HQS / UPCS-V inspections
Before a voucher tenant can move in — and periodically afterward — your unit has to pass a habitability inspection. HUD has historically used Housing Quality Standards (HQS), and is transitioning PHAs to the newer, more detailed Uniform Physical Condition Standards for Vouchers (UPCS-V) protocol.
What inspectors typically check
- Working smoke and carbon-monoxide detectors, secure windows and doors, and functioning locks.
- Safe, functioning electrical, plumbing, and heating systems — no exposed wiring, active leaks, or inoperable heat sources.
- No serious structural, sanitation, or pest issues, and clear emergency egress from every room used for sleeping.
- Adequate space and a kitchen/bathroom that meet minimum equipment requirements for the unit's bedroom size.
How UPCS-V differs
UPCS-V generally inspects more items, in more granular detail, and ties deficiencies to severity levels that can affect timelines for re-inspection and payment. Practically, that means it's worth doing your own walkthrough against a current checklist before the official inspection — the bar for "pass" is incrementally higher than it was under legacy HQS in PHAs that have made the switch.
Before the inspector arrives
Test every detector and appliance, walk every room checking for the items above, and fix anything you find — most failed inspections come down to a handful of small, fixable items rather than major defects. A failed inspection delays move-in and, on existing tenancies, can put your HAP payments on hold until you re-pass.
Deep dives
- REAC and NSPIRE inspection scores: what they mean for public housing investors
HUD's physical inspection scores are public — and they tell you more than just whether a building passed. Here's how to read REAC and NSPIRE scores, what thresholds trigger HUD intervention, and what a 'troubled' designation actually means for a property.