The Address ReportClarity before commitment
History signals and context

Property History Report

By address. See what happened before you commit.

Used by buyers reviewing a specific U.S. residential property before making an offer or waiving contingencies — when they need the full timeline context.

Most regret comes from missing context. The question isn’t “is this property good?” It’s “what happened here — and what might I be missing?”

This report reconstructs the address-level timeline from objective sources — so you can see ownership signals, listing history, and relevant events before you commit.

One-time report: $49. No subscription.

Run a report on one address. Delivered as a paid viewer + PDF.

Informational only. Data availability varies by address and source coverage. Not advice. Not an inspection.

What a property history report actually is

A property history report is not a sales pitch or a narrative. It’s a structured reconstruction of the address timeline using objective records — so you can see what happened, when it happened, and what that may imply for diligence.

This is

  • address-level timeline reconstruction
  • ownership + listing context
  • signals that explain “why now?”
  • designed to reduce unknowns

This is not

  • a guarantee
  • an inspection
  • legal or title advice
  • a prediction of outcomes

How buyers use history signals

  1. 1. You’re evaluating a specific property.
  2. 2. Something feels off — or you want to reduce blind spots.
  3. 3. You review the timeline and decide what to verify next.

If signals appear: escalate diligence with targeted questions

If nothing material appears: proceed with more confidence

Next step: if the timeline still doesn’t explain what you’re seeing, the next decision question is often why the house is so cheap.

Scope reminder: informational screening, not an inspection or advice.

Why this reduces late-stage regret

Most “surprises” aren’t surprises. They’re context you didn’t see in time. This report makes context legible — so you can decide what matters, what to verify, and what to ignore before leverage locks in.