Buying a Stucco Home in NJ? The Essential Inspection Checklist
Stucco on a listing doesn’t have to be a dealbreaker — but it does demand a closer look. Here’s exactly what to check before you make an offer, from a contractor who has repaired hundreds of NJ exteriors.
Seeing “stucco exterior” in a New Jersey home listing can trigger immediate hesitation. Hidden rot, moisture trapped behind walls, repairs costing $30,000–$100,000+ — the horror stories are real. But they’re also preventable with the right pre-offer checklist.
Stucco is an excellent, durable cladding system when installed and maintained correctly. The problem isn’t the material — it’s what happens when small details like flashing or caulk are overlooked, and NJ’s wet climate does the rest. As a contractor who has repaired stucco on everything from Mercer County townhomes to the BAPS Swaminarayan Akshardham Temple in Robbinsville (the largest Hindu temple in the USA), I’ve seen both ends of the spectrum: beautifully maintained stucco homes and completely failed systems that looked fine on the outside.
This checklist will help you tell the difference before you sign anything.
1. The Visual Scan: Red Flags You Can Spot From the Curb
You don’t need tools or expertise to perform this first pass. Walk the full perimeter of the house slowly and look for each of these warning signs. Any one of them alone warrants a closer look; two or more together should prompt a professional moisture inspection before you proceed.
Dark stains running down from windows
Often called “stucco tears,” these dark vertical streaks originate at window corners and run down the wall. They indicate water is consistently escaping behind the window frame — a sign of failed sealant, missing head flashing, or both. This is one of the most common entry points for moisture damage in NJ homes.
Green algae or localized mold patches
Surface dirt and general weathering are normal. However, concentrated green patches — especially near grade level or under windowsills — indicate a chronic moisture source that isn’t drying out. In NJ’s humid summers, this can progress to black mold behind the wall within a single season.
Cracks wider than a credit card
Hairline cracks (under 1/16″) are cosmetic and normal in traditional hard-coat stucco as it cures and settles. Cracks wider than approximately 1/16″ — the thickness of a credit card — are structural openings that allow wind-driven rain to penetrate. Pay special attention to diagonal cracks radiating from window or door corners, which often signal foundation movement rather than simple surface cracking.
Diagonal cracks wider than ¼ inch near window corners almost always indicate foundation movement, not just surface aging. I’ve seen this misdiagnosed repeatedly on Toll Brothers homes in Robbinsville and West Windsor — a surface patch fixes the appearance but leaves the underlying problem untouched. If you see this pattern, budget for a structural engineer consultation alongside any stucco repair estimate.
Stucco touching or buried in the ground
This is a code violation in both New Jersey and Pennsylvania. There must be a minimum 4–6 inch clearance between the bottom of the stucco finish and grade level. When stucco contacts soil, it acts like a wick — constantly drawing ground moisture upward. This also creates a direct pathway for termites to enter the wall system undetected. If the stucco extends to the ground, assume there is substrate damage at the base of the wall.
Stucco touching the ground is not a cosmetic issue — it’s a building code violation in NJ (IRC R703.6.2.1) and a direct path for both moisture and termite damage. A seller “trimming” it back before closing does not fix the damage already done below grade.
2. The #1 Culprit: Missing Kick-Out Flashing
If you only check one technical detail on this list, make it this one. Across hundreds of NJ stucco inspections and repairs, missing or incorrectly installed kick-out flashing is the single most common cause of serious structural water damage in stucco homes in this region.
What is kick-out flashing?
Kick-out flashing (also called a diverter) is a small angled metal component installed where a sloped roof terminates against a vertical wall — typically where a garage roof meets the side of the house, or where a dormer roof meets the main wall. Its purpose is to redirect rainwater running off the roof edge into the gutter, rather than letting it pour straight down the stucco wall.
Why it’s so critical in NJ
New Jersey averages 46 inches of rainfall per year. Without kick-out flashing, every rain event sends a concentrated stream of water directly down the stucco at the wall-roof junction. Over months and years, this saturates the wall assembly. The sheathing (OSB or plywood) absorbs moisture, swells, softens, and rots — all behind a stucco surface that can look completely intact. By the time you see exterior signs, the framing behind the wall may already be compromised.
Look up at every point where a roofline ends against a wall. If you don’t see a metal deflector angled outward toward the gutter, assume there may be damage in that area. Read more about why stucco leaks are usually a flashing problem, not a wall problem.
A kick-out flashing diverter costs roughly $20 in materials and 30 minutes to install correctly during construction. Retrofitting it after the fact — including opening the wall, treating any rot, replacing sheathing, and reapplying stucco with color matching — typically runs $2,500–$8,000+ depending on how much damage has accumulated. The negotiation leverage here is significant.
3. Windows & Doors: The Caulk Check
Here’s something most buyers don’t realize: the stucco surface itself is largely waterproof, especially in modern acrylic finishes. Moisture doesn’t usually enter through the stucco face — it enters at the transitions between stucco and other materials.
Windows and doors are the most critical transition points. Walk up close to each window and door frame and examine the sealant joint where the stucco meets the frame. You’re looking for:
- Missing sealant — bare gap between stucco and frame
- Dried, cracked, or chalky caulk that is pulling away from the substrate
- Discoloration or staining directly below the joint (indicating historical leakage)
- Any visible gap on the top (head) or sides (jambs) of the frame
A failed sealant joint allows wind-driven rain to enter the wall assembly at a direct penetration point — bypassing every other protective layer. The good news: proper re-sealing with high-grade silicone (JARART LLC uses Pecora and Dow products, the same brands we used on the Akshardham temple project) is often sufficient to prevent future issues, and it’s not an expensive repair.
Check the top of each window frame (the head joint) specifically. Most people look at the sides. But wind-driven rain in a NJ nor’easter comes at the wall at an angle, and the head joint is where it enters first. A missing bead of caulk at the top of a window can quietly introduce gallons of water per storm.
4. Is It EIFS? What Buyers Need to Know About “Synthetic Stucco”
EIFS — Exterior Insulation and Finish System — is a type of stucco sometimes called “synthetic stucco” or “Dryvit” (after the major brand). It became widespread in NJ and PA residential construction through the 1990s and early 2000s. If the home was built between roughly 1990 and 2008, there’s a strong chance the stucco is EIFS, not traditional hard-coat. See our full breakdown: EIFS vs traditional stucco — which system is right for your NJ home.
The problem with older EIFS
Early “barrier” EIFS systems (pre-2000) were designed with the assumption that the finish coat itself would prevent all moisture from entering. When it did enter — through failed caulk, cracked foam, or improper installation — there was no drainage channel to allow it to escape. It became trapped against the OSB sheathing. Estimates suggest that as many as 90% of EIFS applications installed between 1993 and 2006 have some degree of moisture-related damage.
Modern EIFS is a different product
Today’s drainage-plane EIFS systems — including those JARART LLC installs using Senergy-Sika and Dryvit products — incorporate engineered drainage channels that allow any incidental moisture to escape at the base of the wall. They’re a high-performance cladding system. The problem isn’t the material category — it’s the vintage.
| System | Era | Drainage | Moisture Risk | Inspection Required? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional hard-coat stucco | Any | Through lath & WRB | Low–Medium | Visual usually sufficient |
| Barrier EIFS | 1990–2000 | None | High | Invasive probe mandatory |
| Drainage-plane EIFS | 2000–present | Engineered channels | Low | Visual + spot moisture check |
5. When to Order Invasive Moisture Testing
A standard general home inspection includes a visual exterior check, but most general inspectors are not trained or equipped to assess stucco moisture conditions at the substrate level. If the home has EIFS, shows any of the visual warning signs above, or was built before 2005, we recommend requesting a dedicated stucco moisture inspection before submitting your final offer.
What invasive probe testing involves
- Inspector drills small holes (pencil-tip diameter) at strategic locations — typically under windows, at wall-roof junctions, and near grade
- A calibrated moisture probe is inserted to measure the moisture content of the wood substrate (plywood or OSB)
- Readings are taken, recorded, and reported with exact locations
- Holes are immediately sealed with color-matched caulk — invisible after curing
Reading the numbers
| Moisture Reading | Status | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| Below 12% | Healthy — dry wood | Proceed with confidence |
| 12% – 19% | Elevated — warrants investigation | Get contractor estimate; negotiate repair credit |
| Above 20% | Elevated risk — possible rot | Professional repair required; negotiate aggressively or walk away |
Some general home inspectors offer “stucco inspection” as an add-on without invasive probe testing. A visual-only inspection cannot detect elevated moisture in the substrate — this is the damage you’re trying to find. If they’re not drilling small probe holes, the inspection is not complete for a stucco or EIFS home.
6. Found a Problem? Your Negotiation Strategy
Discovering a crack, missing flashing, or high moisture reading doesn’t mean you walk away from the deal. It means you have leverage. Here’s how to use it correctly.
Option A: Ask the seller to repair before closing
This is generally not recommended. A motivated seller will hire the cheapest contractor available to satisfy the contract condition. Band-aid patches, mismatched stucco color, and re-caulk-over-rot are common outcomes. You’ll close on a house with a cosmetic fix over an unresolved problem.
Option B: Get a contractor estimate, deduct from the price (recommended)
Have a qualified stucco contractor provide a written scope-of-work and repair estimate. Present this to the seller and negotiate a price reduction equal to the repair cost. You then control the quality of work after closing. JARART LLC provides detailed written estimates for exactly this purpose — call us at (609) 375-7155 and we can typically turn around an estimate within a few business days.
I’ve been called to provide estimates on dozens of pre-closing inspections. Buyers who come in with a professional written scope have far more negotiating power than those asking for a general “stucco allowance.” A specific line-item estimate — “replace 240 sq ft of damaged sheathing, reinstall lath, three-coat stucco, color match: $7,400” — is much harder for a seller to dismiss than a vague repair credit request.
Crack repair, moisture damage, full section replacement with color matching — Mercer County, NJ & Bucks County, PA
New construction and full re-cladding. Traditional hard-coat and modern drainage-plane EIFS systems.
Frequently Asked Questions
Originally from Poland, Kamil spent years mastering stucco and exterior finishing before founding JARART LLC in New Jersey. Projects include residential homes across Mercer County and Bucks County PA, commercial work for Marriott and Hyatt, and the BAPS Swaminarayan Akshardham Temple in Robbinsville, NJ — the largest Hindu temple in the USA. JARART LLC uses only Senergy-Sika, Dryvit, Sto, Pecora, and Sherwin-Williams materials.


