A drywall job can look fine under construction lighting and reveal significant imperfections the moment a pot light is turned on. Inspecting finished drywall before the final payment — and before paint goes on — is the right time to address any issues. Here's how to do it properly.

The Most Important Tool: Raking Light

Construction lighting floods the room with diffuse overhead light that makes drywall look good. Real living conditions — pot lights, floor lamps, windows — send light across the surface at an angle. This is called raking light, and it's the harshest condition for showing surface imperfections.

To replicate this during inspection, bring a bright portable work light (a shop light or a powerful flashlight works) and position it at an oblique angle to each wall surface, pointing across rather than directly at the wall. Walk the light along every wall and ceiling. Any ridge, tool mark, or insufficiently feathered seam will cast a shadow and become immediately visible.

This is the same technique professional finishers use for a pre-paint inspection — and it's the only reliable way to find problems before paint locks them in.

What to Look for During Inspection

Tape Seams and Joints

Fastener Dimples

Inside and Outside Corners

Texture Matching (on Repair Jobs)

Calgary Drywall Doctor does this raking light inspection before every handoff — catching imperfections before your painter arrives, not after. This is a standard step on every job, not an extra.

Get a Quote With Pre-Paint Inspection Included

What to Do If You Find Problems

Document what you find with photos and present them to the contractor before the final payment is made. A professional crew will address them without dispute — these are corrections to the agreed scope, not extras. If the contractor pushes back on fixing visible defects before final payment, that's important information about how disputes will be handled going forward.

The practical approach: walk the job with the contractor present. Point, they note. Agree on a timeline for corrections. Hold the final payment until corrections are complete and re-inspected. This is a standard part of any professional contractor relationship and should be in the written scope from the start.

For more on what a final walkthrough should look like, our residential drywall page covers the full process including how we handle the walkthrough on every job.