Do You Need to Comply with SB326 or SB721? Get the Checklist That Tells You in Minutes

Missing required inspections can create compliance risk and costly delays. This checklist helps you determine your next step quickly.

If your property has balconies, decks, walkways, stairs, or other exterior elevated structures, you may have inspection obligations under California law. This free checklist helps you quickly determine whether your building likely qualifies, what to review first, and what steps to take next.

Avoid uncertainty, missed deadlines, and last-minute compliance issues with a practical guide built for owners, HOAs, and managers.

Who This Is For:

  • HOA board members unsure about compliance
  • Property managers responsible for inspection planning
  • Apartment owners evaluating requirements
  • Commercial property owners with balconies or decks
  • Asset managers needing risk visibility

Download the Checklist

You’ll learn:

  • Whether your property likely requires inspection
  • What structures may trigger compliance
  • What your next step should be

We’ll send your checklist immediately. No spam. No pressure—just clear next steps.

Unsure If Your Building Must Comply?

Many Properties Fall Into a Gray Area

Owners often know the laws exist, but not whether they apply to a specific building.

Deadlines and Responsibilities Can Be Confusing

HOAs, managers, and owners may not know who is responsible for next steps, documentation, or scheduling.

Missing Required Inspections Can Create Risk

Delays can lead to compliance exposure, repair surprises, and avoidable liability.

Get Clear Answers Fast

  • Which building types are commonly affected
  • What exterior elevated elements may need review
  • What ownership or management roles typically matter
  • What to do next if your property likely qualifies
Get the Checklist
SB721 Explained What Property Managers Need to Know​

What You’ll Get

  • How to determine if your building likely requires inspection
  • Balcony and exterior elevated element review points
  • HOA vs owner responsibility guidance
  • Deadline awareness and common compliance mistakes
  • Documentation preparation checklist
  • Next-step action roadmap
  • Questions to ask before booking an inspection
  • How to prepare for the SB326 inspection requirements
  • How to begin the SB721 inspection process

Who This Is For

HOA Boards

Need clarity before planning inspections or budgeting repairs.

Property Managers

Need to organize vendors, records, and compliance timelines.

Apartment Owners

Need to determine whether buildings qualify under applicable laws.

Commercial Owners

Own mixed-use or multi-structure properties with balconies or walkways.

Multi-Family Operators

Managing multiple assets with varying risk and inspection needs.

Asset Managers

Need portfolio-wide visibility and compliance readiness.

Trusted Compliance Support

Our team specializes in California SB326 and SB721 inspections, supporting HOAs, apartment owners, and property managers across the state of California.

  • Licensed engineering professionals involved in inspection workflows
  • California-specific balcony law experience
  • SB326 and SB721 focused compliance guidance
  • Inspection planning for HOAs, apartments, and mixed-use properties
  • Clear next-step recommendations based on property type and condition

Download the Compliance Checklist

Get instant access to the SB326 & SB721 Compliance Checklist and quickly determine whether your property may require inspection—and what to do next.

You’ll learn:

  • Whether your property likely requires inspection
  • What structures may trigger compliance
  • What your next step should be

We’ll send your checklist immediately. No spam. No pressure—just clear next steps.

What Happens After You Submit

1

Instant checklist delivery to your inbox.

2

Review whether your property may qualify and what issues to prioritize.

3

If needed, request guidance, schedule an inspection, or discuss next steps.

Already Need Help Determining Compliance?

Get the SB326 & SB721 Compliance Checklist
See if your building may require inspection and what steps to take next.