Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI)

Building Inspector Firm — Phoenix, AZ

Specialized claims knowledge when you need it most.

Home/commercial inspections Maricopa Co…
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About Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI)

Navigating an insurance claim can feel overwhelming — especially when the carrier's response doesn't match the reality of your damage. Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI) brings specialized expertise and independent advocacy to policyholders across Phoenix and Arizona, from initial damage assessment through final settlement.

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What Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI) helps with

  • Home/commercial inspections Maricopa County claims

How Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI) works with homeowners

  1. Intake

    Tell the story of your loss and share your policy and damage photos.

  2. Assessment

    Independent review of your claim — scope, policy, and carrier position.

  3. Action plan

    A clear next step tailored to your situation, with written recommendations.

  4. Resolution

    Ongoing advocacy through documentation, negotiation, and settlement.

Service area

Service area map — Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
  • Phoenix
  • Phoenix metro area
  • Arizona statewide

Why hire a licensed building inspector in Arizona

  • Licensed and accountable

    Licensure means a legal duty to work in your interest, continuing-education requirements, and a state regulator to complain to if something goes wrong.

  • Experience the carrier respects

    Carriers respond differently when a licensed professional is on the file. The paperwork, cadence, and language matter.

  • Transparent pricing

    Fees are disclosed in writing before any work begins. No surprise invoices, no hidden scope.

What outcomes can look like on claims like yours

Illustrative examples of how common claim types unfold in Arizona — general education, not results of Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI). Actual outcomes depend on policy language, damage, and timing.

Burst supply line and ceiling collapse

Water damage

A common scenario: a supply line fails overnight and part of a ceiling comes down. Initial carrier scopes often cover cosmetic drywall repair and only a fraction of the flooring. Thorough moisture mapping, cabinet-box damage documentation, and code-required electrical work frequently expand the covered scope enough to bring a home back to pre-loss condition.

Post-storm roof denial

Hail damage

Carriers sometimes deny roof replacement after a hail event, calling the damage cosmetic. A fresh inspection with calibrated roof-test squares, shingle mat cross-sections, and NOAA storm-data pairing can establish whether a supportable replacement case exists — and denials do get reversed when the documentation holds up.

Reopened claims and corrected scopes

Reopen & supplement

Initial carrier estimates frequently miss covered line items. Careful scope review, supporting photographs, and code-required documentation are the basis for supplemental payments — the standard path for returning a policyholder closer to whole after an underpaid claim.

Reviews

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Questions people ask

How do I know if I need a building inspector?

If you're facing an insurance claim that's complex, denied, underpaid, or just confusing, a licensed building inspector may be able to help. Ask about scope and fees up front before engaging anyone.

What does licensing mean in Arizona?

Licensed professionals in Arizona are subject to state regulation, which typically includes accountability to a state agency and continuing-education requirements. You can confirm any license directly with the state's licensing authority.

How much does a building inspector cost?

Pricing varies by professional, scope, and engagement type. Reputable professionals disclose fees in writing before any work begins — always ask.

General information about how building inspectors work in Arizona — not statements written by Commercial and Residential Inspection (CRI).

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