Updated about 1 month ago on . Most recent reply
- Real Estate Consultant
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Most investors already have the data. The real problem is organizing it correctly.
Most real estate investors already have access to data.
Comps.
Zillow estimates.
Public records.
Rental estimates.
Permit history.
Flood and fire maps.
Neighborhood statistics.
Market trends.
Zoning information.
The real problem is that this information is usually scattered across multiple platforms, reports, maps, and tools — making it difficult to evaluate the full picture efficiently.
We’ve been exploring a more organized property intelligence approach focused on combining multiple layers of publicly available property and market data into one easier-to-understand investment overview.
The goal is not to “predict the future” or replace inspections, appraisers, attorneys, or financial advisors.
The goal is to help investors, buyers, and agents:
- review opportunities faster
- identify possible risks earlier
- compare properties more efficiently
- understand market positioning
- evaluate long-term potential more clearly
Depending on the property, the analysis may include:
- comparable sales
- market positioning
- rental estimates
- zoning and ADU considerations
- redevelopment potential
- flood/fire/environmental exposure
- public permit history
- ownership and transaction history
- neighborhood trends
- long-term market direction
Still early in development, but curious how other investors currently organize and evaluate all of this information before making decisions.



