# How to Turn Move-In Inspection Photos Into a Room-by-Room Condition Summary With AI

Canonical URL: https://promptedwork.com/articles/turn-move-in-inspection-photos-into-room-by-room-condition-summary-with-ai
Markdown URL: https://promptedwork.com/articles-md/turn-move-in-inspection-photos-into-room-by-room-condition-summary-with-ai.md
Description: Use Gemini on desktop or mobile to turn a property photo set into a room-by-room inspection summary that is easier to review, save, and follow up on.
Published: 2026-03-21
Updated: 2026-03-21
Category: Real Estate & Property Management
Tags: gemini, property-inspections, move-in-inspection, photo-analysis, turnover

## Workflow Summary

- Best for: Operators who need a repeatable, practical workflow instead of a blank prompt.
- Input: A phone or camera that can produce clear room photos A Gemini account on the web or in the mobile app A consistent photo set that covers each room, each major fixture, and any obvious damage
- Primary tool: Gemini
- Output: Use Gemini on desktop or mobile to turn a property photo set into a room-by-room inspection summary that is easier to review, save, and follow up on.
- Main risk: Gemini mixes up the rooms
- Verification step: every room that matters is actually represented the room headings match the photos you uploaded the summary does not turn a visible stain into an assumption about the cause

## Article

Property teams often take plenty of inspection photos but still end up with weak notes. The photos are there, but nobody has turned them into a room-by-room summary that tells the next person what they actually need to know. This workflow is for property managers, field inspectors, maintenance coordinators, and owner-operators who already take inspection photos and want a faster way to produce a usable written summary.

> **Warning:** This workflow creates drafts, summaries, checklists, and briefing documents for review. Double-check unit numbers, dates, conditions, vendor scope, resident details, owner details, and any promised next steps before you use any output. Do not use AI output as the final signed inspection record, an official notice, a legal document, or the only record of property condition.

## Problem this solves and who it is for

Use this when you already have a set of move-in, move-out, or periodic inspection photos and need a readable condition summary. It works best when the real job is not proving liability on its own but giving your team a faster internal record of what was seen in each room and what needs follow-up.

## Prerequisites

- A phone or camera that can produce clear room photos
- A Gemini account on the web or in the mobile app
- A consistent photo set that covers each room, each major fixture, and any obvious damage
- A place to save the final summary, such as your property management system, Google Docs, or the unit folder in Drive
- A simple naming convention for the property, unit, and inspection date

## How to capture or gather the source material

Take wide shots first, then detail shots. For each room, capture one photo that shows the whole room and then a closer photo for anything worn, missing, stained, cracked, broken, or unusually dirty. If you are on your phone, create one album or folder for that unit before you start. Name it with the property, unit, and date.

Before you upload anything, rename the images or at least sort them in order. A simple order such as `01-entry`, `02-living-room`, `03-kitchen`, `04-bedroom-1`, and `05-bathroom` makes Gemini's output much better because the rooms stay anchored to a predictable sequence.

If you have photos mixed with videos, export only the still photos for this workflow. The goal is a written room-by-room condition memo, not a full media archive.

## Step-by-step workflow

### 1. Sort the photo set before you upload it

Do not dump twenty random photos into the chat without structure. At minimum:

- remove duplicates and blurry shots
- put the photos in room order
- keep one wide shot and one or two detail shots per room
- separate obvious exterior photos from interior photos

This is also the point to strip out anything you do not need. If a license plate, family photo, personal mail, or other sensitive detail appears in the image and is not needed for the inspection summary, crop or exclude that image before upload.

### 2. Run the first pass in Gemini

Gemini supports photo uploads in both the web app and mobile app, so this is one of the better workflows for same-day field use.

#### Desktop web app path

1. Open Gemini in your browser.
2. Click **Add files** and upload the inspection photos from your unit folder.
3. Paste the JSON prompt below.
4. Ask Gemini to organize the output by room and to call out anything that needs follow-up.

#### Mobile app path

1. Open the Gemini mobile app.
2. Tap **Add files**.
3. Choose **Gallery** to upload saved inspection photos, or **Camera** if you still need to capture the last room while standing in the unit.
4. Paste or dictate the same prompt.
5. Review the draft before leaving the property if possible.

```json
{
  "task": "Turn this inspection photo set into a room-by-room condition summary for internal property operations use.",
  "property_id": "[property name or address]",
  "unit_id": "[unit number]",
  "inspection_type": "[move-in, move-out, turnover, routine inspection]",
  "date_of_inspection": "[YYYY-MM-DD]",
  "output_format": {
    "sections": [
      "Entry and common areas",
      "Living room",
      "Kitchen",
      "Bedrooms",
      "Bathrooms",
      "Laundry and utility areas",
      "Exterior or balcony if shown",
      "Items needing follow-up"
    ]
  },
  "instructions": [
    "Use only what is visible in the uploaded photos.",
    "Group visible issues by room.",
    "Call out missing items, obvious damage, major wear, heavy dirt, staining, cracks, broken fixtures, or safety concerns that are clearly visible.",
    "If a room is not shown clearly, say that the room is not adequately documented.",
    "Do not guess about hidden damage or causes.",
    "Do not write legal conclusions.",
    "Keep the language plain and specific."
  ],
  "output_request": "Return a room-by-room summary followed by a short follow-up list with the most important items to recheck, repair, clean, or document better."
}
```

### 3. Tighten the draft into an internal condition memo

The first output will usually be close but a little wordy. Ask for a tighter version that your team can actually save in the unit file.

```json
{
  "task": "Rewrite the draft as a concise internal condition memo.",
  "requirements": [
    "Keep room headings.",
    "Use short factual sentences.",
    "Keep only visible observations.",
    "Add a final section called Recommended Follow-Up.",
    "Do not add any legal conclusion or chargeback language."
  ],
  "output_request": "Return a clean memo that can be pasted into a property management note field or inspection follow-up email."
}
```

### 4. Add your own missing context

This is the human step that matters. Gemini can summarize what it sees, but it does not know:

- whether the mark on a wall was pre-existing
- whether the stove burner already had a work order open
- whether the missing blind slat is new
- whether a loose handle is a safety issue or just cosmetic

Add that context manually before the summary gets saved anywhere permanent.

### 5. Save the summary in the same folder as the photo set

Save the memo with the same property, unit, and date naming pattern. Keep the photo set and the summary together. That way the next person can compare the written summary against the underlying images.

## Tool-specific instructions

Gemini works best here when the photos are ordered and the prompt is strict about staying visual and factual. The mobile app is especially useful because you can upload from the phone gallery or take a final room photo on the spot before you submit the prompt. If you are on iPhone and the photo set lives in a cloud location instead of local files, moving the selected images into the local Files or Photos app first usually makes the upload path smoother.

## Quality checks

Before you save or forward the summary, verify all of the following:

- every room that matters is actually represented
- the room headings match the photos you uploaded
- the summary does not turn a visible stain into an assumption about the cause
- the follow-up list is limited to real next steps your team can take
- personal or sensitive details that do not belong in the record have not been copied into the write-up

## Common failure modes and fixes

**Gemini mixes up the rooms**  
Rename the photos in room order and re-upload them.

**The summary sounds too certain about what caused damage**  
Tell Gemini to use visible observations only and remove causal language.

**The output misses a problem you care about**  
Upload one closer photo of that item and ask for an updated memo.

**The draft is too long for your system note field**  
Ask for a shorter version capped at a fixed word count.

**The photos are too dark**  
Retake the darkest rooms or brighten them before upload. Do not expect the model to recover what is not visible.

## Sources Checked

- Google Gemini Apps Help, "Upload & analyze files in Gemini Apps - Computer." Accessed 2026-03-21. https://support.google.com/gemini/answer/14903178?co=GENIE.Platform%3DDesktop&hl=en
- Google Gemini Apps Help, "Upload & analyze files in Gemini Apps - iPhone & iPad." Accessed 2026-03-21. https://support.google.com/gemini/answer/14903178?co=GENIE.Platform%3DiOS&hl=en
- Unsplash License. Accessed 2026-03-21. https://unsplash.com/license
- Unsplash Help Center, "What if there’s a brand or identifiable person depicted in an image that I download?\" Accessed 2026-03-21. https://help.unsplash.com/en/articles/2646379-what-if-there-s-a-brand-or-identifiable-person-depicted-in-an-image-that-i-download

## Quarterly Refresh Flag

Review by 2026-06-19 to confirm Gemini upload steps, mobile camera and gallery wording, and any changes to local file handling in the Gemini mobile app.
