- Dec 26, 2025
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- First Name
- Carlos
As a small dealer, moving to a formal inspection checklist is a smart step—especially if you’re already selling cars honestly in that price range. In New York, state-licensed shops like Carlos Repairs @Ridge follow clear, measurable standards during inspections, which is a good model to borrow from when building your own checklist. Customers often ask basic questions like “How much is a New York State inspection?”, but what really builds trust is having clear numbers and documentation to back up your answers.
From what I’ve seen:
A solid 40–50 point checklist sounds like the happy medium for your inventory and price range—thorough, professional, and not overkill.
From what I’ve seen:
- Yes—most buyers don’t get an independent inspection, and the ones who do usually already trust their mechanic. Your checklist won’t replace that, but it adds credibility and helps serious buyers feel more confident upfront.
- Keeping it simple works best. A 3-option system (OK / Needs Attention / N/A) with measured notes (tire tread, brake thickness) is usually enough. Too many options can confuse customers.
- As long as you’re clear that it’s a condition report at the time of inspection (not a warranty), you’re generally reducing risk, not increasing it—especially if your checklist mirrors what a New York State inspection already checks for safety and compliance.
A solid 40–50 point checklist sounds like the happy medium for your inventory and price range—thorough, professional, and not overkill.