REAC Inspection Preparation: Score-Ranked Deficiency Assessment Before Your HUD Inspector Arrives
A pre-assessment using the actual UPCS scoring methodology — every deficiency logged, classified by severity level, and ranked by point impact. Active across all 50 states.
A Pre-Assessment Using Real UPCS Scoring Tells You Which Deficiencies Cost the Most Points
REAC inspection preparation services give property managers a scored, ranked list of deficiencies before HUD’s inspector arrives. That’s the difference between fixing the right things and fixing the easy things.
TurnKey conducts pre-inspection assessments using the same UPCS scoring methodology — the point-based system HUD uses to grade physical condition across five inspectable categories — applied on actual inspection day. Every finding is scored, classified by severity level, and prioritized in order of point impact.
Every finding scored, classified by severity, ranked by point impact — not just listed.
This page focuses specifically on the pre-assessment process: how it works, what it produces, and how property managers use the output to direct repair budgets before the inspector arrives. For a broader overview of TurnKey’s full affordable housing inspection services — including compliance inspection delivery, housing authority engagements, and LIHTC portfolio work — see the Affordable Housing Inspection Services page.
The HUD Oversight Thresholds Are Specific — and Your Pre-Assessment Should Reflect That
A lot of property managers know their REAC score matters. Fewer know exactly what each threshold triggers. Here’s the direct answer.
A score of 90 or above is high-performing status. A score below 60 puts a property under increased HUD oversight — meaning more frequent inspections and required corrective action plans. A score below 30 triggers immediate enforcement action, which can include suspension of the Housing Assistance Payments contract — the HAP contract — the federal rental subsidy that funds the property’s operations.
Here’s what that means practically. The difference between a 62 and a 58 is not just a number. It’s the difference between a clean compliance record and a mandatory audit cycle.
TurnKey’s pre-assessment is calibrated to the threshold that matters for your property’s current standing. If a property is in good standing and protecting a score above 80, the pre-assessment focuses on preventing the Level 2 and Level 3 deficiencies that could pull it down. If a property is recovering from a prior low score, the assessment identifies the specific items that need to move from deficient to compliant to clear the 60-point floor.
The preparation strategy is not the same for both properties. One protects a baseline. The other clears a threshold. The pre-assessment ranks deficiencies based on which one your property actually is.
What a REAC Pre-Assessment Actually Looks Like in Practice
A scored priority list — not a general punch list — is what separates a useful pre-assessment from a waste of time.
One engagement that illustrates this clearly: a property management team reached out with a 60-day REAC inspection window and a maintenance backlog spread across 80 units. They had a budget to address roughly 40 percent of the open items. The question wasn’t whether deficiencies existed. The question was which ones to fix first.
The TurnKey pre-assessment team walked every inspectable item across all five UPCS categories — site, building exterior, building systems, common areas, and dwelling units. Each deficiency found was logged, assigned a deficiency severity level (Level 1, Level 2, or Level 3), and cross-referenced against the UPCS point deduction schedule.
Level 3 deficiencies first. Cosmetic items documented but deprioritized.
The output wasn’t “here’s everything that needs work.” It was a ranked remediation list showing exactly which items carried the highest score risk. Level 3 — severe — deficiencies came first, because they produce the largest point deductions and, in some cases, trigger Exigent Health and Safety flags that require correction within 24 hours of the official inspection regardless of the final score.
With that list in hand, the property management team directed maintenance staff and outside contractors to the highest-impact repairs in the first three weeks. Lower-risk cosmetic items were documented but deprioritized. The inspection score reflected the work completed — and the team knew going in which score range was realistically achievable given the time and budget available.
Our REAC Preparation Standards: What Every Pre-Assessment Covers
Every TurnKey pre-assessment follows the same UPCS-based scoring protocol — documented, consistent, and audit-ready. ISO 9001 certification means the same scoring methodology, reporting format, and remediation prioritization logic applies whether the property is in Philadelphia or Phoenix.
- Five-category walkthrough: Site, building exterior, building systems, common areas, and dwelling units evaluated using HUD’s inspectable item definitions — not a modified internal version.
- Deficiency severity classification: Every finding logged as Level 1 (minor), Level 2 (major), or Level 3 (severe) using HUD’s published severity criteria — the same scale the official inspector applies.
- Point-impact ranking: Deficiencies prioritized by score risk, not by trade category or ease of repair. The ranking matches how points come off your final score.
- Exigent Health & Safety screening: EHS-level deficiencies flagged separately with their 24-hour correction requirement noted — so you know what runs on its own clock regardless of your overall score.
- Written remediation priority list: Delivered as a working document, formatted for use by in-house maintenance staff and outside contractors. Format matches HUD’s corrective action documentation standards.
- NSPIRE transition awareness: Properties under the updated National Standards for the Physical Inspection of Real Estate framework assessed under the appropriate protocol — NSPIRE scoring weights, not legacy ones.
What Shapes Your REAC Score — and What a Pre-Assessment Can Change
Four variables determine whether a pre-assessment moves the needle on your final REAC score. Understand all four before your inspection window opens.
Inspection Window Remaining
A 60-day window is enough time to address Level 2 and Level 3 deficiencies systematically if the pre-assessment happens in the first week. A pre-assessment conducted with 10 days remaining leaves time only for the most critical items. Schedule early.
Current Deficiency Distribution
Some properties carry a few high-severity deficiencies that are dragging the score. Others have dozens of low-level items that add up. The remediation strategy differs in each case. A pre-assessment tells you which situation you’re actually in — not which one you assume you’re in.
Available Maintenance Capacity
A ranked remediation list only works if there’s someone to do the work. TurnKey coordinates pre-assessment findings with remediation execution on request, so property management teams without deep in-house maintenance staff can move from findings to completed repairs without a gap.
NSPIRE vs. Legacy REAC Protocol
HUD is phasing in NSPIRE — a revised inspection framework — across different housing program types on a rolling basis. The protocol your property is inspected under affects scoring weights and sampling methodology. TurnKey assesses under the correct framework for your property type and funding program.
How Pre-1940 Building Stock Sharpened TurnKey's Deficiency-Tracing Process
The pre-assessment methodology TurnKey uses today was built by working through a specific type of inspection problem — one that aging mid-Atlantic building stock produces at scale.
Philadelphia’s HUD-assisted portfolio includes a concentration of pre-1940 masonry construction — brick walkups and courtyard-style buildings with original plumbing chases, gravity-fed drainage systems, and mechanical equipment retrofitted across multiple rehabilitation cycles. These buildings don’t fail in isolation. A single compromised plumbing chase in an older building of this type can produce moisture intrusion at the building exterior, deterioration in common area finishes, and Level 2 unit deficiencies simultaneously — all from one originating system failure.
The buildings change by market. The deficiency-tracing logic transfers.
That pattern — one root cause producing deficiency flags across two or three UPCS categories at the same time — is what TurnKey’s teams learned to trace specifically. Not just document the visible end-point deficiency, but map the cascade back to the system failure driving it.
For REAC pre-assessment purposes, that distinction matters directly. A pre-assessment that only scores the surface finding understates the actual point exposure. A pre-assessment that traces the cascade gives the property manager the accurate picture — and the right repair sequence.
Affordable Housing Programs Where REAC Pre-Assessments Apply
Not every affordable housing property faces the same inspection risk profile. The inspection protocol, sampling methodology, and enforcement consequences vary by program type — and the pre-assessment is calibrated accordingly.
Public Housing
Housing authority-owned and operated properties inspected under REAC or NSPIRE with direct HUD oversight.
Project-Based Section 8
Privately owned properties with HAP contracts subject to REAC scoring. Contract suspension risk starts at a score below 60.
LIHTC Properties
Low-Income Housing Tax Credit developments with state agency compliance layers that often mirror or intersect HUD physical condition standards.
RAD-Converted Properties
Rental Assistance Demonstration conversions that moved from public housing to project-based voucher structures, now subject to REAC inspection cycles.
Mixed-Finance Developments
Properties combining public housing units with market-rate or LIHTC units — where inspection scope and unit sampling affect scoring differently.
The pre-assessment protocol is calibrated to the program type. A RAD conversion with a mixed-finance structure requires different sampling logic than a standalone project-based Section 8 contract. TurnKey’s teams identify the applicable framework before the walkthrough begins.
REAC Pre-Assessment Markets We Cover
TurnKey deploys REAC inspection preparation teams to affordable housing properties in every U.S. state. We work with housing authorities, LIHTC property managers, Section 8 portfolio operators, and multifamily owners with HUD compliance obligations nationwide. Properties range from single-site affordable communities to multi-state portfolios managed from a central office.
Active pre-assessment markets include the full Mid-Atlantic corridor — Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware — along with consistent deployment to Southeast, Midwest, and Gulf Coast states where HUD-assisted housing concentrations and aging building stock create predictable UPCS scoring exposure. Properties in high-density urban markets such as Baltimore, Newark, Wilmington, and Washington D.C. frequently present the same cross-category deficiency patterns TurnKey’s teams are trained to trace.
Get Your Pre-Assessment Scheduled Before Your Inspection Window Opens
Once you have a scheduled window — or even an anticipated inspection cycle — TurnKey can begin the pre-assessment process. Describe your property, location, program type, and inspection timeline. We’ll outline the pre-assessment process and confirm scheduling availability for your state.
One assessment. One priority list. Every item ranked by score impact before the real inspector arrives.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far in advance of my REAC inspection window should I schedule a pre-assessment?
Schedule your pre-assessment within the first week of receiving your inspection window notification. A 60-day window provides enough time to complete the walkthrough, produce the ranked remediation list, and complete high-impact repairs before the inspector arrives. Waiting until the final two weeks leaves time only for the most critical Level 3 deficiencies. TurnKey confirms scheduling availability for all 50 states from a single contact point.
What does a REAC pre-assessment with TurnKey actually cost?
Pricing for REAC pre-assessment services depends on property size, unit count, and inspection timeline. Contact TurnKey National Enterprises at 610-890-6975 or info@turnkeynational.com to receive a scoped estimate based on your specific property and program type.
What's different about a TurnKey pre-assessment compared to a general property walkthrough?
Every deficiency is scored and ranked by point impact — not just listed. A general property walkthrough tells you what’s broken. TurnKey’s pre-assessment tells you which broken items cost the most REAC points, so your maintenance budget goes to repairs that protect your score. Deficiency severity levels (Level 1, 2, or 3) are assigned using HUD’s published UPCS criteria — the same scale the real inspector applies.
Does TurnKey only produce the pre-assessment report, or does it also complete the repairs?
TurnKey provides both services. The pre-assessment produces the ranked remediation priority list. On request, TurnKey crews complete the identified repairs before the inspection date. Property management teams without deep in-house maintenance capacity can move from assessment findings to completed repairs without sourcing a separate contractor.
My property is under NSPIRE, not the legacy REAC/UPCS framework — can TurnKey still help?
Yes. TurnKey assesses properties under the correct protocol for their funding program and inspection cycle. NSPIRE — HUD’s updated National Standards for the Physical Inspection of Real Estate — changes scoring weights and sampling methodology compared to legacy UPCS. TurnKey’s teams apply the appropriate framework so the pre-assessment reflects actual inspection-day risk, not an outdated scoring model.
What does TurnKey deliver at the end of a pre-assessment, and how is it formatted?
TurnKey delivers a written remediation priority list formatted for immediate use by maintenance staff and outside contractors. Each deficiency is logged with its severity classification, point-impact ranking, and Exigent Health and Safety flag if applicable. The format matches HUD’s corrective action documentation standards, so the same records support both your internal repair planning and any post-inspection submission to HUD.