Free tool
Neighborhood Highlights
Five real, distance-grounded amenities buyers actually care about.
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.