Relocation / Neighborhood Guide
The most comprehensive area report — everything worth knowing before you move, sourced and dated.
The mover's guide to any US address. It opens with what homes rent for and cost around it (US Census ACS), then a “What's happening here” snapshot of the area's recent trajectory — federal disaster declarations, county unemployment, new-construction permits, and who's moving in or out (FEMA, BLS, US Census, IRS), each dated — plus ~20 stackable area cards: cost of living, property-tax rate, energy costs, climate, broadband, jobs, schools context, parks & trails, farmers markets, libraries, amenities, transit and dining. Every figure is named to its source and vintage, with link-outs to official sources. It describes the place you chose; it never ranks neighborhoods or tells you where to live.
- ✓ZIP + county rent, home-value & income medians (US Census ACS)
- ✓“What's happening here”: recent disaster declarations, unemployment, building permits & net migration — each dated (FEMA, BLS, US Census, IRS), with official link-outs
- ✓~20 stackable area cards: cost of living, property tax, energy, climate, schools context, parks & trails, farmers markets, libraries, amenities, transit & dining
- ✓Objective facts with named sources — never a neighborhood 'score', never a steer
Every number is labeled and sourced.
No unlabeled figures. Every number on this report traces to a named source, anything assumed is flagged, and where AI fills a gap it says so — right next to the number.
Every figure carries its source
Each number is tagged with where it came from — a licensed property record, a named government dataset (Census, NCES, FEMA, HUD, FBI), or your own data — along with its vintage. Confidence measures how consistent those sources are, not a promise of truth.
AI is always disclosed
Where AI fills a gap — like market references in a thin market — it's clearly labeled “AI-estimated” and never passed off as real data. Every report is advisory, not an appraisal.