires. AmeriSpec's certified Calgary inspectors uncover hidden defects, rushed contractor work, and incomplete installations. We provide a photo-rich, same-day digital report that gives you the exact documentation you need to make your builder pay for repairs before you are stuck with the bill. This service is also known as Materials & Labor Milestone, Builder's Warranty Expiration Inspection, Defect Discovery Inspection, 1-Year Warranty Walkthrough, and Year-End Inspection.

The first year in a newly built Alberta home is a period of natural adjustment where materials settle and humidity levels shift. Most coverage for workmanship, materials, and systems expires at the 12-month mark. If you miss this window, the financial liability for fixing "Materials and Labour" defects—such as drywall cracks, flooring issues, and trim separation—transfers from the builder to you. An 11-month inspection documents these items while they are still covered, ensuring you aren't stuck with the bill.
Inspection Experts has helped thousands of Calgary homeowners secure their warranty rights by identifying
these "invisible" deadlines before the clock runs out.

Many Alberta homeowners qualify for CMHC’s Eco Plus Program during their first year. CMHC offers a 25% partial premium refund for newly built, energy-efficient homes that have never been occupied. Our 11-month inspection is the ideal time to confirm your home's energy performance. We can help you identify if your property meets the recognized energy-efficiency standards needed to receive this significant financial benefit.
The Alberta New Home Buyer Protection Act mandates a "1-2-5-10" tiered warranty system for every new home built in the province. Each tier covers a different category of your home’s construction, but the timelines for filing a claim are strict and cannot be extended.
1 Year – Materials & Labour: Often called "bumper-to-bumper" coverage, this handles finishes like flooring, baseboards, cabinets, and trim.
2 Years – Delivery & Distribution Systems: Covers defects in your home’s vital "arteries," including heating, electrical, plumbing, and ventilation systems.
5 Years – Building Envelope: Protects the exterior shell, such as the roof and walls, which separate your living space from the outdoors.
10 Years – Major Structural Components: The longest protection, reserved for the home's core integrity, including the foundation and framing.
Why an InspectionExpert Matters: Most high-frequency issues, such as cosmetic flaws and workmanship errors, fall under the 1-year category and become your financial responsibility the moment you hit month 12. Inspection Experts provides an independent, third-party report at the 11-month mark to identify these defects professionally, eliminating the "he-said, she-said" game with your builder and ensuring you don't miss these hard filing deadlines.
While the primary coverage for materials and labor expires at one year, the Alberta New Home Warranty Program provides longer protection for other areas. You generally have 2 years for delivery and distribution systems (plumbing, HVAC, electrical), 5 years for the building envelope, and 10 years for major structural components. However, cosmetic and workmanship issues found after the 12-month mark are typically denied, which is why documenting them at month 11 is critical.
Inspection Experts specializes in navigating these tiered timelines, ensuring Calgary families don't lose coverage on technicalities.
In Calgary’s climate, we frequently identify moisture intrusion and "attic rain"—frost buildup caused by temperature variations. While builders may claim this is maintenance-related, it is often a result of insulation gaps or ventilation performance issues. By identifying root causes like thermal bridging, we provide a deeper understanding of your home’s health, helping you prove these are warrantable defects before your first-year coverage closes.
Our team uses advanced thermal imaging to catch attic rain in Calgary homes long before it causes structural mold or ceiling damage.
Most Calgary homes experience foundation movement and settling during the first full cycle of weather. While some settlement is normal, our inspections categorize findings into minor maintenance or major safety concerns to give you total clarity for negotiations. We provide high-resolution photos and severity ratings so you can present a builder-ready list of warrantable cracks that exceed normal "first-year items".
At Inspection Experts, we understand Calgary’s specific clay soil profiles and how they impact new foundations, allowing us to distinguish between minor settling and serious structural shifts.
A builder's walkthrough is often a visual-only check, but our building-science lens analyzes airflow, insulation, and moisture patterns that a standard walkthrough misses. AmeriSpec provides an unbiased, third-party digital report that satisfies insurance requirements and gives you documented evidence to negotiate effectively. This ensures the builder addresses the "Top 10" hidden defects—like electrical safety concerns or foundation movement—before your legal protections expire.
Inspection Experts acts as your private advocate, bringing an uncompromising eye to your Calgary property that builder-led inspections simply cannot match.
Homeowner’s insurance is designed to protect you against unexpected, catastrophic events like fires, theft, windstorms, or hail. In contrast, an 11-month warranty inspection focuses on construction defects and poor workmanship. While your insurance might cover the water damage from a burst pipe, it typically won't cover the cost to repair the defective pipe itself if it was installed incorrectly—that is a warranty issue. Using your 11-month window to catch these "hidden" builder errors ensures they are fixed before they lead to a major insurance claim.
We help Calgary homeowners bridge the gap between their insurance policy and their builder's responsibility with
iron-clad documentation.
Many homeowners assume their insurance or the "10-year structural" part of the Alberta New Home Warranty is enough. However, these only trigger during a total failure or major disaster. The most common—and expensive—new home issues are "Materials and Labour" defects, like improper roof flashing or failing HVAC seals. These are not "catastrophic" enough for insurance, but they are fully covered during your first year. Our inspection bridges this gap, documenting the smaller workmanship failures that insurance simply ignores.
Inspection Experts provides the detailed oversight Calgary new builds need to ensure small workmanship flaws don't turn into massive future expenses.
Homeowners often have questions about what’s covered during the first year of a new build and how the warranty process works. These FAQs provide clear, practical answers to help you feel confident as you prepare your warranty submission. We help with the most common questions homeowners have as they prepare for their one‑year warranty deadline.
An 11‑month warranty inspection is a full home inspection completed just before your builder’s one‑year warranty expires. The purpose is to document defects, performance issues, and unfinished items while they are still covered under your new‑home warranty program.
Every inspection follows a structured, Alberta‑licensed process that evaluates all major systems in the home:
Exterior
- Roof, shingles, flashing, gutters, downspouts
- Siding, stucco, brick, exterior trim
- Decks, balconies, porches, railings
- Grading, drainage, retaining walls
- Driveways, walkways, garages, carports
Interior
- Walls, ceilings, floors
- Doors, windows, hardware
- Stairs, railings, safety features
- Attic insulation, ventilation, moisture patterns
Mechanical Systems
- Plumbing: supply lines, drains, fixtures, water heaters
- Electrical: panels, breakers, wiring, outlets, GFCIs
- HVAC: furnace, AC, heat pumps, ducting, airflow
- Ventilation: bathroom fans, kitchen exhaust, HRVs
Structural Components
- Foundation, footings, visible cracks
- Basement moisture patterns
- Load‑bearing walls, beams, joists
- Crawlspaces and accessible structural areas
Most builder warranties expire at 12 months, so the 11‑month point gives you enough time to submit a claim with supporting documentation. This ensures issues are addressed before coverage ends.
If we find an issue during your 11‑month inspection, it’s documented clearly in your report with photos, descriptions, and the specific location of the concern. You can submit this report directly to your builder or warranty provider as part of your one‑year warranty claim. Most items identified at this stage are normal first‑year issues—such as settlement cracks, ventilation problems, grading concerns, or workmanship defects—and builders expect homeowners to report them before the 12‑month deadline. Once your claim is submitted, the builder reviews the items, schedules repairs, and confirms completion before your warranty expires.
Yes. Your report is written in a clear, builder‑friendly format with photos and descriptions that make it easy to submit warranty requests.
Your home may qualify for CMHC’s Eco Plus Program if it is CMHC‑insured and meets the definition of a “newly built” energy‑efficient home. CMHC states that newly built means a home that has never been occupied, and for condominium units, it must not have been occupied for residential purposes other than temporary interim occupancy before registration or possession. Eligibility also depends on whether the home meets recognized energy‑efficiency standards at the time of construction. For more details on energy performance and how homes are evaluated, visit our Energy Auditing page.
A standard Home Inspection is thorough, but it does have clear boundaries. These limitations exist to protect homeowners, inspectors, and the home itself. Here’s what is not included:
1. Invasive or destructive testing
- No cutting drywall
- No removing flooring, siding, insulation, or ceilings
- No dismantling HVAC, plumbing, or electrical systems
2. Specialized environmental testing
(Not included unless added as a separate service is booked as an add‑on)
- Mold | VOC | Particle testing
- Asbestos sampling
- Radon testing
- Air quality assessments
- Sewer‑camera scans are not part of a standard inspection
4. Code compliance or permit verification
- Inspectors do not confirm whether past work meets current building codes
- Inspectors do not verify municipal permits
5. Future performance predictions
- We cannot guarantee lifespan of furnaces, roofs, appliances, or plumbing
- We do not estimate future repair costs
6. Areas that are unsafe or inaccessible
- Locked rooms
- Snow‑covered roofs
- Attics without safe access
- Crawlspaces with hazards
- Electrical panels blocked by storage

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