HomeIQ Reports Explained: Report, CMA, Gameplan & Outlook

Every Meydomo transaction runs on one intelligence engine called HomeIQ, and it produces four reports. They all read from the same data — which is the entire point. When the buyer and the seller look at the same number, the negotiation stops being a contest of opinions. Here is what each report does, in plain English.
What is the HomeIQ Report, and what does it cost?
The HomeIQ Report is an appraisal-grade valuation of a home. It is built from primary government records — 11 million Florida parcels and over 2 million qualified sales — not a commercial data vendor's estimate. A licensed Florida broker, Jose Martin (BK3177826), puts his name and license behind every number. That is the difference between a real valuation and an anonymous online guess that no one stands behind.
It costs $4.95 for a single report. You get the same data a licensed appraiser would use — without the $500 appraisal fee, the 10-day wait, or the lender as the gatekeeper. Get a HomeIQ Report →
Is a HomeIQ Report the same as an appraisal?
No — but it is built to appraisal and Fannie Mae standards. A traditional appraisal is ordered by a lender, performed by a licensed appraiser, and carries legal weight in a financing transaction. A HomeIQ Report is a Broker Price Opinion (BPO): a licensed broker applies the same comparable-sales methodology and puts their license behind the number. The data source and valuation discipline are equivalent; the legal standing in a financed transaction is different. For most sellers and buyers, the HomeIQ Report gives you everything you need to make a confident, defensible decision.
HomeIQ CMA: the appraisal-grade comparison underneath it
The CMA is the engine inside the Report — the comparable-sales analysis, done the way a licensed appraiser would do it, following Fannie Mae standards. (Fannie Mae is the government-chartered company behind most American home loans. Its valuation rules are strict on purpose: they keep homes from being valued too high or too low, which protects buyers, lenders, and ultimately taxpayers.)
Two parts of how we measure are proprietary and patent-pending, and both produce a more accurate number that is harder to argue with at the table: we judge condition from actual photos — yours and every comparable's — instead of guessing from a home's age on paper; and we measure location from your real lot lines, not a ZIP code or a dot on a map. A more accurate condition grade and a more precise distance produce a comp pool that reflects what your home actually is, not what the algorithm assumes.

HomeIQ Gameplan: what to fix, and what it's worth
The Gameplan is for sellers. It goes room by room and tells you what to fix, what to skip, and the dollar value of each decision — so you spend money on preparation only where it pays you back. It is included with QuickSell and Full Service Sell; it is not sold separately.
For example: a seller whose carpet is worn gets a line item showing replace carpet — estimated cost ~$1,800, estimated value added ~$4,000. A seller with dated kitchen hardware gets paint cabinets and replace hardware — cost ~$900, value ~$2,800. You see every decision as a return-on-investment, not a guess. See how the Gameplan works in a full sale →
HomeIQ Outlook: the same data, $4.95 on any property
The Outlook is the buyer's lens on the same intelligence — and it is $4.95 for a single property, or $49 for twelve, on any property, Meydomo-listed or not. You pull a HomeIQ Outlook and you get the same comps, same condition scores, same neighborhood data, same number the seller used to set the price. Both sides read the same document. There is nothing to argue about, because the data is the data.
A buyer who knows the defensible value of a home does not overpay, and does not lowball. They make a more accurate offer, and offers that reflect real value close faster. For less than a coffee, you stop negotiating blind. See the buyer portal →
One engine, both sides of the table
For thirty years the home transaction has run on an imbalance: the seller pays for information the buyer never sees. HomeIQ ends that. Same comps. Same methodology. Same number — on both sides of the table. That is the whole idea, and it is why we built four reports on one engine instead of four different stories.
FAQ
Do I need to be selling to get a HomeIQ Report?
No. Any Florida homeowner can get a HomeIQ Report for $4.95 — to know what their home is worth, to track their equity, or to prepare before they're ready to sell. Buyers can get a HomeIQ Outlook on any Florida property they're considering.
How is HomeIQ different from a Zillow Zestimate?
A Zestimate is an algorithm with no one behind it — Zillow publishes an accuracy disclaimer and the number changes constantly. A HomeIQ Report is a Broker Price Opinion: a licensed broker applies Fannie Mae comparable-sales methodology and puts their license behind the result. The data source is primary government records, not commercial aggregators.
How current is the data?
The comparable-sales database updates continuously from county and state government sources. HomeIQ pulls the most recent closed sales when generating your report, so the number reflects current market conditions in your neighborhood, not last quarter's aggregated national trend.
See it in motion: what selling with Meydomo looks like → and what buyers see that others can't →.
Prepared with HomeIQ, Meydomo's property-intelligence platform, and reviewed by a licensed broker. Meydomo Florida LLC · Jose Martin, Qualifying Broker, License BK3177826. General information, not individualized advice.
