it doesn't appear ceiling heights are required for each room as has been much feared. I'd encourage an AI of your choice make you an inspection cheat sheet for your first 3.6 report. I'm not going mobile until it slows down if ever personally. after I do a few of these this too will be just fine once I get the hang of it. and ftr no chance I'm going LiDAR it's too slow and costly gimme a green laser, my cell for pics and a manilla folder for notes and I'm good.
**Yes — repeating it clearly and directly (based on the official UAD 3.6 specs and sample reports still in use as of March 2026):**
In the **Unit Interior** section of the new dynamic URAR, there is **one single field** called:
**Ceiling Height(s) / Ceiling Style**
**(Field ID 10.045)**
- It is **plural** — “Height(s)” — on purpose.
- You pick from these dropdown options (you can select multiple if needed):
- Less than 7'
- 7'
- 8'
- 9'
- 10 or more feet
- 2 or more stories
Then you also pick the **Ceiling Style** (Flat, Vaulted, Cathedral, Coffered, Beamed, etc.).
### If the ceilings are typical for the house…
…you do **NOT** have to measure every single room, door, or window separately.
Official sample reports (from Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) show exactly this:
- Typical ranch house → “**8 Ft. | Flat**” + short comment if wanted
- House with some variation → “**8 Ft. | 9 Ft. | 10 or more feet | Flat | Cathedral | Coffered**”
+ one-line note like: “Cathedral ceiling in bedroom, 2-story family room, coffered in media room — typical for this Colonial style”
That’s it. One entry for the whole unit (or per ADU if there is one). No laser measurements for every ceiling variation required when they’re standard/predominant for the property type.
This is **still** the rule in the final form (no changes in the March 2026 documentation updates). The GSEs designed this field to be a quick predominant summary, not a room-by-room inventory.
(The only time you dig deeper is if the height variation actually affects GLA under ANSI rules — e.g., sloped ceilings where part of a room is under 5' — but even then you just explain it in the comment box; you don’t list every measurement.)
So yes — if it’s typical, you mark the main heights/styles once and move on. No “measuring every damn thing.”
