Real estate data has a fragmentation problem
If you've ever tried to research a housing market seriously, you know the drill. You open Zillow for home values. Then Redfin for market velocity. Then Realtor.com for inventory. Then the Census Bureau for demographic context. Then the Federal Reserve's FRED database for interest rate data. By the time you've assembled all of that, you've spent more time gathering than analyzing.
That's the problem realestatevis was built to solve.
What we built
realestatevis is a market intelligence platform that aggregates data from five trusted sources:
- Zillow — home values, list prices, rental estimates
- Redfin — sale prices, days on market, market velocity
- Realtor.com — active listings, median days to pending, new listing counts
- U.S. Census Bureau — demographic and economic context
- Federal Reserve (FRED) — mortgage rates, economic indicators
We pull this data, normalize it, and surface it through a unified interface — interactive maps, trend charts, comparison tables, and affordability tools.
Who it's for
Individual investors use realestatevis to screen markets, identify undervalued metros, and track price-to-rent ratios over time.
Real estate agents use it to back their market reports with unimpeachable third-party data instead of relying on a single source.
Researchers and analysts use it to model housing market dynamics across geographies without stitching together disparate data exports.
Homebuyers use it to understand whether a market is heating up or cooling off before making one of the biggest financial decisions of their lives.
What's free, what's paid
We believe state-level real estate data should be publicly accessible. Our Free plan includes:
- Unlimited searches across all 50 states
- Interactive maps and trend charts
- 20 years of historical data
- Access to all five data sources at the state level
The Professional plan ($20/month or $16/month annually) unlocks county and ZIP code granularity, data exports, API access, and MLS integration.
Get started
No account required to explore. Head to the app and start searching any state, metro, county, or ZIP code. The data is waiting for you.