The AI video agent for real estate
Mobile-first video recording app for real estate agents
Dunphy vs Momenzo — honest comparison for real-estate agents
Both are realtor-specific. The wedge is what kind of video you actually want to make — you on camera reading a teleprompter, or a story built from the listing photos you already have.
If you're comparing real-estate-specific video products, Momenzo and Dunphy will both come up. They sit closest together on the "built for realtors" axis, which makes the differences underneath easy to miss.
The differences are the whole story. Both serve real estate agents. They serve different jobs.
Momenzo is a video recording app for agents — built around the moment you point a phone at yourself or a property and record. Teleprompter, framing guides, AI subtitles, branding. Dunphy is the AI video agent for real estate — built to take the photos that already exist from the listing and produce the right creatives for every surface buyers use, calibrated to platform mechanics and storytelling practice. Different units of work, different products.
This page is the honest comparison: what Momenzo is genuinely good at, where Dunphy is built differently, and how to tell which one fits your week.
Same audience, two different units of work
Momenzo's unit of work is you, the agent. You open the app, point your phone, and Momenzo helps you record a polished version of yourself talking about a listing, a neighborhood, or this week's market. Teleprompter, framing guides, AI subtitles, branding — all of it scaffolds the moment when you're in front of the camera.
Dunphy's unit of work is the listing. You upload the eight to twelve photos you already have, and Dunphy generates three videos: a Spotlight for the listing card, a Highlight Reel for social, a Cinematic Tour for the listing page. You never appear on camera.
Think of it like cooking shows. Momenzo is the chef-on-camera format — you, in your apron, walking the audience through the dish. Dunphy is the recipe-book format — the food photographs that get a buyer to flip the page. Both produce content. Neither replaces the other.
At a glance
Side by side
| Dimension | Dunphy | Momenzo |
|---|---|---|
| Primary input | Listing photos | You, recording yourself |
| Camera-on-camera required? | No | Yes — you're the talent |
| Output formats | Three (Spotlight / Highlight Reel / Cinematic Tour) tied to use-sites | Single recorded video, length flexible |
| Branding | Capsule auto-applied to every video | Logo + colors, per-video configurable |
| Per-video cost | 1–4 credits | Included in subscription |
| Pricing model | Credit packs | Monthly / annual subscription |
| Pricing (typical) | ~$15 for a three-format kit per listing | Roughly $14–20/month at annual rate |
| Best for | Agents whose bottleneck is time and decisions | Agents whose bottleneck is feeling confident on camera |
| Worst for | Agents who want creative control of the cut | Agents who don't want to film themselves |
When to pick which
Which tool fits the week you're actually having
When
Weekly cadence of market updates, agent tips, or neighborhood deep-dives
Use
Momenzo
The teleprompter and framing guides shorten the path from idea to shipped agent-led video
When
Every new listing needs Day-0 marketing across multiple surfaces
Use
Dunphy
Three formats from the same photo upload — listing card, Reels, listing page — in three minutes
When
You want to be on camera as part of your brand
Use
Momenzo
Tooling is built around the assumption that you are the talent
When
You'd rather the listing photos do the storytelling than your face
Use
Dunphy
Workflow assumes the property is the protagonist
When
You want both: agent-led content AND listing-led content
Use
Both
Different units of production; the surfaces don't overlap
Where Momenzo is genuinely good
This is the integrity section. Three things Momenzo does better than Dunphy, no caveats.
It's built for agents who want to be the protagonist. The teleprompter, framing guides, and AI-subtitle workflow are real time-savers if your weekly content includes a recurring on-camera segment. Per Momenzo's own positioning, the promise is "create real estate videos in 5 min" — and for the agent-led format it's calibrated for, that's accurate. If your brand is "the agent who shows up on Reels weekly with a market update," it's the right tool.

Established workflow polish. Momenzo has been in the realtor-video space for years. Capterra-style peer reviews of agent-video tools (Capterra's video editing directory covers the broader category) consistently note that workflow polish, the kind that only comes from iteration with actual agents, is one of the highest signals of a tool that fits real practice. Momenzo has that signal. Dunphy is newer.

Single subscription, predictable cost for the agent-led case. If you're shooting weekly content, paying once for the month beats paying per video. Momenzo's annual rate works out to roughly $14/month for unlimited videos — a clear win on volume of agent-led recordings.
Where Dunphy is built differently
No camera, no script, no setup. Dunphy takes the photos that already exist from the listing shoot and turns them into video. No teleprompter to read from, no good-hair-day to wait for, no quiet room to record in. The unit of work is the listing, not the agent's appearance.
Three formats tied to three buyer moments. Spotlight goes on the listing card where buyers are scrolling. Highlight Reel goes on the social scroll where buyers are in entertainment mode. Cinematic Tour goes on the listing page where buyers are leaning in. You don't pick a length — you pick where the video lives, and the format follows. Most listings use two or three formats together, generated from the same photo upload.
Brand-protection by default. Your capsule (name, phone, optional handle, optional logo) is set up once and auto-applied to every video forever. There's no "did I remember to add my logo to this one?" friction across a year of listings.
Consistency across every listing. Every listing gets the same quality video. There's no "the agent had a cold that week" variance — the photos do the work.
A pattern worth noticing
What if you used both?
They complement each other cleanly
Momenzo for the agent-led content: weekly market updates, neighborhood walking tours, listing intros where your face is the hook. Dunphy for the listing-led content: every new property gets the three-format treatment automatically. Different units of production, different surfaces, no overlap. This is probably the right answer for a meaningful share of working agents.
Where each one is the wrong tool
Where neither of us is the right answer
- Luxury listings ($1M+) with drone footage and bespoke walkthroughs. Hire the videographer. Both Momenzo and Dunphy cover the everyday case; the flagship listing case wants a human shoot.
- Agents who want to edit the cut on a timeline. Neither tool does timeline editing — Momenzo records, Dunphy generates. If you want to slice clips, swap audio tracks, or arrange transitions yourself, CapCut or Adobe Premiere are the right tools.
- Agents who do less than 5 listings a year and don't shoot weekly content. The fixed cost of either subscription doesn't pay back at that volume. Order a one-off on Fiverr for that single hero listing of the year and skip the monthly.
FAQ
Is Dunphy cheaper than Momenzo?
Depends on what you're producing. On a per-video basis Dunphy is cheaper, but per-video isn't the right unit. A typical agent shipping 1–2 listings a month at three formats each runs 6–12 credits — well under Momenzo's monthly subscription. If you're also doing weekly agent-led content, Momenzo's flat-rate flips the math.
Does Dunphy require me to be on camera?
Never. Photos are the input. Your face never appears unless you explicitly upload a photo of yourself.
Can I use both?
Yes. Most likely the right answer if you're a busy agent shipping multiple content shapes.
What about creative control?
Momenzo gives you control over the script, the take, and the framing. Dunphy gives you control over which photos to include and which format to generate. Neither lets you edit a timeline. CapCut or Premiere for that.
Where do I read independent reviews?
Capterra's video-editing directory and G2's video-editing category both have peer-review breakdowns of agent-video tools and general video editors. The r/realtors subreddit also has recurring threads where working agents share what they actually use week to week.
Further reading
Capterra
Video Editing Software directory
Directory of video-editing tools with verified user reviews and feature breakdowns.
G2
Video Editing Software category
Aggregated peer reviews and feature comparisons across video-editing tools.
TrustRadius
Video Editing Software category
Long-form verified reviews of video-editing platforms across industries.
Reddit
r/realtors
Community discussion of agent-side tools, workflows, and brokerage policies.
Inman
Inman News
Industry trade publication covering brokerage policy, agent technology, and market shifts.
The AI video agent for real estate. Photos in, the right creatives out — for every surface buyers use. No videographer, no teleprompter, no good-hair-day.