Wide-angle interior view of a shipping container home mid-inspection, corrugated steel walls with natural light streaming through a cut window opening
Licensed · ICC Certified · Serving 14 Counties

Know What's
Inside the Walls
Before You Sign.

Certified structural assessments for shipping container homes. Whether you're buying off Zillow, mid-CONEX build, or need a report your insurer will actually accept — Gauge delivers.

847+
Inspections Completed
Since 2019
48 hrs
Avg. Turnaround
Report delivery
94%
Defect Detection Rate
Pre-purchase finds
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Inspection Estimator

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Three inputs. Instant results. No sales call required — see exactly what your inspection covers and what it costs.

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Select your container count, modification level, and county to generate your inspection scope and price range.

What We Inspect

Five Systems.
Zero Guesswork.

Every Gauge report covers all five structural systems — not just the ones that are easy to access.

Close-up inspection of steel container corner post welds and structural connections
Critical

Structural Integrity

Every weld, every cut, every corner post — assessed against IICRC and ICC container conversion standards.

  • Corner casting & ISO fitting condition
  • Weld quality at all modification points
  • Corten steel wall deformation mapping
  • Roof load rating verification
  • Stack capacity after cuts

Most common finding: Improper header reinforcement after window cuts (found in 61% of inspections)

Moisture damage and rust corrosion visible on corrugated steel container wall interior
High Priority

Moisture & Corrosion

Rust is the enemy. We map corrosion depth, identify condensation traps, and flag penetrations that will leak.

  • Surface rust vs. through-wall corrosion
  • Thermal bridging condensation points
  • Penetration flashing integrity
  • +1 more checks

Active condensation behind spray foam (found in 43% of full residential builds)

Electrical panel and wiring rough-in inspection inside a container home conversion
Code Compliance

Electrical & Plumbing Rough-In

County sign-off starts here. We verify your rough-in against NEC and local jurisdiction amendments before walls close.

  • Panel sizing & grounding continuity
  • Conduit routing through steel walls
  • GFCI/AFCI placement compliance
  • +2 more checks

Missing equipment grounding conductor at panel (found in 38% of owner-builds)

Thermal imaging showing heat loss through container home steel walls and insulation gaps
Energy Code

Thermal Envelope

Steel conducts heat 400× faster than wood framing. Your insulation strategy determines whether this home is livable.

  • Thermal break continuity at framing
  • Spray foam adhesion & coverage
  • Vapor barrier placement (climate-specific)
  • +1 more checks

Thermal bridging at floor joists reducing effective R-value by ~40% (found in 52% of builds)

Container home foundation and leveling inspection showing concrete footings and anchor bolts
Structural Base

Foundation & Leveling

A container on unlevel footings transfers stress to every weld and door frame. We verify bearing points and anchor compliance.

  • Footing bearing area & frost depth
  • Corner post load transfer verification
  • Anchor bolt pattern & embedment
  • +1 more checks

Point-loaded footings under mid-span cuts — not designed for concentrated load (found in 29% of builds)

From The Field

What We've Caught.
Before It Became Your Problem.

Real findings from real Gauge inspections. Names removed. Problems documented exactly as found.

Container home door opening with missing structural header beam showing unsafe load path
CriticalStructural
No header — load path broken

Header beam absent above 4ft door cut

Owner-builder removed 48" of wall corrugation for entry door without installing structural header. Roof load transferring directly through door frame.

Found in
61% of pre-purchase inspections
Risk
Roof deflection under snow load
Severe rust corrosion through container wall at door hinge point showing section loss
HighMoisture
Through-wall rust — 83% section loss

Through-wall corrosion at cargo door hinge

Original cargo door hinges retain water. Corrosion has progressed through full wall thickness — 3/16" Corten now measures 1/32".

Found in
34% of units over 8 years old
Risk
Structural compromise + water intrusion
Electrical panel inside container home showing improper grounding connection to steel chassis
Code ViolationElectrical
Improper bonding — NEC 250.64 violation

Ungrounded panel bonded to container chassis

Main panel ground wire attached to container frame — not to driven ground rod. Creates shock hazard whenever container is on non-conductive footings.

Found in
38% of owner-builds
Risk
Electrocution risk + permit failure
Thermal envelope inspection showing spray foam gaps at steel floor joist penetrations in container home
Energy CodeThermal
Thermal bridge — R-value gap

Spray foam gaps at floor joist penetrations

Spray foam application missed steel floor joist flanges — 2" continuous thermal bridge running full container length. Effective R-value drops from R-21 to R-12.

Found in
52% of spray-foam builds
Risk
Energy code failure + condensation risk
Container home foundation footing showing crack and undersized concrete pad under concentrated load point
HighFoundation
Footing undersized — load concentration

Point-loaded footing under mid-span cut

Window opening cut at container mid-span created concentrated load point. Footing beneath is 12"×12" — undersized for the load. Visible foundation crack after one winter.

Found in
29% of mid-span modifications
Risk
Settlement + door/window racking
Container corner post cut for stair access in multi-unit stack showing structural compromise
CriticalStructural
Corner post compromised — stack unsafe

Corner post cut for stairwell — unstacked unit

Multi-unit stack had lower container corner post partially removed for interior stair access. Post is the primary load path for 18,000 lbs of upper unit.

Found in
18% of stacked multi-unit builds
Risk
Catastrophic collapse risk

Don't let these become your findings.

Every one of these was caught before closing, before permitting, or before insurance denial.

Schedule Your Inspection
Credentials & Process

The Inspector Behind
Every Report.

Marcus Webb, licensed container home inspector in work gear holding clipboard inside a shipping container

Marcus Webb

Licensed Inspector · Container Conversion Specialist

847 inspections completed since 2019

Former structural engineer turned full-time container home inspector. I've been inside more converted CONEX boxes than most contractors have built — which means I know exactly where the shortcuts are taken and what they cost downstream.

B2
ICC Certified Inspector
International Code Council
Since 2019
IICRC
IICRC S520 Certified
Mold Remediation Protocol
Since 2020
NAHI
NAHI Member
Natl. Assoc. of Home Inspectors
Since 2019
INachi
InterNACHI Certified
Residential Inspector
Since 2021

From Booking to Report: What to Expect

01

Submit Your Property

Provide the address, container count, and current stage. We confirm jurisdiction and availability within 4 business hours.

02

On-Site Inspection

We arrive with laser level, moisture meter, thermal camera, and 40-point checklist. Typical inspection takes 2–4 hours depending on scope.

03

Certified Report Delivery

PDF report with annotated photographs, deficiency ratings (Critical / High / Moderate / Advisory), and remediation guidance. Delivered within 48 hours.

04

County-Ready Documentation

Report formatted for submission to building department. Includes inspector license number, signature, and jurisdiction-specific code references.

See a sample certified report

Full 38-page PDF with annotated photos and deficiency ratings

Book Your Inspection

Ready to Know What's
Actually Inside?

Fill out the form below. We'll confirm your date within 4 hours and send a pre-inspection questionnaire to make sure we arrive prepared.

Schedule Your Container Inspection

We confirm within 4 business hours · No payment required to schedule

Free: The 12-Point Container Home Checklist

Not ready to book? Download the same checklist Gauge inspectors use on-site. Evaluate your container before calling anyone.

  • Structural red flags to look for
  • Corrosion severity grading guide
  • Questions to ask before buying
  • County permit checklist by state

Why Gauge

ICC Licensed
License #B2-2019-0847
Reports Accepted by All Major Insurers
Lloyds, State Farm, Farmers, USAA
48-Hour Report Guarantee
Or inspection fee refunded
847 Inspections Completed
14 counties · 5-year track record

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