Long reports can create panic.
PropWise helps turn the report into a more digestible set of findings so buyers can understand what matters, what needs evaluation, and what may be routine maintenance.
PropWise helps buyer’s agents organize findings, review repair cost context, and prepare cleaner post-inspection conversations without pretending to be a contractor, inspector, or attorney.
Buyer’s agents are often stuck translating technical findings, managing fear, gathering quotes, protecting contract timelines, and keeping the deal moving. PropWise gives that workflow more structure.
PropWise helps turn the report into a more digestible set of findings so buyers can understand what matters, what needs evaluation, and what may be routine maintenance.
Agents should not guess repair pricing. PropWise provides contextual estimate ranges to support better discussions while still making contractor quotes the final source of truth.
The way repair requests are framed can affect tone, trust, and negotiation momentum. PropWise helps agents prepare clearer, more organized language for the inspection response phase.
PropWise is designed around the work buyer’s agents actually do after the inspection report arrives.
Start with the inspection report and relevant contract context.
Findings are grouped into a more usable structure for review.
Look at severity, action type, repair context, and potential next steps.
Prepare cleaner buyer conversations and inspection response language.
Buyer’s agents do not need another generic AI summary. They need an inspection response workflow that respects professional boundaries.
PropWise is not a contractor quote, legal opinion, home inspection, appraisal, warranty, or repair guarantee. It helps agents organize information and communicate more clearly.
Request Beta AccessPropWise gives agents a cleaner framework for the inspection phase so buyers can make decisions with more context and less confusion.
No. PropWise can support multiple inspection workflows, but buyer’s agents are one of the clearest early use cases because they are often guiding clients through the inspection response under tight timelines.
PropWise helps prepare cleaner language and organize options, but the agent remains responsible for reviewing the output, applying local contract requirements, and using professional judgment.
No. Cost context is a starting point for conversation. Final pricing should come from qualified contractors and vendors who inspect the issue and provide a quote.
Yes. The goal is to make long inspection reports easier to discuss by organizing findings, highlighting practical priorities, and supporting a clearer next-step conversation.
Join the PropWise Beta and help test a cleaner way to move from inspection report to buyer conversation.