Hank's House
Hank's Home Guide · ID Edition
US · Idaho Change

Idaho home maintenance checklist

Heavy mountain snow, hard freezes, and wildfire risk across the panhandle. Tap a box on your phone, or print the whole thing for the fridge.
Chapter One · Mar · Apr · May

Spring.

Undo the winter. Open the house, clear the gutters, wake up the yard.

Clean the gutters

Scoop out leaves and grit, then flush with a hose. Watch for water sheeting over the edge — that's a clog telling on itself.

Twice a year 1–2 hr $0
Clogged gutters dump water against the foundation — the #1 source of basement leaks.

Inspect the roof

Walk the perimeter with binoculars. Look for missing shingles, curled edges, or debris around vents and flashing.

Every spring 30 min $0
Catching one missing shingle in April beats patching a ceiling in July.

Service the AC

Swap the filter. Hose down the outdoor condenser fins (power off first). Clear a two-foot radius of leaves and weeds.

Every spring 45 min $15–25
A clean unit runs 10–15% more efficiently. That's real money on July's bill.

Reseal exterior wood

Drop water on your deck. If it beads up, you're good. If it soaks in, time to clean, dry, and reseal.

Every 2–3 yr 1 weekend $40–80
Unsealed wood drinks rain, splits, and greys. A coat every two seasons doubles its life.

Wake up the yard

Service the mower, reconnect hoses, rake beds. Plant things before the heat sets in.

Early spring Half day $20+
Healthy beds resist weeds and hold moisture better through summer.

Clear the 5-foot ember zone

Nothing combustible touching the house: no mulch, firewood, doormats, or planters in the first five feet.

Twice a year 1–2 hr $0
Embers travel a mile. The ember zone is what decides whether your house catches.

Screen attic & crawlspace vents

1/8-inch metal mesh on every vent. Embers get sucked through unscreened vents and ignite the attic.

Once, then check 1–2 hr $25
More homes burn from inside-out (ember intrusion) than from a wall of flame.
Chapter Two · Jun · Jul · Aug

Summer.

Heat, pests, and the backyard. Keep water out and air moving.

Check the irrigation

Run every zone, once. Watch for broken heads, geysers, dry patches, and spray hitting the siding.

2x/season 30 min $0–8
One stuck valve can waste a thousand gallons a night. Spray on siding rots wood.

Pressure-wash exteriors

Siding, walkways, and the deck, in that order. Use the widest nozzle that still does the job — narrow tips strip paint fast.

Once a year 1 day $60 rental
Mildew and algae hold moisture against the house. Cleaning keeps it healthy.

Check windows & seals

Run a hand around each frame. Cracked caulk gets a bead of fresh stuff; squished weatherstripping gets replaced.

Once a year 2–3 hr $20
Gaps leak cool air out in summer and warm air in winter — same fix, year-round savings.

Walk the pest perimeter

Pencil-width gaps at the foundation, sill plates, and where pipes enter. Seal with copper mesh and expanding foam.

Late summer 45 min $15
A mouse squeezes through a dime. Summer is when they scout — fall is when they move in.

Mow & water smart

Blade on the highest reasonable setting. Water deep and less often, early morning, twice a week.

All summer Weekly $0
Longer grass shades its own roots and crowds out weeds. Deep water grows deep roots.

Defensible space, 30 ft out

Mow grass low, prune branches up 6 ft, thin trees so canopies don't touch, clear dead brush.

Late spring Half day $0
A defensible perimeter buys firefighters a chance to defend the structure.

Pack a go-bag

Documents, meds, a few days of clothes, pet supplies, and a charger. Stage by the door during peak season.

Start of season 30 min $30
When the order comes, you have minutes — not hours — to leave.
Chapter Three · Sep · Oct · Nov

Fall.

Button up the house. Everything you do now is the gift you give your January self.

Service the heating

Swap the filter, vacuum around the unit, and test-fire it for twenty minutes. Any odd smells or bangs? Call the pro now, not in January.

Every fall 30 min $15 DIY
Furnaces fail at 3 a.m. on the coldest night. A fall tune-up is cheap insurance.

Chimney & fireplace check

Before the first fire: damper opens, flue is clear, no nest in the cap. Creosote build-up is a real fire risk.

Yearly 20 min $0 (sweep $150+)
Chimney fires are preventable. Most start in a flue that hasn't been swept in years.

Winterize outdoor plumbing

Disconnect hoses. Close the interior shut-off for each outdoor spigot, then open the spigot to drain. Insulate exterior-wall pipes.

Before 1st freeze 30 min $10–20
Frozen pipe splits. Split pipe floods. The single most expensive mistake homeowners make.

Clean the gutters (again)

Do this after the last leaves drop. Clear downspouts and direct them away from the foundation.

Late fall 1–2 hr $0
A gutter clogged with leaves turns to a trough of ice — which rips the gutter off the house.

Stow the outside

Drain the mower fuel or add stabilizer. Cover or bring in the grill. Shake out and store patio cushions.

Late fall 1 hr $0–20
Fabric in a dry garage outlasts fabric left to freeze-thaw by years.

Insulate exposed pipes

Foam sleeves on every pipe in unconditioned space — garage, crawlspace, exterior walls.

Once, then check 1–2 hr $15–30
Cheaper than a single burst-pipe restoration by three orders of magnitude.

Wrap the water heater

Insulating blanket on the tank and on the first 6 ft of hot-water pipe. Saves money even on new units.

Once 1 hr $25
An insulated tank cycles less, lasts longer, and gives you hotter showers in February.

Attic insulation audit

R-49 or better. Look for compressed batts, daylight at the eaves, and missing baffles at the soffits.

Once a decade 1 hr $0–800
Ice dams are an insulation problem disguised as a roof problem. Fix the heat loss, the dam stops forming.

Buy a roof rake

Telescoping aluminum, 16+ ft. Stage it by a door before the first storm.

Once 5 min order $45–70
After the first 6-inch snow they're sold out. Buy the rake in October.

Seal the driveway

Asphalt sealer every 2–3 yr; concrete sealer on a 5-yr cycle. Do it before the first thaw cycle.

Every 2–3 yr 1 day $60–120
Sealed driveways shrug off salt. Bare ones crumble at the joints in 5 winters.
Chapter Four · Dec · Jan · Feb

Winter.

Mostly, you're just paying attention — to what you can see, and to what you can't.

Watch for ice dams

Big icicles along the eaves mean warm air is escaping into your attic. Real fix: attic insulation. Urgent fix: roof rake.

After every snow 15 min $40–60 rake
Ice dams back water up under shingles — damage shows up on the living-room ceiling.

Mind the indoor humidity

Aim for 30–50%. Below 30, add a humidifier. Above 50, run the bath fan longer and crack a window.

Weekly glance Ongoing $15–80
Too dry: wood shrinks, static jumps. Too wet: windows sweat, mildew finds a home.

Hunt drafts & drips

Hold a candle near window edges on a breezy day — the flame tattles. Listen for toilets that cycle on their own.

Once in Jan 30 min $0
Tiny leaks and drafts are free to fix and expensive to ignore.

Manage snow load

Rake low-slope and flat roofs after big snows. Keep a path to every exit and to the gas meter.

Per storm 30 min $0
Heavy wet snow strains low roofs. A blocked gas meter is a safety emergency.

Don't let the house get cold

Heat at 55°F or higher even when away. Open cabinet doors under sinks during deep freezes.

All winter Ongoing $0
A cold-soaked house freezes the pipe inside the wall, not the visible one. By the time you see it, it's flooding.

Rinse the garage floor

Hose off the floor whenever the temp gets above freezing. Salt eats concrete and rebar.

Monthly 15 min $0
A salt-soaked garage slab spalls in 5 years instead of 50.
Every Season · Always

Safety.

The short list that matters more than all the rest combined.

Test smoke & CO detectors

Smoke alarm on every level and outside every sleeping area. CO alarm near every bedroom. Press the test button.

Batteries 2x/yr Replace units 10yr $20–40
If it doesn't chirp, it doesn't work. There is no cheaper way to save a life.

Fire extinguishers & escape plan

One ABC-rated extinguisher in the kitchen, one near the furnace, one in the garage. Pressure gauge in the green. Walk the escape plan with everyone.

Yearly check 15 min $25–40 each
Two ways out of every room. A meet-up spot in the yard. Kids too.

Know the shut-offs

Water main, gas meter, and electrical panel. Everyone in the house should know where each one is and how to operate it in the dark.

Yearly test 10 min $0
Exercise the water main once a year — valves seize from disuse. Keep a flashlight next to the panel, always.

Hank's four golden rules

  1. Water is the enemy. Nine out of ten expensive problems start with water going somewhere it shouldn't.
  2. Small, often, beats big, rarely. A Saturday every season saves a month of regret later.
  3. Know what you can't do. Roofs, gas lines, main electrical — call the pro. No prize for bravery here.
  4. Write it down. Date the filter. Keep receipts. Future-you will thank present-you.
This checklist is the tip of the iceberg

Your home has 200+ things that need looking after.

This page covers the big-rock seasonal tasks. Your actual home has hundreds more — every appliance, fixture, filter, and warranty on its own clock. I am Home keeps track of all of it for you.

200+
tasks tracked
per home
$0
to get started —
free forever tier
set it up once,
reminders forever
  • Every appliance on a schedule. Filters, belts, drain lines, warranty dates — all tracked per serial number.
  • Smart reminders, not spam. Weather-aware: pings you before the first freeze, not on a random Tuesday.
  • The full home record. Paint colors, model numbers, contractor contacts, manuals — searchable in one place.
  • Hank, your AI handyman. Ask "why is the basement smelling musty?" and get an answer that knows your house.
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Frequently asked

How do I make my Idaho home wildfire-ready?

Three layers: a 5-foot non-combustible "ember zone" right against the house (no mulch, firewood, doormats); 1/8-inch metal mesh on every attic and crawlspace vent so embers can't slip in; and a 30-foot defensible perimeter with grass mowed low and tree canopies thinned. A pre-staged go-bag is the fourth thing — when the order comes you have minutes, not hours.

How do I prevent frozen pipes in Idaho?

Three habits: insulate every exposed pipe (foam sleeves on garage, crawlspace, and exterior-wall runs); never let the house dip below 55°F, even when you're away; on the coldest nights, open cabinets under sinks so warm air reaches the pipes inside the wall. The pipe that bursts is almost always the one you couldn't see.

What causes ice dams and how do I stop them in Idaho?

Ice dams are an insulation problem disguised as a roof problem. Heat escaping into a cold attic melts snow on the roof; meltwater refreezes at the cold eaves and backs up under the shingles. The real fix is R-49+ attic insulation with clear soffit baffles. The urgent fix during a storm is a roof rake — buy it in October, not after the first 6-inch snow.

How often should I do home maintenance?

A weekend per season — spring, summer, fall, winter — handles 80% of what matters. Layer in monthly safety checks (smoke/CO test, breaker panel glance) and one yearly walk of the big shut-offs (water main, gas, electrical). The pattern that fails homeowners isn't doing too little; it's doing nothing for two years and then trying to catch up at once.

Can I do this checklist myself, or do I need a pro?

Most of it is DIY — gutters, filters, windows, sealants, irrigation, pest perimeter. Hire a pro for: anything on the roof past a quick eyeball with binoculars, gas-line work, the main electrical panel, and any plumbing repair that involves soldering or splicing into a main. There's no prize for bravery on those — the cost of a mistake is much higher than the cost of the call.

Go home. Hank's got you.