One address, one clear report. ReconNest reads the public record for the dozens of things that worry a buyer, from freight-rail noise to environmental hazards to what's being built nearby, so you can see what a listing leaves out and an afternoon walk-through can't tell you.
Not in your state yet? We can often add it within 24 hours. Request yours →
A great-looking listing can still sit next to a rail line, a cleanup site, or a flight path. We check the kinds of things a buyer would want to know but rarely gets told, and we put them in one place.
Freight rail, busy roads, and flight paths you won't notice on a quiet afternoon visit.
Contaminated land, old fuel tanks, former gas stations, and the industrial neighbors a listing never mentions.
Parks, transit, schools, and emergency services, the daily-life details that make a block fit.
Reported crime and public records for the area, shown as plain data you read in context. Not a safety rating, and never a label on a block or its residents.
Building permits, planned projects, and zoning changes that could reshape the block.
FEMA flood zone, wildfire hazard, and the storm and disaster history for the area. The exposure that drives insurance costs and rarely makes the listing.
Crime and area data describe a location, not the people who live there. It is not a rating of how safe a neighborhood is, and under the federal Fair Housing Act and state and local fair-housing laws it must never be used to make housing choices based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, disability, source of income, or any other protected class.
We pull from public records and translate them into plain English. We can't promise every record is complete or current, so treat a report as a starting point for your own due diligence, not the last word.
When you buy a house, the seller's disclosures are mostly about the house itself, and the rules change from state to state. What surrounds it, the freight line a block over, the cleanup site down the street, the high-voltage line at the end of the block, often isn't on any form. I went looking for one tool that pulled all of it together before you make an offer. I couldn't find one, so I built it.
A real report for a real address. We pull dozens of public records, sort out which ones actually matter here, and explain each one without the jargon. Click through every card and see it on the map.
See an example full reportYou shouldn't have to read dozens of signals and guess which ones matter for your block. The summary lays it out for you: what stands out at this exact address, what's worth a closer look in person, and what's probably nothing. It even hands you the questions worth asking before you make an offer. The full data is all still here. The summary just makes sense of it.
57 signals live now across 24 categories, with more rolling out.
Live now Coming soon
Tell us what you would want checked, from radon zones to cell towers to anything else, and we will work to add it. Often within 24 hours.
We're live across Washington, Oregon, Idaho, New York, California, Florida, Texas, and Illinois, and we run a full report on any address in those states, listed in our directory or not. Some city-level signals, like 311 nuisance reports, show up where the local data exists. We'll keep filling in the map region by region until it's nationwide.
Browse coverageTell us where you're looking and we'll prioritize it. We can often have a new state live within 24 hours of your request, and you'll get a personal note from the founder the moment it's ready.
Still looking for a buyer's agent in your corner? Tell us where you're house hunting and we'll connect you with someone we know personally who works that market, even in a state we don't cover yet. It's free, and there's no obligation.
Help me find an agentBuy a report when you need one, and it never expires. The more you buy, the less each one costs. Licensed real estate agents can join a membership for a lower per-report price.
Licensed real estate agent? See agent membership →
See pricing