Understanding
PropCertainty™
PropCertainty™ tells you how confident you can be in your analysis. It's not a quality score — it's a data quality indicator.
A confidence indicator, not a property score
PropCertainty™ measures how much data we have to inform your report. It answers the question: “How confident should I be in this analysis?”
A high PropCertainty™ score means we have rich, verified data. A lower score means some data points are missing or less reliable — so you may want to do additional verification.
It's not telling you whether the property is good or bad. It's telling you how much we know about it.
PropCertainty™
Good data coverage — analysis is well-supported
What different scores mean
PropCertainty™ is scored from 0 to 100. Here's how to interpret it.
High Confidence
Rich data coverage. Analysis is well-supported by multiple verified sources.
Good Confidence
Solid data coverage. Analysis is reliable with some minor gaps.
Moderate Confidence
Some data gaps. Consider additional verification for key decisions.
Low Confidence
Limited data available. Treat analysis as preliminary; verify independently.
What affects PropCertainty™
Data availability
How much publicly available data exists for the property and suburb. New developments or rural areas often have less data.
Data recency
How recent the data is. Older data reduces confidence because market conditions change.
Source verification
Whether the data comes from verified sources like government records, or less reliable sources.
Low PropCertainty™ ≠ bad property
A property with a low PropCertainty™ score might be excellent — we just don't have enough data to say with confidence. Treat it as a signal to do more homework, not as a red flag.
See PropCertainty™
in your next report
Every intelliprop report includes PropCertainty™ so you know exactly how confident to be in the analysis.
Next steps
Continue with the full First Home Buyer Guide, check pricing, or get in touch.
PropCertainty™ is a proprietary data confidence indicator. It measures data coverage and quality, not property quality. Always conduct your own due diligence.