PARKERA single number for the condition of a home.
No one buys a used car without its history report. The home — the largest purchase most families ever make — has never had one. The HomeVerify Score is that record: a documented history of the home's condition, scored by a published model.
A one-time inspection is a snapshot.
One stranger walks the house for a few hours, on one day. The report arrives by email, is read once, and is never seen again. Whatever the last inspector flagged — and the last owner never fixed — is invisible to the next one.
The way it works today
- One visit, one afternoon, one opinion
- The report is emailed, then lost
- Previous inspections are invisible to you
- Flagged issues vanish when the home changes hands
- Condition is a guess dressed up as a disclosure
With HomeVerify
- A baseline inspection, then quarterly reviews
- Every finding retained in one permanent history
- Issues stay open until the repair is verified
- The history transfers with the home
- Condition is a number with evidence behind it
The score is earned over a year — not granted in an afternoon.
A HomeVerify Score is a number from 0 to 100, computed by software from documented evidence: component conditions, classified findings, measurements, time-and-location-stamped photographs, and verified maintenance. People gather the evidence. The model does the scoring.
Baseline inspection
A deep, component-by-component documentation of the home as it stands — the score's foundation, and the moment its history begins.
Quarterly reviews
Four inspections a year track what changed: what improved, what deteriorated, what needs attention before it becomes expensive.
Verified maintenance
Work on the home — Parker's or any licensed professional's — is documented and folded into the record. Cared-for homes score like it.
The score compounds
Every event lands in an append-only ledger that cannot be quietly edited. The longer the history, the more the number means.
A first reading of the home.
Computed from the baseline inspection alone. Available to any home — including a home being prepared for sale — without ongoing membership. Clearly marked as preliminary, because a single visit is still a snapshot.
The score with a year behind it.
Earned after the baseline inspection, four quarterly reviews, and a full year of documented care — with enough evidence that the model's confidence clears its published threshold. This is the number a buyer can trust.
A score you can interrogate.
The score is computed by the model, never assigned by a person. Nobody at Parker can hand-set a number.
Safety comes first: some findings cap the score outright. An active roof leak holds the home at 75 or below until the repair is verified — no renovated kitchen offsets it.
The model discounts what it hasn't seen. Thin evidence lowers confidence, and low confidence lowers the score.
Verified work by any licensed professional counts — not only Parker's. The score measures the home, not the vendor.
Every input lives in an append-only record. History can be added to; it cannot be rewritten.
Florida-first weighting · Model v0.1
The HomeVerify Score is a private condition certification computed from documented evidence under Parker's published methodology. It is not an appraisal, and it is not a substitute for a licensed pre-purchase home inspection.
The situations this exists for.
Two listings, same price.
One has a Certified 88 and three years of documented care. The other has fresh paint and a one-page disclosure. Every June, a family moves into the second kind of house — and every July, one of them replaces an air conditioner that was never once serviced. A history would have said so before the offer, not after the closing.
Listing at a 72.
The score arrives with its reasons: which components pulled it down, which repairs return the most, what each fix is worth to the number before you spend a dollar. Handle the short list, have the work verified, and walk into the market with evidence instead of adjectives.
The storm, the claim, the plan.
A documented condition history means a storm assessment has a before to compare against — evidence an insurer can work with. And because the record tracks every system's age, the score comes with a replacement outlook: the roof, the AC, the water heater, planned on a calendar instead of arriving as emergencies.
One link shows a buyer everything that matters — and nothing that doesn't.
The score and its component breakdown, the score's history over time, the record of care, and the age of every major system. No names, no photographs of the interior, no private details — and the owner can revoke the link at any time.
History · System ages
Selling? Begin with a Preliminary Score.
A single baseline inspection gives your listing a Preliminary HomeVerify Score: the number, the component breakdown, and a prioritized list of the improvements that raise it. No membership required. Scope and pricing are confirmed before we visit.
Available without ongoing membership
The history can only begin once.
Every year without a record is a year the home can't prove. The walkthrough is where the record starts.