Maintenance & Prevention

Home maintenance checklists that prevent expensive repairs

Turn overwhelming “someday” projects into short, doable maintenance tasks. Use our step-by-step checklists to protect your home, budget, and peace of mind all year long. These home maintenance checklists are designed to help homeowners stay ahead of problems with simple, scheduled tasks.

  • Monthly, seasonal, and annual checklists in plain language.
  • Focused on preventing leaks, failures, and surprise breakdowns.
  • Clear notes on what you can DIY vs. when to call a pro.
Open The Maintenance Checklists Plan Your Next 90 Days

No scare tactics. No jargon. Just practical routines that fit real life.

Quick view: where to start this month

5–10 minute tasks: Test smoke/CO alarms, check GFCI outlets, and swap dirty HVAC filters.
30–60 minute tasks: Walk the exterior for cracks, caulk gaps, and clear problem gutters.
Rainy-day tasks: Open your panel schedule, label breakers, and photograph shutoff locations.

Start small. Consistency matters more than doing everything at once—your future self will thank you.

Start with the right checklist for where you are

Choose a checklist that matches your timeline. Each one includes estimated time, tools, and red flags that mean “pause and call a pro”.

Quick win

30-Minute Home Checkup

A single walkthrough you can do tonight to catch obvious leaks, trip hazards, and safety issues in under an hour.

Open the 30-minute chekclist
Monthly

Monthly Home Maintenance Routine

Short, repeatable tasks that keep air filters clean, drains flowing, and small issues from turning into big repairs.

View the monthly routine
Seasonal

Spring & Fall Prep Checklists

Roof, gutters, grading, heating, cooling, and weatherproofing tasks to tackle before extreme temperatures hit.

See seasonal prep tasks
Annual

Annual Whole-Home Maintenance Checklist

A deeper dive into roofs, foundations, plumbing, and HVAC so you can budget for big projects before they’re urgent.

Open the annual checklist

Popular maintenance & prevention guides

These guides are a great starting point if you’re building a maintenance routine from scratch or catching up after a few busy years.

Checklists

The Ultimate Home Maintenance Checklist: Monthly, Seasonal & Annual

A printable, easy-to-follow roadmap you can complete in small blocks of time—no marathon weekends required.

Read the ultimate home checklist
Water damage

Stop Water Damage Before It Starts: Gutters, Grading & Drainage 101

Prioritized steps to keep water moving away from your home—and how to spot trouble before it reaches your basement.

Open the drainage guide
New homeowners

New Homeowner 90-Day Maintenance Plan

A simple three-month plan that gets you caught up on neglected tasks and familiar with your home’s major systems.

Read the new homeowner checklist
Budgeting

How Much to Budget for Home Maintenance Each Year

Simple rules of thumb, examples by home age, and how maintenance spending saves money over the long term.

See maintenance budget tips

Maintain your home by zones, not overwhelm

Break your to-do list into clear areas so you can focus on one zone at a time—inside or out—without losing track of the big picture.

Roof, gutters & exterior

Shingles, flashing, gutters, downspouts, and grading checks that keep water going where it should.

View exterior maintenance

Plumbing & moisture control

Leak checks, shutoff tests, caulking, and condensation control to protect walls, floors, and cabinets.

Water damage prevention

Heating, cooling & ventilation

Filters, returns, outdoor units, and duct checks that keep systems efficient and extend their lifespan.

Explore HVAC maintenance

Interior, safety & finishes

Smoke/CO alarms, handrails, caulking, grout, and paint touch-ups that keep things safe and looking cared for.

View interior upkeep tasks

Build a realistic 90-day maintenance plan

Instead of a giant “someday” list, use this framework to decide what to do now, what can wait, and what belongs in your long-term budget.

Good candidates for DIY maintenance

Low-risk tasks that mostly require a ladder, basic tools, and a little focus—not a license.

  • Changing HVAC filters and cleaning supply/return grilles.
  • Clearing accessible gutters and downspouts on single-story homes.
  • Re-caulking tubs, showers, and simple window/door gaps.
  • Testing smoke/CO alarms and replacing batteries.
  • Basic yard grading checks and downspout extensions.

Maintenance best left to a pro

Great to have on your calendar—but safer and more effective when handled by a licensed contractor.

  • Roof repairs, high or steep gutter work, and chimney repairs.
  • Major grading changes or drainage systems tied into sewers.
  • Annual furnace/boiler service and deep AC cleanings.
  • Foundation crack repairs, structural issues, or major settling.
  • Any work local codes require a licensed professional for.

Simple planning prompt

In the next 30 days, try this:

  • Pick one checklist (30-minute, monthly, or seasonal) and schedule it on your calendar.
  • Walk your home with your phone and take photos of anything that looks worn, cracked, or damp.
  • Make a short list: “DIY this month”, “Get a quote”, and “Watch and re-check”.

Maintenance doesn’t have to be perfect—done regularly and safely beats perfect once every few years.

Home maintenance questions homeowners ask most

These short answers are a starting point—each FAQ links to deeper guides and printable checklists if you want more detail.

How much time should I plan for home maintenance each month?

A good starting point is 2–4 hours per month for basic tasks, plus a few half-days each year for seasonal prep. Older homes or homes with existing issues may need more. See example maintenance schedules

What if my home has been neglected for years—where do I start?

Start with safety and water: smoke/CO alarms, visible leaks, drainage, and electrical red flags. Then use the 90-day plan to catch up in stages instead of trying to fix everything at once. Use the 90-day catch-up plan

Which maintenance tasks should I hire out instead of doing myself?

Anything that involves significant height, structural changes, electrical or gas work, or specialized tools is usually worth hiring. You stay safer and often get better long-term results.  See the DIY vs pro maintenance list

Get monthly maintenance reminders in plain language

Short, practical emails that nudge you to tackle the right tasks at the right time—so you can prevent problems instead of reacting to emergencies.

We’ll also send major updates to maintenance checklists and prevention guides as they’re published.