Free tool

Neighborhood Highlights

Five real, distance-grounded amenities buyers actually care about.

We'll pull real nearby places — grocery, schools, parks, transit, food — and write them up.

Common questions

How do you know what's near the property?
We use Google Places — the same data behind Google Maps. When you submit an address, we pull real places nearby in five buyer-relevant categories: grocery, schools, parks, transit, food. The distances are straight-line measurements (not driving routes), so they're approximate but in the right ballpark.
Will the AI invent amenities to fill space?
No. The amenity names, categories, and distances come directly from Google Places. The AI only writes the one-line description of each. If we don't find a grocery store within walking distance, we don't pretend there is one. This is one of Dunphy's hard rules — no fabricated facts.
What features matter most to home buyers?
It depends on the buyer, but the consistent themes are: how close is grocery, are there good schools and parks for kids, can I get to a transit option without a car, and what's the food/coffee scene like. The order matters: a buyer with kids weights schools heavily; a young professional weights transit + food. We give you all five categories so you can pick the angle for the buyer in front of you.
Why these five categories?
Grocery, schools, parks, transit, food — these are the categories buyers ask about in the first 90 seconds of a showing. They cover the day-to-day shape of life in the neighborhood. We deliberately don't include things like "luxury car dealerships" or "hospitals" — they don't move offers.
Can I use this for the listing description or just talking points?
Both. The blurbs are short enough to drop into the "neighborhood" paragraph of a listing description. Or print them as talking points for an open house — when a buyer asks "what's nearby?" you have specific answers, not handwaves.
Is this tool free?
Yes. No sign-up. The pull from Google Places and the AI write-up are on us.