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How Housing Inspections Protect Tenants: Complaint‑Based Enforcement and What We Look For

By Tim Durkan

Our Code Compliance Inspectors play a key role in keeping Seattle’s housing safe. Most inspections are complaint based, meaning we respond when tenants, neighbors, or community members report a potential violation. When a complaint comes in, inspectors verify the conditions, determine whether code requirements are being met, and work with property owners to correct any issues.

What we look for during housing inspections:
Our inspections focus on conditions that directly impact safety, health, and building performance, including:

• Safe, reliable heat, hot water, and utilities
• Structural soundness of floors, stairs, decks, guardrails, and entryways
• Proper ventilation and moisture control to prevent mold and maintain healthy indoor air
• Functional plumbing and sanitary facilities
• Electrical safety, including exposed wiring, damaged outlets, or overloaded circuits
• Evidence of pests or rodent activity that requires corrective action
• Working smoke and carbon monoxide alarms in required locations
• Clear, unobstructed exits and access paths for emergencies

How the complaint‑based process works:

  1. A complaint is submitted through the Seattle Services Portal or by phone
  2. An inspector is assigned and conducts an on‑site inspection
  1. We issue a Notice of Violation or Citation with clear correction requirements and timelines if violations are found
  2. Property owners complete repairs and request reinspection
  3. We verify compliance and close the case once the corrections are complete

Our goal is to support timely, effective corrections, and ensure that all housing in Seattle meets the minimum standards required by code. Complaint‑based inspections allow us to respond directly to issues affecting residents while maintaining consistent, equitable enforcement citywide.