For inspection business owners
Sell your inspection business.
Tiny buys profitable inspection businesses with recurring routes, trained inspectors, trusted reports, and repeat customer demand.

The category matters less than the business itself: real profit, customer trust, and a reason to keep it independent for the long term.
Short answer
Does Tiny buy inspection businesses?
Yes. Tiny will consider profitable inspection businesses when they have trained inspectors, trusted reports, recurring or repeat demand, and a strong reputation with customers who depend on accurate work.
- Good fit: safety, property, equipment, environmental, franchise, quality, infrastructure, or regulatory inspections.
- We like route density, repeat accounts, standardized checklists, photo documentation, and report templates.
- Durability comes from trust, accreditation or licenses where relevant, and the cost of getting inspections wrong.
Why this kind of business can last
Inspection businesses can be wonderful when customers need the work done regularly and trust the report.
We like trained field teams, consistent QA, clean scheduling, and a reputation that compounds.
A niche inspection category with repeat accounts can be more attractive than broad one-off demand.
Strong fit and weaker fit signals
Strong fit
- Repeat commercial accounts, service routes, regulatory cycles, or contracted inspection calendars.
- Documented procedures, inspector training, report standards, QA, and insurance are in good shape.
- The business has dispatch, scheduling, report delivery, and collections under control.
Weaker fit
- Mostly one-off residential leads with weak repeat demand.
- Reports and QA live in the founder's head.
- Unclear liability, licensing, or insurance exposure.
What happens after a sale to Tiny
We keep the inspection team, customer relationships, and reporting standards stable.
Founder transition should preserve technical judgment and customer confidence, especially in regulated or safety-sensitive work.
Tiny is not a broker, marketplace, private equity fund, or short-term flipper. We buy businesses we would be proud to own for the long term, and we try not to break the thing customers already trust.
Where to go next
Questions founders ask
Does Tiny buy local inspection businesses?
Potentially, if the business is profitable, repeatable, and has a team and reputation that can continue after the owner transitions.
What records matter in diligence?
Revenue by customer, inspection volume, routes, reports, licenses, insurance, claims history, inspector training, and repeat account behavior.
Talk to Tiny
If this sounds like your business, email hello@tiny.com with a short description, approximate revenue, and approximate profit. No pitch deck required.