Inspections for metal fabrication work go faster when the installation is ready and the documentation is organized before the inspector arrives.
Planning guidance only. The content on this page is general planning guidance only. It is not legal advice, engineering advice, or a code interpretation service. Requirements change by jurisdiction and code cycle. Always verify specific project requirements with the local building department or a licensed design professional before making final decisions.
What Inspectors Are Looking For
Building inspectors reviewing metal fabrication work (handrails, guards, structural steel, fencing) are primarily checking three things: code compliance with the approved permit drawings, proper attachment and anchoring, and workmanship quality that meets the approved scope.
They are not looking to find problems. A well-prepared site with the permit documents available and the work matching the approved drawings typically passes on the first visit.
Before the Inspection: Documentation
Have the following ready:
Approved permit documents (the stamped set from the building department).
Any product approval documentation required for the system (particularly in Miami-Dade HVHZ).
The contractor's license and insurance certificate if required by the AHJ.
Any shop drawings or submittals that were part of the permit application.
For residential work without stamped drawings, the scope description from the permit application.
Before the Inspection: Physical Readiness
The installation must be complete: inspectors do not approve work-in-progress. Key readiness items:
Post anchors must be set and cured (for embedded posts, minimum curing time applies).
Surface-mount brackets must be fully fastened with all specified hardware.
All rails and infill must be installed.
Do not paint, powder coat, or cover connection points that the inspector needs to see.
Inspectors commonly check: post attachment at the base and top, rail connections at posts, infill spacing (4-inch sphere test), and overall height at the rail top.
Common Causes of Failed Inspections
Work not matching the approved drawings (scope creep or substitutions not re-reviewed).
Connection points obscured by finish before inspection.
Post height short of the required minimum (measure at the lowest point, not the average).
Infill openings slightly over the 4-inch limit: measure before calling for inspection.
Missing or incomplete documentation at the site.
What Fine Edge Does at Installation
Fine Edge installs to the spec confirmed at quote approval and verified at field measurement. Before the crew leaves, they confirm the rail height at multiple points along the run and confirm the infill spacing meets the 4-inch standard. They note any conditions that differ from the approved spec and communicate them to the client before leaving the site.
Final payment is due at installation completion, not at inspection approval, which is a separate step managed by the permit applicant.
Questions About Your Inspection?
Contact Fine Edge if you have questions about the installation spec or need documentation for the permit file.