Property red flags report for any US home address
Ten official checks in one pass — FEMA flood zone, wildfire likelihood, Superfund and cleanup sites, radon zone, wetlands and more. Every finding comes with its source, data date and the exact questions to ask before your offer.
Check an address
A full sample report — open before you pay
A real report for a real address: verdict, ten risk cards with evidence, and the action plan. Yours will look exactly like this.
Ten checks, one report — every finding with its source
Flood & water
Official FEMA flood zone and Special Flood Hazard Area status, map availability, plus elevation and distance to the nearest mapped stream or lake.
Wildfire
Wildfire likelihood and exposure for the surrounding community from USDA Forest Service data — the same inputs insurers look at.
Earthquake & ground shaking
USGS seismic hazard at the site and recorded significant earthquakes nearby, so retrofit and coverage questions surface before closing.
Landslide & slope
USGS landslide susceptibility and any inventoried landslide events near the property, with honest notes on map scale.
Wetlands & protected waters
Mapped National Wetlands Inventory features on or near the parcel, with type and distance — the difference between a view and a permit problem.
Contaminated land & cleanup sites
Superfund (NPL), brownfields and hazardous-waste cleanup sites within defined radii, from EPA registries, each with name, status and distance.
Industrial releases & facilities
Toxics Release Inventory facilities, permitted dischargers and underground storage tanks nearby — what operates around the home, with links.
Radon
EPA county radon zone with the explicit reminder the EPA itself gives: test every home, whatever the zone says.
Drinking water context
The public water systems serving the area and their recent violation history from EPA records — or a private-well flag with test guidance.
Disaster history
Federal disaster declarations for the county — how often floods, storms, fires and freezes have hit this area, as context for insurance questions.
Four honest statuses — no opaque score out of 100
The verdict is built only from category statuses you can inspect. Every red or yellow card shows its measurable evidence, the primary source with its date, our confidence level — and what that source cannot prove.
A factor that can reasonably change your decision, require a professional check, or affect insurance or use of the land. Comes with what to do before removing contingencies.
Something is there — or close by — but the available data can’t confirm material impact. You get the exact question to ask and who to ask it.
No flag in the sources we checked, within their declared coverage. Never phrased as “safe” — that word doesn’t belong in due diligence.
The source is unavailable, the area isn’t mapped, or the scale is too coarse. Shown as exactly that — missing data is never dressed up as a clean result.
From address to action plan
Enter and confirm the address
Start typing — we match against official records and you confirm the exact property. Ambiguous matches never reach checkout.
See coverage before paying
We show which of the ten categories have data for this location. If coverage is insufficient, we won’t sell you the report at all.
Pay $19 — one flat price
One SKU, everything included: web report, PDF, read-only share link and one free refresh within 30 days. No account required.
Read the verdict, act on the plan
Red, yellow, green and unknown counts up top; evidence on every card; then a what-to-verify plan mapped to offer, inspection and closing.
Built so decisions get made on data you can check
Evidence, not vibes
Every material finding links to the primary government source, shows the data date and scale, and states our confidence. You can verify anything in the report yourself.
“We don’t know” is an answer
When a source doesn’t cover the area, the category is gray — insufficient data. We never let a data gap masquerade as a green light.
Built for the transaction
Findings translate into due-diligence moves: what to check before the offer, what to order during inspection, what to resolve before contingencies come off.
Easy to hand off
PDF download and a read-only share link that needs no account — send it to your agent, inspector or insurance broker in one click, revoke it anytime.
One report, four moments it pays off
Buying a home
Run the check before you make the offer. A flood zone, a cleanup site across the street or an uninsurable wildfire area is cheaper to discover now than after closing.
In your inspection period
Turn the clock you’re on into a checklist: which specialist tests to order — radon, water, geotech, Phase I — and which documents to demand before contingencies expire.
Buying land to build
Wetlands, slopes and flood zones decide what you can build and what it will cost. See the mapped constraints before the land is yours.
Agents & inspectors
A client-ready second opinion with sources attached. Share the read-only link — no logins, no PDFs lost in email threads.
per address · one flat price · no subscription
- All ten checks — nothing sold separately
- Verdict + red/yellow/green/unknown counts
- Measurable evidence with primary-source links
- Questions to ask the seller, agent and insurer
- Action plan for offer, inspection and closing
- PDF download + revocable read-only share link
- One free data refresh within 30 days
Automatic full refund if we can’t generate the report with the coverage we promised.
Common questions
What exactly do I get for $19?+
One full report for one US residential address: ten risk categories checked against official sources (FEMA, EPA, USGS, USFWS, USFS and others), a verdict with red/yellow/green/unknown counts, measurable evidence with links for every finding, questions to ask, and an action plan organized around your transaction. Includes web report, PDF, a revocable share link and one free refresh within 30 days.
Is this a home inspection or an environmental site assessment?+
No. This is an informational due-diligence report built from public government data. It doesn’t inspect the structure, sample soil or water, or replace a Phase I ESA, title search, survey or appraisal. Its job is to tell you which of those professional checks are worth ordering — before you’re committed.
Where does the data come from?+
Primary federal sources: FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer and disaster declarations, EPA facility and cleanup-site registries (Superfund, brownfields, RCRA, TRI, tanks, drinking-water systems), USGS seismic and landslide data, US Fish & Wildlife National Wetlands Inventory, USDA Forest Service wildfire likelihood data, and the US Census Bureau geocoder. Every card names its source and data date.
What if there’s no data for my address?+
You see it before paying: the coverage preview shows which categories have data for your location. If overall coverage is insufficient, we refuse the sale. If a single source fails during generation, that category is marked “insufficient data” — and if we can’t deliver the coverage we promised, you get an automatic full refund.
Does a green result mean the property is safe?+
No — and we deliberately never use the word “safe”. Green means no flag was found in the sources we checked, within their declared coverage and scale. Official maps have gaps and update cycles; that’s why every card also states what the source cannot prove.
How fast is the report ready?+
Typically within a few minutes of payment. You can close the tab — the link arrives by email, and the report stays available. If generation fails, you’re refunded automatically.
Can I share the report with my agent or inspector?+
Yes. Create a read-only share link right in the report — recipients don’t need an account and never see your email or payment details. You can revoke the link at any time, and download an identical PDF.
Do you cover every US address?+
We cover residential addresses in all 50 states and DC that can be verified against official records. Some rural and newly built addresses can’t be confirmed or have thin source coverage — in that case we say so up front instead of selling you a hollow report.
Go deeper
The most expensive red flags are the ones you find after closing
$19 and a few minutes — against surprises that cost five figures and can’t be returned. Check the address before the offer, not after the keys.
Check an address — $19