Section 8 Inspection Checklist: How to Pass HQS

11 min readVoucherMatch Team
Section 8 Inspection Checklist: How to Pass HQS

Section 8 Inspection Checklist: How to Pass HQS in NYC

Every Section 8 unit has to pass an HQS inspection before a tenant can move in, and then again every year after that. HQS stands for Housing Quality Standards, and it's a federal requirement that applies to all Housing Choice Voucher programs nationwide.

The inspection itself isn't complicated. An inspector walks through the unit checking specific items against a standardized list. If everything meets the standards, you pass. If something doesn't, you fail and have to fix it before the tenant can move in (or before your payments continue, if it's an annual inspection).

Most failures are preventable. Landlords who walk through their units beforehand and fix obvious issues almost always pass. Landlords who assume everything is fine are the ones who get surprised.

Here's what inspectors actually look for, room by room, plus the most common reasons units fail.

What HQS Inspectors Check: The Complete List

The HUD Housing Quality Standards cover 13 performance areas. Inspectors evaluate each one and mark items as pass, fail, or inconclusive. A single failed item means the whole inspection fails.

1. Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Detectors

This is the number one reason units fail inspection, and it's completely avoidable.

Current requirements (as of December 2024 under NSPIRE):

  • Smoke detectors on every level of the unit
  • Smoke detector outside every sleeping area
  • Smoke detector inside each bedroom
  • All smoke detectors must be hardwired OR have sealed 10-year batteries (regular battery-operated detectors no longer pass)
  • Carbon monoxide detectors required if there's any fuel-burning appliance (gas stove, gas heat, fireplace) or attached garage
  • The hardwired/10-year battery requirement trips up a lot of landlords. If your unit has old battery-operated smoke detectors, they need to be replaced before inspection. This isn't optional and inspectors will fail you on it.

    2. Living Room

    • At least one window
    • Window must open, close, and lock properly
    • Window must have a screen (during warm months) or the ability to accept one
    • Working electrical outlet
    • No exposed wiring
    • No tripping hazards
    • Ceiling, walls, and floor in good condition (no holes, no peeling paint, no water damage)

    3. Kitchen

    • Working stove/oven with all burners functional
    • Working refrigerator that maintains proper temperature
    • Sink with hot and cold running water
    • Working electrical outlets (GFCI required near water sources)
    • Adequate food storage space
    • No evidence of pest infestation
    • Ventilation (window that opens or exhaust fan)
    • No peeling paint
    • No leaks under sink

    4. Bathroom

    • Toilet that flushes properly and doesn't run
    • Sink with hot and cold running water
    • Tub or shower with hot and cold running water
    • GFCI outlet required
    • Ventilation (window or exhaust fan)
    • Privacy (door with lock)
    • No leaks
    • No mold or mildew indicating chronic moisture problems
    • No peeling paint

    5. Bedrooms

    • At least one window that opens (for emergency egress)
    • Window must lock
    • Closet or wardrobe space
    • Working electrical outlet
    • Ceiling, walls, floor in good condition
    • Door for privacy
    • No peeling paint
    • Adequate size (generally at least 70 square feet for one person)

    6. Other Interior Areas

    • All interior doors open and close properly
    • Hallways clear and well-lit
    • Stairs have handrails if 4 or more steps (this one catches people)
    • No tripping hazards
    • Adequate lighting throughout
    • No exposed wiring anywhere

    7. Heating System

    • Must be able to maintain 68°F throughout the unit
    • Heating equipment in safe working condition
    • No visible damage to heating system
    • Vents unobstructed
    • If space heaters are primary heat source, they must be permanently installed (portable space heaters don't count)

    8. Plumbing

    • No leaks anywhere (check under all sinks, around toilets, water heater)
    • Water heater has temperature/pressure relief valve with discharge pipe that extends toward the floor (not just a valve with no pipe)
    • Hot water reaches all fixtures
    • Adequate water pressure
    • All drains function properly

    9. Electrical

    • All outlets work
    • All light switches work
    • No missing outlet or switch covers
    • No exposed wiring
    • Circuit breaker or fuse box accessible and properly labeled
    • GFCI outlets where required (kitchen, bathroom, within 6 feet of water)
    • No overloaded circuits

    10. Windows and Doors

    • All windows open, close, and lock
    • No cracked or broken glass
    • Exterior doors have deadbolts or adequate locks
    • Exterior doors close and latch properly
    • No gaps that let in weather or pests
    • Screens on windows (seasonally)

    11. Lead Paint (Pre-1978 Buildings)

    If the building was built before 1978 and a child under 6 will live there:

  • No peeling, chipping, or flaking paint anywhere
  • No deteriorated paint on friction surfaces (windows, doors)
  • This applies to common areas and exterior too, not just the unit
  • Lead paint issues are taken extremely seriously. Even small areas of peeling paint will fail an inspection in pre-1978 buildings.

    12. Building Exterior and Common Areas

    • Building entrance secure
    • Stairs and railings in good condition
    • Hallways adequately lit
    • No accumulation of garbage or debris
    • Mailbox available
    • Building address clearly visible
    • Fire exits accessible and marked

    13. Site and Neighborhood

    Inspectors also note environmental hazards, though these rarely cause failures:

  • No obvious pollution sources immediately adjacent
  • No evidence of flooding
  • Reasonable proximity to services
  • Most Common HQS Inspection Failures in NYC

    Based on what actually fails inspections most often in New York City:

    • Smoke detectors - Wrong type (not hardwired/10-year), missing from required locations, or not working
    • Carbon monoxide detectors - Missing entirely in units with gas appliances
    • Peeling paint - Especially in pre-1978 buildings, this is treated as a lead hazard
    • Window problems - Won't open, won't lock, broken glass, missing screens
    • Missing handrails - On stairs with 4+ steps, inside or outside the unit
    • Electrical issues - Missing outlet covers, non-working outlets, no GFCI where required
    • Water heater pressure relief valve - Missing the discharge pipe extension
    • Locks - Exterior doors without adequate locks
    • Leaks - Under sinks, around toilets, from ceilings
    • Mold/mildew - Indicates ventilation or moisture problems

    Most of these are inexpensive fixes. A smoke detector costs $25-40. An outlet cover costs $1. A handrail costs maybe $50-100 installed. The problem isn't the cost, it's landlords not checking before the inspection.

    What Happens If You Fail the Inspection

    If the unit fails, you'll get a report listing exactly what failed and why. What happens next depends on whether it's an initial inspection (before move-in) or an annual inspection (existing tenant).

    For initial inspections:

  • The tenant cannot move in until the unit passes
  • You typically get 30 days to make repairs
  • Emergency items (no heat, gas leaks, etc.) must be fixed within 24 hours
  • After repairs, you schedule a re-inspection
  • If you fail twice, the tenant may need to find another unit
  • The tenant's voucher has an expiration date, so delays hurt them
  • For annual inspections:

  • You get 30 days to fix non-emergency items (24 hours for emergencies)
  • If you don't fix issues in time, your HAP payments get abated (stopped)
  • Payments resume after you pass re-inspection, but you don't get back pay for the abatement period
  • Repeated failures can result in HAP contract termination
  • For a deeper dive on the consequences and how to handle them, see our guide on what happens if you fail a Section 8 inspection.

    Pre-Inspection Walkthrough: Do This Before the Inspector Arrives

    Walk through your unit with this checklist before the scheduled inspection. Fix anything you find.

    Quick wins (under $50, under an hour):

  • [ ] Replace smoke detector batteries or install 10-year sealed battery detectors
  • [ ] Install/replace CO detectors near gas appliances
  • [ ] Replace missing outlet and switch covers
  • [ ] Tighten loose doorknobs and locks
  • [ ] Fix running toilets (usually just the flapper)
  • [ ] Clear drain clogs
  • [ ] Replace burned-out light bulbs
  • Medium fixes (under $200, a few hours):

  • [ ] Install GFCI outlets in kitchen and bathroom
  • [ ] Install handrails on stairs with 4+ steps
  • [ ] Fix windows that won't open or lock
  • [ ] Repair leaks under sinks
  • [ ] Add discharge pipe to water heater pressure relief valve
  • Bigger fixes (may need a pro):

  • [ ] Address peeling paint (especially in pre-1978 buildings)
  • [ ] Repair or replace non-functional heating equipment
  • [ ] Fix electrical problems beyond simple outlet issues
  • [ ] Address mold/moisture issues
  • [ ] Replace broken windows
  • We built a free Pre-Inspection Checklist tool that walks through every item inspectors check. Use it the week before your inspection to catch problems while you still have time to fix them.

    The Inspector Isn't Your Enemy

    I want to be clear about something: the HQS inspection isn't designed to fail you. It's designed to make sure the unit is safe and livable. Inspectors aren't looking for reasons to reject your property. They're checking a standardized list and marking what they see.

    If something fails, it's because it genuinely doesn't meet the standard, not because the inspector is being difficult. And the standards aren't unreasonable. They're basically: the unit has heat, the plumbing works, the electrical is safe, there's no lead paint peeling onto kids, and smoke detectors exist. That's not a high bar for a rental apartment.

    Landlords who treat inspections as adversarial make their own lives harder. Landlords who prepare their units and fix obvious issues pass without drama.

    HQS Inspection Timeline in NYC

    Here's roughly what to expect timing-wise:

    • Initial inspection scheduling: NYCHA typically schedules within 5 business days of rental packet approval
    • Inspection results: Available on NYCHA's portal within 24 hours
    • Re-inspection after repairs: Automatically scheduled for 30 days out, or you can request earlier once repairs are done
    • Emergency repairs: Must be completed within 24 hours

    For HPD-administered vouchers, the timeline is similar but you'll work through their system instead of NYCHA's.

    If you're curious about the full Section 8 approval timeline from waitlist to move-in, including where inspection fits in, see how long Section 8 approval takes in NYC.

    For Tenants: What You're Responsible For

    Most HQS requirements are the landlord's responsibility, but some things fall on tenants:

    • Keeping smoke detector batteries working (if you removed them, that's on you)
    • Not causing damage that leads to failures
    • Maintaining basic cleanliness (severe pest infestations from tenant neglect can be tenant-caused)
    • Providing access for the inspection (if you refuse access repeatedly, you can be terminated from the program)

    If an inspection fails due to something you caused, the housing authority notifies you to fix it. If you don't, your voucher can be terminated.

    That said, the vast majority of failed items are landlord responsibility: the structure, the systems, the appliances, the paint.

    Section 8 Inspection Requirements by Housing Authority

    Different housing authorities in NYC administer Section 8, and while they all follow HUD's HQS standards, there can be slight differences in process:

    NYCHA: Largest program, uses NSPIRE standards as of 2025, inspections scheduled through Self-Service Portal, results available online within 24 hours.

    HPD: Second largest, inspections handled by their Division of Code Enforcement, owners can certify repairs online through their eCertification system.

    HCR (NYS Homes and Community Renewal): Administers vouchers for some areas, similar HQS requirements.

    The inspection standards themselves are essentially identical since they all flow from federal HUD requirements. The differences are mostly administrative, like how you schedule and how you certify repairs.

    Preparing Your Unit: A Summary

    Here's the short version of everything above:

    • Install proper smoke detectors - Hardwired or 10-year sealed battery, every level, every bedroom, outside sleeping areas
    • Install CO detectors - If you have any gas appliances
    • Fix any peeling paint - Especially if the building is pre-1978
    • Check all windows - Open, close, lock, no broken glass
    • Check all doors - Locks work, close properly
    • Test all outlets and switches - Install GFCI where required
    • Check for leaks - Under sinks, around toilets, water heater
    • Ensure water heater has discharge pipe - Not just the relief valve
    • Install handrails - Any stairs with 4+ steps
    • Walk through with our Pre-Inspection Checklist tool - Catches things you might miss

    If you do these things, you'll almost certainly pass.

    ---

    Preparing for an HQS inspection? Use our free Pre-Inspection Checklist tool to walk through everything inspectors look for.

    New to renting to Section 8 tenants? Our guide on how to become a Section 8 landlord in NYC explains the full process from start to finish.

    Looking to rent your unit to voucher holders? List your property on VoucherMatch and connect with qualified tenants who are ready to move.

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