
Renovating an older San Antonio home can be one of the smartest ways to build equity and create a space that finally fits your life. But if your house was built before 1978, there’s a safety issue you can’t afford to guess on: lead-based paint.
When lead paint is disturbed: by sanding, scraping, cutting, demo, window replacement, door/trim work, or even aggressive prep: it can turn into fine dust that spreads quickly and settles everywhere. That dust is easy to inhale or ingest, especially for kids (hand-to-mouth is real) and pregnant family members. And here’s the frustrating part: you often can’t see it.
At Veteran Home Inspections, we help you remove the guesswork before you start tearing into walls, trim, and cabinets. The goal is simple: protect your family and keep your renovation on schedule with clear, defensible information.
If you’re ready to schedule, start here: Request an Inspection
Learn more about our service: Lead Paint Inspection (XRF)
Why Pre-1978 Homes in San Antonio Deserve Extra Caution
San Antonio has plenty of charming neighborhoods with older housing stock: solid framing, mature trees, real character. Those same homes often have multiple generations of paint on:
- Windows and sashes (high friction surfaces create dust faster)
- Doors and door trim
- Baseboards and crown molding
- Stair rails and balusters
- Kitchen/bath cabinets
- Exterior siding, soffits, and porch railings
The risk isn’t just “old paint.” The risk is what happens during renovation. Activities that seem routine: like prepping trim for a smooth finish: can create the exact conditions that spread lead dust through your home.
Benefit to you: Treating lead as a planning item (not an afterthought) reduces anxiety, prevents expensive do-overs, and protects the people who matter most.
What Makes Lead Paint So Dangerous During Renovations
Lead exposure is especially harmful for children because it can affect the developing brain and nervous system. The hard truth is that children can have elevated blood lead levels with no obvious symptoms: meaning you may not know there’s a problem until long after the dust has settled.
Lead dust is dangerous because it:
- Travels: It gets on shoes, tools, clothing, HVAC returns, and surfaces throughout the home.
- Persists: It can settle into cracks, carpets, and window tracks.
- Is easy to ingest: Kids pick it up from floors and windowsills, then touch their mouth.
Benefit to you: When you identify lead sources early, you can plan containment and safe workflows: so your renovation doesn’t quietly create a long-term health concern.
For broader guidance on lead-safe renovation, the EPA’s Renovation, Repair and Painting program is the standard reference (often called the “RRP Rule”).
Before You Renovate: Understand the EPA’s Renovation (RRP) Reality
If your home is pre-1978, federal rules can come into play for renovation activities that disturb painted surfaces. In practical terms, you should assume lead may be present until proven otherwise: especially if you’re hiring a contractor or planning a big DIY project.
The RRP framework is built around one central idea: disturbing lead paint creates lead dust, so the work needs to be planned and contained.
Common lead-dust-generating activities include:
- Sanding old trim and repainting
- Replacing windows or doors
- Cutting into drywall/plaster near painted surfaces
- Removing cabinets, baseboards, or built-ins
- Exterior scraping and repainting
Benefit to you: Knowing where lead is located helps you (and your contractor) choose safer methods and avoid accidental contamination that can delay the project.
Lead Paint Testing Options (And Why Swabs Often Fall Short)
You’ll see a few “testing” approaches advertised. Here’s how to think about them:
1) Chemical swabs (quick kits)
These can be tempting because they’re cheap and fast, but they’re often limited:
- They test only the specific spot you swab
- Results can be affected by surface conditions and user technique
- They don’t create a whole-home strategy for renovation planning
- Even used correctly, the false-positive and false negative rates are so high they are about as accurate as flipping a coin. This is why professional lead-paint inspections do not use these kits
On our lead paint service page, we address this directly: don’t rely on low-bid, partial testing when you don’t even know if lead paint is present.
Source: Veteran Home Inspections – Lead Paint Inspection
2) Paint chip sampling (lab testing)
Accurate, but it’s destructive (you remove a sample), and results take time.
3) XRF testing (the professional standard for fast, non-destructive screening)
This is the option most homeowners renovating older homes actually want: because it supports real decision-making without tearing up your house.
What Is XRF Lead Paint Testing? (And Why It’s Ideal for Renovations)

XRF stands for X-ray fluorescence. In plain terms, an XRF analyzer is a specialized instrument that can detect lead in paint by reading what’s in the layers: even through multiple coats: without you having to scrape anything off.
How XRF testing works in the real world
During an on-site lead paint inspection, we:
- Select representative painted components (doors, trim, windows, walls, exterior elements, etc.)
- Test surfaces in-place with the XRF device (non-destructive)
- Document results by location and component so you can plan renovation work intelligently
Why XRF matters for your renovation
- Instant clarity: You don’t wait days wondering whether demo is safe.
- Non-destructive: No unnecessary damage to historic trim or finished surfaces.
- Better planning: You can target containment and work sequencing to the areas that actually matter.
Benefit to you: XRF gives you confidence. Instead of “maybe it’s fine,” you get a clear map of risk: so your project stays controlled and your family stays safer.
Learn more about our XRF approach here: Lead Paint Inspections
Inspection vs. Risk Assessment: Which One Do You Need?
Your next step depends on your goal.
According to the EPA (and echoed on our lead paint page):
- A Lead Paint Inspection tells you whether lead-based paint is present and where it is located (surface-by-surface).
- A Lead Paint Risk Assessment goes further: evaluating the presence, type, severity, and location of lead hazards in paint, dust, and soil, and providing recommended controls.
Source: Veteran Home Inspections – Difference Between an Inspection and Risk Assessment
Practical guidance for San Antonio remodels
- Choose a Lead Paint Inspection (XRF) if you primarily need to plan a renovation and determine where lead paint exists.
- Choose a Risk Assessment if you need deeper hazard evaluation (for example: concerns about children’s exposure, deteriorated paint, dust pathways, or soil issues in the yard).
Benefit to you: Picking the right scope saves money and time while ensuring you’re not under-reacting to a genuine hazard.
Where Lead Paint Problems Show Up First in Older Homes
If you’re renovating, pay special attention to the high-risk areas below because they create dust easily and spread it widely.
High-friction components (dust generators)
- Window tracks and sashes
- Door frames and door edges
- Stair rails
- Drawers and cabinets
High-disturbance renovation zones
- Kitchens (cabinet removal, wall opening, backsplash demo)
- Bathrooms (vanity removal, patching, repainting)
- Trim-heavy rooms (baseboards, wainscoting, crown molding)
Exterior work (often overlooked)
- Scraping and repainting siding/trim
- Porch rebuilds
- Fascia/soffit repairs
- Old outbuildings and detached garages
Benefit to you: When you know the “hot spots,” you can prioritize testing and reduce the chance of contaminating clean areas of the home.
If Lead Is Present: What You Should Do Next (Renovation-Smart Steps)

Finding lead paint doesn’t mean you can’t renovate. It means you need a plan that protects your household and prevents spread.
Use this checklist to stay in control:
- Adjust your scope before demo starts.
Knowing where lead is helps you avoid “surprise” changes after dust is already everywhere: reducing stress and rework. - Use proper containment and dust control.
Isolation barriers, protected pathways, and HEPA equipment are key to preventing contamination of bedrooms, HVAC returns, and living areas. - Sequence the job to minimize exposure.
Keep high-disturbance work grouped and contained so your home isn’t a rotating dust zone for weeks. - Protect the most vulnerable people first.
Keep children and pregnant family members away from work areas and consider temporary relocation for major disturbance work. - Verify cleanliness when the work ends.
Renovation is only “done” when the dust is handled. Post-work cleaning and verification reduce lingering worry and support a safer move-back-in.
Benefit to you: These steps protect health, prevent project delays, and help you feel confident that your renovation improved your home instead of introducing an invisible hazard.
Why This Matters Most for Families (Not Just Compliance)

Most people think about lead paint testing as a regulation or a checkbox. We recommend you think about it differently: it’s a family protection decision.
When you test before renovating, you gain:
- Control over how and where work happens
- Confidence that you’re not exposing your kids to invisible dust
- Clarity to work with your contractor on safe methods and sequencing
- Momentum because fewer surprises means fewer delays
That peace of mind is hard to put a price on: especially when you’re already juggling budgets, timelines, and the stress of living through a remodel.
Work With Certified Professionals (And Choose Testing That Supports Real Decisions)
Veteran Home Inspections is certified to conduct Lead-Paint Inspections and Risk Assessments in Texas and offers XRF inspections designed for renovation planning.
Source: Lead Paint Inspections in the Bandera & San Antonio, TX Area
If you’re renovating a pre-1978 home in the San Antonio area, don’t rely on guesswork or minimal testing that leaves you uncertain. Get information you can actually use.
Schedule your lead paint testing here:
Request an Inspection
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Quick Renovation-Safety Takeaway
If your San Antonio home was built before 1978, lead paint is a realistic possibility. Renovation work can turn that paint into dust that affects the whole home: especially children’s spaces. XRF testing gives you fast, non-destructive answers so you can plan the job safely and confidently.
When you’re ready, the inspectors at Veteran Home Inspections can help you identify where lead-based paint is present and what that means for your remodel( before the first piece of trim comes off.)
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