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Aduscale launches InspectPilot to score LA contractors on inspection outcomes

Jun. 8, 2026
By AI, Created 18:49 UTC, Jun 08, 2026, AGP -

Aduscale has launched InspectPilot, an inspection intelligence platform that ranks 40,493 Los Angeles contractors using 7.2 million city inspection records. The company says the system is the first to score subcontractor reliability on actual inspection pass rates, correction cycles and days-to-pass.

Why it matters: - Los Angeles general contractors have long hired subcontractors on price, relationships and reputation because they lacked measurable inspection data. - Aduscale is trying to turn public inspection records into a hiring signal that can show which subcontractors pass on the first try and which ones slow projects down. - The company says failed inspections and inspection scheduling problems can drive project delays, added labor costs and idle crew time. - The launch targets residential construction, where inspection timing and trade coordination can affect every phase of a project.

What happened: - Aduscale, Inc. launched InspectPilot, an inspection intelligence platform for residential general contractors in Los Angeles. - The platform ingested 7,238,238 city inspection records from LADBS and built enriched profiles on 40,493 licensed contractors. - InspectPilot computed 242,958 enrichment signals across the contractor base. - The company says InspectPilot is the first data product that scores subcontractor reliability using actual inspection outcomes. - InspectPilot includes a free inspection management tool for scheduling, tracking and managing city inspections across active permits. - InspectPilot also includes a Contractor Reliability Score for each subcontractor and trade.

The details: - The score answers questions about first-attempt pass rates, correction cycles, days-to-pass and inspection performance trends over the last 12 months. - Contractor profiles include CSLB license status, workers' compensation coverage, Google and Yelp ratings, permit volume and history, project valuation data and per-trade inspection pass rates. - The dataset tracks more than 50 inspection types, including rough, final, grading, green building and fire inspections. - InspectPilot uses AI to classify trade categories such as electrical, plumbing, HVAC and structural work. - The system also extracts correction items from failed inspections. - The company says 99.7% of contractor profiles include phone data, or 40,389 of 40,493 profiles. - InspectPilot identifies 544 B-tier contractors, which the company defines as the highest-fit general contractors and specialty trades. - The platform flags risk and opportunity signals such as digital presence low, permit velocity high, license expiring soon, ADU active and workers' comp lapsed. - The composite score ranges from 0 to 100. - The platform segments contractors into B-tier at 61 and above, C-tier from 38 to 60, and D-tier below 38. - Aduscale says the score is designed to surface contractors that are both high-performing and active in the Los Angeles market. - Yaroslav Korets, founder and CEO of Aduscale, said a subcontractor with a 94% first-attempt pass rate is fundamentally different from one that passes 62% of inspections.

Between the lines: - The product is aimed at fixing an information gap in a market where municipal inspection data exists but is not structured around contractor performance. - Aduscale is positioning public records as a way to compare subcontractors on outcomes rather than reputation. - The launch also highlights how much residential construction still relies on manual workflows, with the company citing Excel as the tool used by 85% of construction professionals for estimating and bid processes. - Los Angeles is a natural test market because ADU growth has created a high-volume, high-inspection environment. - The company is not trying to compete as a bid platform, project management tool or estimating product. - Instead, InspectPilot is meant to sit alongside existing contractor workflows as an intelligence layer.

What's next: - Aduscale plans to use InspectPilot as its first product and keep the inspection management tool as the entry point. - The company is betting that contractors will use inspection performance data to choose subs, reduce correction cycles and avoid delays. - If adoption grows, the score could become a reference point for subcontractor vetting in Los Angeles residential construction.

The bottom line: - Aduscale is turning millions of public inspection records into a contractor ranking system built around actual jobsite performance, not self-reported credentials.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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