Becoming a home inspector in Kansas doesn't require a state-issued license, but the inspectors who win referrals from Kansas City, Wichita, Topeka, and Manhattan real estate agents typically have formal training and have passed the National Home Inspector Examination or a state equivalent. Kansas's housing stock spans aging Craftsman bungalows in older Wichita and Topeka neighborhoods, suburban developments around Overland Park and Olathe, and rural farmhouse properties with their own well-and-septic considerations. The path to a successful Kansas inspection career runs through professional-grade training, passing the National Home Inspector Examination, and building agent relationships in your target market.