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Elevator Inspection Requirements by State: A Complete Guide for Building Owners

Why Elevator Inspections Are Non-Negotiable

If you own or manage a building with an elevator, inspection isn't optional — it's a legal requirement in every state that regulates vertical transportation. Beyond the law, inspections are the primary mechanism that catches mechanical failures before they become accidents. The ASME A17.1 Safety Code for Elevators and Escalators estimates that properly maintained and inspected elevators are among the safest forms of transportation in the built environment. When that inspection lapses, so does the safety record.

For building owners, the stakes are direct: an uninspected or out-of-compliance elevator exposes you to fines, forced shutdown, and liability if an incident occurs. Most commercial property insurance policies also require current inspection certificates. An expired certificate can void coverage entirely.

This guide covers what you need to know — federal baseline, state-specific requirements, what happens during an inspection, and how to find a qualified inspector in your market.

Federal vs. State Requirements: How They Interact

There is no single federal elevator inspection mandate that applies to all buildings. The federal government's role is primarily indirect:

The practical result: elevator inspection requirements are almost entirely governed at the state level, and in some states, at the local jurisdiction level. A building in Texas operates under completely different rules than an identical building in California or New York.

State-by-State Inspection Requirements

The following table covers our six primary target markets. For deeper dives on specific states, see our California Elevator Inspection Guide and Texas Elevator Maintenance Requirements articles.

State Governing Agency Inspection Frequency Inspector Credential Penalty for Non-Compliance
California Cal/OSHA DOSH Annual (Cat 1); 5-year (Cat 5) QEI or Cal/OSHA-approved Up to $7,000/violation; shutdown order
Texas TDLR Annual TDLR-licensed inspector Up to $10,000/day per violation
Florida DBPR (local AHJ) Annual (periodic); 5-year (Category 5) QEI or state-licensed inspector Fines up to $5,000; mandatory shutdown
Georgia Georgia Dept. of Labor Annual State-certified QEI Civil penalties; certificate revocation
New York NYC DOB (city); DOS (state) Annual (Cat 1); 5-year (Cat 5) + witnessing NYC-licensed inspector; PE witnessing for Cat 5 ECB violations; fines $1,000–$25,000+; shutdown
Illinois Chicago DOB (city); IDOL (state) Annual QEI or city-licensed inspector Fines; certificate suspension; shutdown order

Key takeaway: Every state requires at minimum an annual inspection. Jurisdictions with higher elevator density (New York City, Chicago) layer additional local requirements on top of state minimums.

Inspection Frequency Requirements Explained

The ASME A17.1 standard establishes three inspection and test categories that building owners need to understand:

Category 1 — Annual No-Load Safety Test

Required every 12 months. This is the routine annual inspection that verifies the elevator's safeties, brakes, and operating devices function correctly under normal no-load conditions. Every elevator in every regulated state must pass a Category 1 inspection annually to maintain its operating certificate.

Category 3 — Hydraulic Buffer Test (Hydraulic Elevators Only)

Required every 3 years for hydraulic systems. Tests the buffer under load to verify it absorbs impact within design parameters. Building owners with older hydraulic elevators should pay particular attention — this test frequently surfaces deferred maintenance issues.

Category 5 — Full-Load Safety Test

Required every 5 years. The most comprehensive test — the elevator is loaded to rated capacity and the governor, safeties, and buffers are tested under full load. Category 5 tests require a licensed QEI inspector in most states and often a licensed Professional Engineer to witness the test in high-regulatory jurisdictions like New York City.

Acceptance Inspection

Required for all new installations and major modernizations before the elevator can be placed in service. This is separate from the ongoing inspection schedule and must be completed and approved before the first passenger ride. If you're managing a modernization project, budget for an acceptance inspection as a non-negotiable line item.

What Happens During an Inspection

A qualified inspector working under ASME A17.2 (the inspection and testing companion to A17.1) will systematically evaluate the following:

After the inspection, the inspector issues either a Certificate of Operation (pass) or a deficiency notice listing violations that must be corrected before a certificate is issued. Minor violations typically allow continued operation with a correction deadline. Critical violations — anything affecting life safety — require immediate shutdown until corrected.

How to Find a Qualified Inspector

The inspector credential that matters most across jurisdictions is the QEI (Qualified Elevator Inspector) designation, administered by the International Code Council. Most states either require QEI certification outright or accept it as the primary path to licensure.

To find a QEI-certified inspector in your market:

  1. Your state elevator safety office: Most states maintain a public registry of licensed inspectors. This is the authoritative source — verify credentials here before hiring anyone.
  2. Your current elevator maintenance contractor: If you have a maintenance contract, your contractor can often facilitate the inspection or provide a referral. Note: some states prohibit the same company from performing both maintenance and inspection on the same unit to prevent conflicts of interest.
  3. Certified mechanic directories: Independent mechanics and inspection firms list their credentials. Our directory covers verified, credentialed elevator professionals across major U.S. markets — see city pages for Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, and Miami.

For a detailed breakdown of inspector credentials and what separates a QEI from a CET, see our guide to finding certified elevator mechanics.

Cost of Elevator Inspections by State

Inspection costs vary by state, elevator type, inspection category, and whether the state charges permit fees separately from the inspector's fee.

State Annual (Cat 1) Inspector Fee 5-Year (Cat 5) Inspector Fee State Permit Fee
California $300–$600 $800–$1,500 $100–$300 (varies by unit)
Texas $150–$350 $500–$1,000 $75–$200 (TDLR annual)
Florida $200–$450 $600–$1,200 $50–$150 (local AHJ)
Georgia $175–$400 $500–$1,100 $50–$175
New York $400–$800 $1,200–$2,500+ $150–$500 (NYC DOB)
Illinois $250–$500 $700–$1,400 $75–$250 (city/county)

New York is consistently the most expensive market — Cat 5 tests in NYC often require a PE witness on top of the QEI inspector, pushing total costs above $2,500 for a single elevator. Texas remains the most economical major market for ongoing compliance.

For a broader view of elevator operating costs, including maintenance contracts, emergency service, and modernization budgeting, see our elevator maintenance cost guide.

Building an Inspection Compliance Calendar

Property managers overseeing multiple elevators benefit from a simple compliance calendar. For each elevator unit, track:

Most state agencies send renewal notices, but do not count on them arriving reliably. The certificate expiration date is the building owner's responsibility. A lapsed certificate discovered during a property sale or insurance renewal creates significant problems — correcting compliance retroactively is harder and more expensive than staying current.

The simplest approach: schedule your annual inspection 60 days before the certificate expires. This gives you time to correct any deficiencies before the current certificate lapses.

Finding Qualified Inspectors and Mechanics in Your Market

Whether you need a routine annual inspection or are navigating a Category 5 test for the first time, working with credentialed professionals makes the difference. Our directory covers verified elevator mechanics and inspection contractors across major U.S. markets:

State inspection requirements operate alongside federal ADA compliance obligations. See the ADA Elevator Requirements guide for federal requirements that overlay state codes.

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