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This website presents a “property price assessment” system designed for real estate agents in Israel. It clearly states that the output is a price assessment report intended to assist agents, not a legally recognized real estate valuation; statutory valuations must still be completed by a licensed appraiser. The system emphasizes that it “uses only real data,” with sources including data.gov.il, the Israel Tax Authority, the Election Committee, and GovMap, and does not display synthetic figures.
The tool is built around an agent’s workflow: first, users enter agent details, homeowner information, and property details, including city, street, parcel, area, property type, floor, year built, orientation, parking, balcony, ownership/registration status, and more. It then helps find similar properties, import transaction records or listing ads, and select comparable properties for inclusion in the final report. The price assessment is based on the selected comparable listings and common valuation formulas, with the option to call Claude AI to generate professional analysis in Hebrew. If the API is not enabled, a rule-based analysis method is also available.
The page does not disclose pricing for the system itself, but notes that external capabilities require users to bring their own API keys: Anthropic Claude AI is estimated at around $5-15/month; ScraperAPI costs $49/month with 1000 requests/day. Integrations are fairly extensive, including Anthropic API, ScraperAPI, data.gov.il, Tax Authority transaction data, GTFS public transit data, CSV/JSON/Excel imports, as well as Excel, HTML, print/PDF, email, and WhatsApp output.
Its strengths are a highly focused use case, comprehensive report fields, clear compliance disclaimers, and an emphasis on data authenticity. Agent profiles and API keys are stored on the local computer or in config.json and are not shared, which is friendly to smaller agencies. The drawbacks are also obvious: the system is deeply tied to the Israeli market and Hebrew-language environment, with no mention of Chinese support; external sites such as Yad2, Madlan, and Win-Win are affected by CORS and anti-scraping restrictions, requiring scripts or ScraperAPI; and there is limited information about the tool’s service support, deployment method, and payment options.
It is suitable for real estate agents serving the Israeli market who need to quickly produce client-readable price assessment reports, city comparisons, and historical archives. It is not suitable for users in China’s real estate market, nor can it replace a professional appraiser. Its accessibility from China cannot be determined from the text; even if accessible, differences in data sources, language, payment methods, and local property systems would limit its practical usefulness. Alternatives may include local real estate data platforms, traditional appraisal services, or self-built Excel/BI valuation models.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on thedanishcase.dk official site.
thedanishcase.dk is an Denmark Real Estate provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach thedanishcase.dk directly.