For real estate agents
Property Risk Reports for Real Estate Agents
Help buyer clients review public property risk signals before showings, offers, financing deadlines, or insurance conversations.
Free beta
Run an address check and get a plain-English property risk brief before an offer, lease, financing deadline, or insurance call.
Check an addressQuick answer
Real estate agents can use a public-data property risk brief to help buyers organize flood, insurance, environmental, disaster, and access questions before offer deadlines.
What to check first
- Run a quick address brief before a buyer submits an offer.
- Share public-data signals as informational context, not advice.
- Use the PDF brief as a checklist for lender, insurer, and inspector conversations.
- Document what needs professional verification.
- Help clients avoid discovering basic public-record questions too late.
Client education
A simple brief helps clients understand what to verify without drowning in raw datasets.
Offer speed
Fast markets reward teams that can identify questions before deadlines hit.
Professional boundaries
The brief supports conversations while preserving the need for licensed specialists.
Shareable PDF
Clients can share the brief with lenders, insurance brokers, and inspectors.
What this report is not
PreOfferCheck is not an appraisal, inspection, insurance quote, official flood determination, title search, or professional advice. It summarizes public-data signals so you know what to verify with a licensed agent, lender, insurer, inspector, or attorney.
Common questions
Can agents use this with buyer clients?
Yes. It is designed as an informational public-data brief and should be paired with professional verification.
Does it replace disclosures or inspections?
No. It should be used alongside disclosures, inspections, lender requirements, and insurance quotes.
What is the best agent workflow?
Run the address, review the summary with the client, download the PDF, and assign verification items to the right professional.
Check the property before you commit
Start with a free public-data risk brief, then use the result as a checklist for the professionals involved in the deal.
Run a free property check