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Tagzter is a report-writing app built for home inspectors, created by a team with backgrounds in home inspection companies and real estate brokerage. Its positioning is highly vertical: it helps inspectors complete photos, videos, defect notes, summaries, and report generation mainly on a phone while on site, instead of returning to a desktop to compile a lengthy report afterward.
The product centers on single-page online inspection reports, PDF export, defect summaries, buyer-saved defects, photo and video annotations, real-time report previews, and native iOS/Android mobile apps. Its template editor is a key capability, allowing users to customize narratives, defects, limitations, YouTube videos, charts, and tags through an online editor or XML spreadsheets. The on-site workflow supports both checklist-style inspections and completing key actions directly within the camera interface. For collaboration, Tagzter supports multiple inspectors working on the same report at the same time and states that duplicate data will not overwrite each other. It also supports offline inspections, with data syncing to the cloud once connectivity is restored.
Pricing is straightforward: $79/month for one admin account and $59/month for each additional inspector. There is no per-report fee, and the plan includes unlimited image and video storage, all features, and future upgrades. A 30-day free trial is available and can be canceled at any time; the terms state that cancellations after 60 days of service are not eligible for refunds. For integrations, the public materials only clearly mention importing inspections from ISN or NXT, as well as embedding YouTube and 360 YouTube videos. We did not find a full third-party integration marketplace or public API documentation.
The strengths are its focused use case, strong mobile experience, more consumer-friendly reports, and multimedia plus template features that can improve inspectors’ on-site efficiency. The lack of per-report fees is also friendly to teams with frequent usage. The limitations are that security and compliance disclosures are limited, with no visible SOC 2, ISO, or similar certification information. Descriptions of permissions, roles, audit logs, and enterprise management capabilities are also insufficient, and there is no information about self-hosted deployment or a developer API.
Tagzter is better suited to independent home inspectors, small inspection teams, and inspection companies that need to collaborate with Realtors in the U.S. and similar markets. Access from China cannot be determined from the available text, and because the product involves embedded YouTube content, related multimedia may be restricted in mainland China network environments. Payment methods are also not disclosed. If you plan to run a local home inspection business in China, you should first evaluate access stability, payment options, report language support, and local compliance-friendly alternatives.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on tagzter.com official site.
tagzter.com is an United States SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach tagzter.com directly.