Also analyzed in: 1 other industry
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
19
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
77
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Idealista without web search.

LLM Authority?
8
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
8
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Idealista from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
77/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.68
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.74
Top associations for Idealista
strong brand recognition in Spain 3 lots of listings 3 better user experience 2 real-estate professionals 2 strong presence in Southern Europe 2 large listing marketplace 2 easy-to-use search and filtering 2 strong brand recognition 2 slow agent responses 2 outdated or inaccurate listings 2 real estate marketplace 2 major online real estate marketplace 2 especially in Spain 2 huge property inventory 2 private users 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
easy search and comparison 2 direct contact with advertisers 2 contact sellers directly 2 jobs classifieds platform 1 generic online listings platform 1 one place to search 1 aggregates property listings 1 easy listing comparison 1 one place for classifieds 1 contact agents directly 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Idealista is firmly in the model's "national listing portal" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Idealista known for?

Idealista is best known as a real estate marketplace and property listings platform, especially in Spain, Italy, and Portugal.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Idealista known for?

Idealista is best known as a leading online real estate marketplace in Spain, Italy, and Portugal, where people search for homes to buy, rent, or sell.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
8/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best national listing portals for first-time home buyers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which home listing websites are best for searching by school district? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best property portals for relocating to a new state? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which national listing portals are best for apartment hunters? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best real estate marketplaces for luxury homes nationwide? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which listing sites are best for finding open houses across the U.S.? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best home search websites for investors looking for rental properties? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which national property portals are best for new construction homes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best listing portals for suburban home searches? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which websites are best for finding foreclosed homes nationwide? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best real estate portals for rental listings and leases? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which national listing portals are best for mobile home buyers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best property marketplaces for filtering by price and commute time? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which home listing websites are best for virtual tours? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best national real estate portals for finding homes with acreage? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which listing platforms are best for searching co-ops and condos? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best real estate search sites for out-of-state buyers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which property portals are best for finding pet-friendly rentals nationwide? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best national listing portals for vacation homes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which websites are best for browsing all residential listings in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to the biggest national listing portal? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which national real estate portals are better for buyers than the leading marketplace? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for searching homes nationwide online? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which property listing websites compete with the largest home search site? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a big national apartment listing site? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which home marketplaces are best if I want more listings than a major portal? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for nationwide rental searches? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which real estate websites are better than the top listing portal for filters? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for finding off-market homes online? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which national property portals are best if I want a cleaner search experience? #5 not mentioned
problem How do I find all homes for sale in a city on a national listing portal? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I search for houses within my budget on a property marketplace? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I filter home listings by number of bedrooms and bathrooms? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find newly listed homes before they sell? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I look for homes with photos and virtual tours online? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I find listings near a specific school or neighborhood? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I search for rentals that allow pets? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find homes with price drops on listing sites? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I search for properties in another state from where I live? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find all open houses near me? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are national listing portals free to use? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do home listing websites charge buyers any fees? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cost to advertise a home on a national listing portal? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does it cost to list a property on a real estate portal? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do national property portals have free listings for agents? #8 not mentioned
transactional What is the pricing for premium listing placement on property websites? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there any free national listing portals for home searches? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does a featured home listing cost online? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the best value national listing portals for agents? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do property marketplaces offer paid ads for real estate listings? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: Which national property portals are best if I want a cleaner search experience? · comparison · recall mode

If you want a cleaner, less cluttered search experience, these are usually the best bets:

  • Redfin (US) — clean UI, fast map search, fewer distractions.
  • OnTheMarket (UK) — simpler than Rightmove/Zoopla, generally less busy.
  • Domain (Australia) — polished, straightforward filtering.
  • ImmoScout24 (Germany) — strong filters, fairly organized.
  • Idealista (Spain/Portugal/Italy) — good search tools, though can feel ad-heavy.

If you’re in the UK, I’d try OnTheMarket first, then Rightmove if you want the biggest inventory.

If you tell me your country, I can name the single best portal for that market.

Prompt: Do national property portals have free listings for agents? · transactional · recall mode

Sometimes — but often only in a limited way.

Examples:

  • Zillow / Realtor.com: usually not true free agent “full listings” in the same way as paid MLS-based tools.
  • Rightmove / Zoopla (UK): typically require agency subscriptions.
  • realestate.com.au / Domain: usually paid for agent listings.
  • ImmobilienScout24 / idealista: commonly paid or freemium, depending on country and package.

So the short answer: yes, some portals have free or trial listings for agents, but most national portals charge for regular agent advertising.

If you tell me your country, I can name the exact portals and which ones are free.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
8/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best national listing portals for finding homes across the U.S.? 0 0/5
Which national listing portal is most popular for home buyers? 0 0/5
What are the top national real estate listing websites? 20 0/5
What are the most recommended property listing portals nationwide? 0 0/5
Which online listing portals show homes for sale all over the country? 0 0/5
What are the best websites for searching residential listings nationwide? 0 0/5
Which property marketplaces are best for house hunting nationwide? 0 0/5
What are the leading home search portals in the U.S.? 0 0/5
Which national real estate marketplaces are worth using? 0 0/5
What are the most popular sites for browsing homes for sale? 0 0/5
What are the best real estate portals for buyers and renters nationwide? 0 0/5
Which listing sites have the most homes across the country? 0 0/5
What are the top home listing platforms for the whole U.S.? 0 0/5
Which websites are best for nationwide apartment and house listings? 0 0/5
What are the best online portals to search residential properties nationally? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

Also analyzed in Idealista in 1 other industry

This page covers Idealista in National Listing Portals. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for the matching report.

What to do next Recommendations for Idealista

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 4:23 AM

All 210 AI responses for Idealista

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Idealista known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best known as a real estate marketplace and property listings platform, especially in Spain, Italy, and Portugal.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best known as a leading online real estate marketplace in Spain, Italy, and Portugal, where people search for homes to buy, rent, or sell.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best known as a major online real estate marketplace, especially in Spain, where people use it to buy, sell, and rent homes and other properties.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best known as a real estate marketplace in Spain and other parts of Southern Europe, used for buying, selling, and renting homes and commercial properties.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is known as a major online real estate marketplace, especially in Spain, where people search for and list homes, apartments, and commercial properties for sale or rent.

What are Idealista's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in Spain and parts of Southern Europe, large property inventory, high user traffic, and effective search/filter tools that make it a go-to marketplace for buyers, renters, and real estate agents. It also benefits from network effects: the more listings it has, the more attractive it becomes to users and professionals.

Its main weaknesses are dependence on the real-estate cycle and housing-market conditions, competition from other property portals, and some user frustration around listing quality, duplicated or outdated ads, and lead-generation practices. It can also be seen as more focused on marketplace visibility than on solving the deeper pain points of housing affordability and transaction complexity.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in Spain and Southern Europe, very large property inventory, easy-to-use search/filter experience, and high traffic that gives listings good visibility. It’s also known for being a strong lead-generation platform for agents and private sellers.

Its main weaknesses are heavy dependence on the Spanish real-estate market, frequent competition from other portals, and occasional concerns about duplicate, outdated, or low-quality listings. Some users also view its pay-to-promote model as costly, especially for professional advertisers.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in Spain and parts of Southern Europe, huge property inventory, very active user base, and easy-to-use search tools for buyers, renters, and agents. It’s also well known for good market coverage and frequent listing updates.

Main weaknesses: listings can sometimes be duplicated, outdated, or inaccurate because many are posted by third parties. Some users also find the platform heavily oriented toward paid listings and lead-generation for agencies, which can make it less transparent. Competition from other portals and price sensitivity in the housing market can also limit its advantage.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista’s main strengths are its very strong brand recognition in Spain and Southern Europe, huge property inventory, easy-to-use search and filtering, and strong network effects for both buyers/renters and agents. It’s also known for good local market coverage and useful market data/tools.

Main weaknesses: it is heavily dependent on the real-estate market cycle, can be crowded and competitive for sellers/agents, and users may face duplicate or low-quality listings in some markets. It also has limited diversification beyond property listings and related services, so growth depends a lot on the housing market.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in Spain and Southern Europe, very large inventory of property listings, easy-to-use search and filtering, and good visibility for both buyers/renters and real-estate professionals. It’s also known for strong market coverage and useful price/market insights.

Its weaknesses are typical of large property portals: listing quality can be uneven, some ads may be outdated or duplicated, and users can face competition from many similar properties or slow responses from agents. In some markets it is also less dominant than local competitors, and its experience depends heavily on the quality of the individual seller or agency.

Who should use Idealista? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best for people buying, selling, or renting homes in Spain, Italy, and Portugal—especially private users and real-estate professionals who want lots of listings and local market coverage. It’s also useful for comparing prices and tracking property trends.

Who should avoid it: people looking for a single global real-estate platform, users outside its main markets, or anyone wanting a very curated, boutique inventory. It may also be less ideal if you want a heavily guided, concierge-style property search.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best for people in Spain, Portugal, and Italy who want to buy, sell, or rent homes, or for landlords and agents listing properties. It’s also useful for house hunters who want lots of listings and market data.

You may want to avoid it if you’re looking for a global property platform, need a very local-only niche service outside its main markets, or prefer a fully managed rental/buying service rather than browsing listings yourself.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best for people looking to buy, rent, or sell property in Spain, Portugal, or Italy, especially if they want lots of listings and an easy search experience.

Use it if you are:

  • A homebuyer or renter in those markets
  • A landlord, agent, or seller wanting broad exposure
  • Someone comparing neighborhoods, prices, or property types

Avoid it if you are:

  • Looking for property outside its main countries
  • Wanting a niche luxury/off-market-only service
  • Need a fully managed, hands-on agency instead of a listing platform
  • Not comfortable dealing directly with landlords or agents, since many listings are from third parties
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best for people buying, selling, or renting property in Spain, Portugal, and Italy—especially private users, tenants, landlords, and real-estate professionals who want a large listing marketplace. It’s also useful for anyone comparing neighborhoods, prices, and market trends.

People who may want to avoid it: users looking for a niche local-only app, those outside its main markets, or anyone needing a fully managed property service rather than a listings platform. If you want guaranteed verification of every listing, it may also not be ideal, since you still need to do your own due diligence.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is best for people looking to buy, rent, or sell property in Spain, Portugal, or Italy—especially private users and real-estate professionals who want a large listing marketplace. It’s less suitable for people outside those markets, or for anyone who needs a full-service real-estate agent rather than a search/listing platform.

How does Idealista compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is generally seen as one of the strongest real-estate marketplaces in Spain and also a major player in Italy and Portugal. Compared with its main competitors, it tends to stand out for:

  • Scale and traffic: usually among the highest-reach portals, which means more listings and more buyer/renter demand.
  • Brand strength: very well known by consumers and agents, especially in Spain.
  • Product quality: often regarded as having a cleaner, more user-friendly interface and strong search/filter tools.
  • Lead generation for professionals: popular with agencies because it can deliver strong inquiry volume.

Against competitors:

  • Fotocasa: probably the closest rival in Spain. Fotocasa is also very large and widely used, but Idealista is often perceived as the market leader on traffic and consumer preference.
  • Pisos.com: solid and established, but typically smaller in scale and visibility than Idealista.
  • Habitaclia: strong in certain regions, especially Catalonia, but more regional than national.
  • Milanuncios/other classifieds: broader marketplaces can offer cheaper listings, but usually with less specialization and weaker real-estate experience.
  • In Italy/Portugal, local portals compete more directly, but Idealista is often among the top names because of its cross-border presence and strong product.

Overall: Idealista is usually considered the premium, category-leading portal, while many competitors compete more on price, regional strength, or alternative inventory sources.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is generally seen as the leading real-estate marketplace in Spain and one of the strongest in Portugal and Italy. Compared with its main competitors, it usually stands out for:

  • Reach and inventory: very large listing volume and strong brand recognition, especially in Spain.
  • User experience: clean search filters, good map search, and solid app/web usability.
  • Lead generation: effective tools for agents and high consumer traffic.

Main competitors include Fotocasa, pisos.com, Habitaclia, Milanuncios, and in some markets local portals. Against them:

  • vs Fotocasa: Idealista often has stronger traffic, broader market perception, and a more polished product; Fotocasa can still be very competitive in certain regions and with some agent audiences.
  • vs pisos.com / Habitaclia: these can be useful and locally strong, but Idealista is usually bigger and more dominant nationally.
  • vs classifieds sites like Milanuncios: Idealista is more specialized and typically better for serious property searches; classifieds are broader but less focused.

Overall, Idealista is usually considered the benchmark portal, with competitors mainly challenging it on niche strength, local presence, or pricing for professionals rather than overall scale.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is generally seen as one of the strongest real-estate marketplaces in Spain, and also a major player in Italy and Portugal. Compared with its main competitors:

  • vs Fotocasa: Idealista is often perceived as more premium and stronger in brand recognition, user experience, and listing quality. Fotocasa is also very large and competitive, with strong local reach.
  • vs Pisos.com: Idealista usually has greater traffic, more listings, and stronger market leadership. Pisos.com is smaller but can be useful in some local searches.
  • vs Milanuncios / general classifieds: Idealista is more specialized in property, so it tends to offer better search tools, filters, and a more serious real-estate audience.
  • vs local agency sites: Idealista usually wins on scale and discovery, while agency sites may have exclusive listings.

Overall, Idealista’s main advantages are scale, brand trust, and a polished search experience. Its main downside is that premium visibility for advertisers can be expensive, and some listings may overlap with other portals.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is generally seen as one of the strongest real-estate marketplaces in Southern Europe, especially in Spain, Italy, and Portugal. Compared with its main competitors, it usually stands out for:

  • Strong brand recognition and traffic, especially in Spain
  • A very large listings inventory
  • A cleaner, more user-friendly product experience than many local portals
  • Better tools for search, alerts, valuation, and analytics than some rivals

Main competitors vary by country:

  • Spain: Fotocasa, Pisos.com, Habitaclia
  • Italy: Immobiliare.it, Casa.it
  • Portugal: Imovirtual, Casa Sapo

Typical comparison:

  • vs Fotocasa: Idealista is often perceived as the market leader in Spain with broader reach and stronger traffic; Fotocasa is a close rival and can be strong in certain segments.
  • vs Immobiliare.it: In Italy, Immobiliare.it is usually the closest peer; both are major players, with Idealista often competing well on UX and brand, while Immobiliare.it is very strong locally.
  • vs smaller portals: Idealista usually has better scale, liquidity, and advertiser appeal.

Overall: Idealista is usually positioned as the premium, high-traffic portal with strong product quality, while competitors may compete on niche focus, local depth, or pricing.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Idealista is generally seen as the leading real-estate portal in Spain and one of the strongest in Italy and Portugal. Compared with its main competitors:

  • Fotocasa: the closest rival in Spain. Fotocasa is also very large, but Idealista is often considered stronger for user experience, search quality, and brand perception.
  • Habitaclia: strong in Catalonia and some regional markets, but smaller nationally.
  • Pisos.com: a solid competitor with good inventory, but usually behind Idealista and Fotocasa in traffic and reach.
  • Milanuncios / general classifieds: broader, less specialized, and typically weaker for serious property search.
  • Rightmove/Zoopla (UK) or SeLoger (France): Idealista is comparable in model and market position, but it is the dominant player in its core Iberian markets.

Overall: Idealista tends to stand out for market leadership, cleaner product, and strong traffic; competitors may compete on regional strength, pricing, or specific audience segments.

What do people typically complain about with Idealista?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about Idealista’s high ad volume and intrusive listings, occasional duplicate or outdated property ads, and the difficulty of getting timely responses from agents. Some also mention limited moderation of scams or misleading listings, plus frustration with search filters not always matching real availability.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Idealista has a lot of fake, outdated, or duplicate listings, especially in high-demand areas. Others mention slow responses from agents or landlords, limited customer support, and that the platform can feel crowded with listings that are already rented or sold. Some also say pricing or search filters aren’t always accurate.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Idealista has a lot of duplicate, outdated, or even fake/scam listings; many ads are posted by agents or landlords who don’t respond; search filters and map results can be inconsistent; and the app/site can feel cluttered or push paid promotions too much. Some also criticize customer support and the amount of noise from agencies versus private owners.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Idealista listings can be outdated or inaccurate, with properties already rented/sold or prices/details not matching reality. Other common complaints are slow or unhelpful responses from agents, too many duplicate ads, aggressive lead generation/sales calls, and occasional issues with scam or low-quality listings.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Idealista being dominated by fake or outdated listings, agents not replying, price changes after contact, lots of duplicate ads, and search filters that can feel a bit inaccurate or limited. Some also criticize the heavy presence of agencies over private landlords and occasional issues with customer support or moderation.

What is a typical national listing portal known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical national listing portal is known for aggregating property, rental, or local service listings in one place, making it easy to search, compare, and contact advertisers across a whole country.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical national listing portal is known for aggregating ads from across the country in one place—most commonly property listings, jobs, cars, or other classifieds—making it easier for users to search, compare, and contact sellers or agents.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical national listing portal is known for aggregating property or item listings in one place, making it easy for users to search, compare, and contact sellers, agents, or landlords across a wide area.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical national listing portal is known for aggregating property, job, or other classified listings from across the country, making it easy for users to search, compare, and contact advertisers in one place.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A national listing portal is typically known for aggregating listings across a whole country—such as jobs, homes, cars, or services—and making them easy to search, compare, and contact through one platform.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best national listing portals for first-time home buyers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For first-time home buyers, the best national listing portals are:

  • Realtor.com — usually the most reliable for fresh MLS listings and detailed search filters.
  • Zillow — best overall for ease of use, estimated payments, and broad inventory.
  • Redfin — great for map-based search, fast updates, and agent-backed insights.
  • Homes.com — clean interface and helpful neighborhood/home details.
  • Trulia — strong for neighborhood info, schools, and lifestyle data.

If you want the best combo for a first purchase, start with:

  1. Realtor.com
  2. Zillow
  3. Redfin

They cover most listings nationally and are easiest for comparing homes, prices, and commute/neighborhood factors.

retrieval Not mentioned

For first-time home buyers, the best national listing portals are usually:

  1. Realtor.com — best for broad MLS coverage and collaboration. It’s the official site of the National Association of Realtors and says it displays listings from 800+ MLSs nationwide. (mediaroom.realtor.com)
  2. Zillow — best all-around for search plus buyer education. Zillow offers buyer guidance and a first-time home buyer checklist, plus easy agent connection. (zillow.com)
  3. Redfin — best if you want search-to-close help with agent support. Redfin describes itself as an integrated homeownership platform from search to close, and it offers buying support/agent help. (redfin.com)
  4. Homes.com — best for neighborhood and school research. Homes.com highlights neighborhood, school, tax-history, and market insights, plus large search inventory. (homes.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Realtor.com
  • Best for first-timers who want guidance: Zillow
  • Best for hands-on help: Redfin
  • Best for research: Homes.com (mediaroom.realtor.com)

If you want, I can also rank them by lowest-friction mobile app, best filters, or best for starter homes under a certain budget.

Which home listing websites are best for searching by school district? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best options for searching by school district:

  1. Zillow
    • Best-known school filter and school boundary info.
    • Good for drawing a search area and comparing nearby schools.
    • Use the Zillow app/site and check the “Schools” section on each listing.
  2. Realtor.com
    • Strong school data and often more consistent listing info.
    • Helpful if you want to filter by school ratings and attendance zones.
  3. Redfin
    • Clean school boundary maps and easy neighborhood search.
    • Great if you want to cross-check homes within a district.
  4. Homes.com
    • Has school and district filters, improving a lot recently.
    • Nice for broad browsing.
  5. Trulia
    • Good school info and neighborhood details.
    • Useful as a secondary check, not usually my first pick.

Best combo: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin That gives you the best chance of finding homes inside a specific district and verifying it.

Quick tip: school boundaries can change, so always confirm with the local school district website before you buy.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best options:

  1. Redfin — strong for school district pages and school-specific home searches. (redfin.com)
  2. Zillow — has dedicated district pages like “Homes for Sale in [School District],” so it’s very easy to browse by district. (zillow.com)
  3. Realtor.com — supports searching by school name, and their school search is designed to show homes within district boundaries or nearby. (realtor.com)
  4. Homes.com — also has school-district and school-area listing pages. (homes.com)

My pick:

  • Best overall: Zillow
  • Best for school-boundary browsing: Redfin
  • Best if you want to search by a specific school name: Realtor.com

One caveat: school boundaries can change, so always verify with the local school district before buying. This is especially important because listing sites may not always match the district’s official boundary map.

What are the best property portals for relocating to a new state? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For relocating to a new state, the best portals are:

  • Zillow — best all-around for house hunting, filters, map search, school info, and commute estimates.
  • Realtor.com — often the most accurate/updated listings since it’s tightly tied to MLS data.
  • Redfin — great search tools, fast updates, and useful neighborhood info.
  • Homes.com — clean interface and solid for comparing areas and listings.
  • Trulia — especially good for neighborhood insights, crime, schools, and lifestyle data.
  • Apartments.com — best if you’re renting first or want short-term/flex options.
  • HotPads — useful for rentals in metro areas.

Best combo:

  • Zillow + Realtor.com for the broadest search
  • Redfin for active house-shopping
  • Trulia for neighborhood research

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by buying vs renting, or by specific state.

retrieval Not mentioned

For relocating to a new state, I’d start with these:

  • Zillow — best all-around for buying + renting; strong filters, map search, and nationwide coverage. (zillow.com)
  • Realtor.com — great for state-by-state browsing and local info like schools and neighborhood details. (realtor.com)
  • Redfin — best if you want fast alerts, easy tour scheduling, and rentals + homes in one place. (redfin.com)
  • Apartments.com — strongest for apartment rentals, with over 1 million rental listings and tools for applying online. (apartments.com)

My quick pick:

  • Buying a house: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin. (zillow.com)
  • Renting an apartment: Apartments.com + Zillow. (apartments.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best portal by move type (family, luxury, cheap rent, new construction, or remote job commute).

Which national listing portals are best for apartment hunters? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you’re in the U.S., the best national apartment listing portals are:

  • Zillow Rentals — biggest all-around inventory, strong filters
  • Apartments.com — great for verified listings and detailed building info
  • Zumper — fast-moving rentals, good map search
  • Realtor.com Rentals — solid national coverage, often refreshed
  • HotPads — especially good for neighborhood-focused searching
  • Trulia Rentals — useful for commute, crime, and local-area context

Best overall: Apartments.com + Zillow Rentals Best for neighborhood research: HotPads / Trulia Best for broad coverage: Zillow Rentals / Realtor.com

If you tell me your country/city, I can list the best portals there specifically.

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For national apartment hunting in the U.S., my short list is:

  • Apartments.com — best overall for apartment communities and professionally managed inventory; it says it’s the nation’s premier multifamily listing network and offers over 1,000,000 available units. (apartments.com)
  • Zillow Rentals — best for broad reach and mixed inventory (apartments + houses + condos); Zillow shows about 1.53M U.S. rentals and its rentals network includes Zillow, Trulia, HotPads, and Realtor.com for multifamily. (zillow.com)
  • Realtor.com Rentals — best if you want another large national portal with a strong rental section; Realtor.com advertises millions of monthly rental visitors and has nationwide apartment listings. (realtor.com)
  • HotPads — best for map-first, urban apartment searches; it’s explicitly built as a map-based rental search platform across the U.S. (hotpads.com)
  • Apartment List — best if you want a more guided, match-style search experience; it shows millions of apartments across the U.S. and emphasizes renter matching. (apartmentlist.com)

If you only want 2 sites: start with Apartments.com and Zillow Rentals. (apartments.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by best for big cities, cheapest rentals, pet-friendly search, or avoiding scams.

What are the best real estate marketplaces for luxury homes nationwide? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best nationwide luxury-home marketplaces:

  1. Sotheby’s International Realty
    • Best overall for high-end listings, global reach, and polished presentation.
    • Strong for $1M+ homes, estates, and second homes.
  2. Mansion Global
    • Best pure luxury portal/editorial brand.
    • Great for trophy properties, waterfront, penthouses, and $2M+ homes.
  3. Christie’s International Real Estate
    • Excellent for ultra-luxury and distinctive properties.
    • Strong network of elite brokerages nationwide.
  4. Luxury Portfolio International
    • One of the best aggregators for upscale homes.
    • Good if you want broad national coverage from many top brokerages.
  5. Coldwell Banker Global Luxury
    • Very strong in U.S. luxury inventory and agent network.
    • Good balance of reach, search tools, and listing volume.
  6. Zillow
    • Best for sheer inventory and search convenience.
    • Not luxury-only, but has the widest national coverage.
  7. Realtor.com
    • Strong nationwide coverage and solid filters for high-end homes.
    • Good secondary marketplace for comparing listings.

Best picks by use case

  • Most luxury-focused: Mansion Global
  • Best overall network: Sotheby’s International Realty
  • Best for ultra-luxury: Christie’s International Real Estate
  • Best for broad inventory: Zillow

If you want, I can also rank the best sites for mansions over $5M, beachfront luxury, or luxury new construction.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want the strongest nationwide luxury-home marketplaces in the U.S., I’d start with these:

  1. Mansion Global — best for the broadest searchable luxury inventory and strong editorial coverage; it has a dedicated U.S. luxury search page and huge listing volume. (mansionglobal.com)
  2. Sotheby’s International Realty — best for high-end branded listings and a deep U.S. broker network; its U.S. sitemap shows nationwide coverage. (sothebysrealty.com)
  3. Christie’s International Real Estate — best for trophy properties and international prestige; Christie’s says its network spans 48 countries and has roughly 14,000 listings globally. (luxurydefined.christiesrealestate.com)
  4. Forbes Global Properties — best for curated, media-forward luxury listings; Forbes describes it as an invitation-only consumer marketplace and network of top firms. (forbes.com)
  5. Luxury Portfolio International — best for a broad luxury broker network across the U.S.; its U.S. market page lists luxury homes in all 50 states/regions and its about page says it spans 800+ cities worldwide. (luxuryportfolio.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Mansion Global
  • Best “luxury brand” network: Sotheby’s / Christie’s
  • Best for curated exposure: Forbes Global Properties
  • Best broker-network reach: Luxury Portfolio International (mansionglobal.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this to best for buyers vs sellers, or best by region (e.g., California, Florida, New York, Texas).

Which listing sites are best for finding open houses across the U.S.? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best sites for U.S. open houses:

  • Zillow — strongest overall coverage and easiest map/search filters for “Open House.”
  • Realtor.com — very solid nationwide listings, often updated well with MLS data.
  • Redfin — great search tools and clear open-house filtering in many markets.
  • Homes.com — good growing coverage, especially if you want another broad search source.
  • Trulia — useful as a secondary check; some overlap with Zillow.

Best combo: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin.

Also worth using:

  • Local MLS sites (often the most accurate for your area)
  • Brokerage sites like Compass, Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, eXp Realty, and Sotheby’s for open houses in specific markets

If you want, I can also give you the best open-house apps or the best sites by city/state.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best bets for nationwide open-house hunting:

  1. Zillow — strong U.S. coverage, easy “Must have open houses” filter, and broad map/search tools. (zillow.com)
  2. Realtor.com — very solid for open-house maps and filters; their guide specifically points users to the “open house” box under More Filters. (realtor.com)
  3. Redfin — good for quick filtering and alerts; Redfin says you can filter for homes hosting open houses and set alerts. (redfin.com)
  4. Trulia — useful if you want a dedicated open-house search page and map-style browsing. (trulia.com)
  5. Homes.com — another solid nationwide option with open-house pages and filters. (homes.com)

My pick: start with Zillow + Realtor.com, then cross-check Redfin for alerts and any listings one site misses. Open-house data usually comes from MLS feeds, so no single site is perfectly complete everywhere. (redfin.com)

If you want, I can also rank these for best mobile app, best map view, or best for a specific state/city.

What are the best home search websites for investors looking for rental properties? discovery 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Here are the best home search websites for rental-property investors:

  1. LoopNet

Best for commercial and multifamily deals. Strong for apartment buildings, mixed-use, and larger rental investments.

  1. Crexi

Good alternative to LoopNet with lots of investment property listings, especially multifamily and commercial.

  1. Zillow

Best mainstream site for finding single-family rentals and off-market price comps. Good filters, but more owner-occupant focused.

  1. Redfin

Great for fast search, map tools, and price history. Useful for spotting undervalued homes that could work as rentals.

  1. Realtor.com

Solid for broad MLS-style inventory and good neighborhood search. Helpful when looking for long-term rental homes.

  1. MLS via a local agent / investor-friendly MLS access

Often the best source for fresh listings and accurate data. Many investors use an agent to get better search access.

  1. Mashvisor

Built for investors. Great for analyzing cash flow, cap rate, Airbnb potential, and rental income estimates.

  1. Roofstock

Best for turnkey rental properties and pre-vetted single-family investments.

  1. Auction.com

Good for distressed or discounted properties, including foreclosures and auction deals.

  1. DealMachine

Useful for finding off-market deals by driving for dollars and contacting owners directly.

If you want, I can also give you the best sites by strategy:

  • single-family rentals
  • multifamily
  • turnkey rentals
  • off-market deals
  • short-term rentals
retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best options, depending on what you want:

  • Zillow Rental Manager — best all-around. Huge renter traffic, free listing tools, tenant screening, lease signing, and pricing comps. (zillow.com)
  • Apartments.com — best for rental listings and landlord tools. Strong exposure, free basic listings, and tools for screening, leases, rent collection, and maintenance. (apartments.com)
  • Redfin Rentals — good for reaching a big audience and listing for free, especially if you want a simple workflow and screening tools. (redfin.com)
  • Realtor.com / Avail — solid for DIY landlords who want syndication to multiple sites plus screening and lease tools. (realtor.com)
  • Roofstock — best if you want to buy income properties, especially single-family rentals, rather than just advertise one. It focuses on investment property marketplaces and investor data. (roofstock.com)
  • BiggerPockets — best for investor education and deal-finding community, not a pure listing site. (biggerpockets.com)

If I had to pick 3: Zillow Rental Manager, Apartments.com, and Redfin Rentals. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can also rank them for single-family, multifamily, or out-of-state investing.

Which national property portals are best for new construction homes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For new construction homes, the best national portals are usually:

  1. NewHomeSource – best dedicated site for new builds; strongest builder inventory and search filters.
  2. Zillow – best all-around reach; lots of new construction listings and model homes.
  3. Realtor.com – very solid national coverage, especially if you want MLS-backed listings.
  4. Homes.com – good coverage and simple search experience, growing fast.
  5. Redfin – useful if you want a clean interface and map-based search.
  6. Trulia – decent, but usually not as strong as Zillow/Realtor.com for new builds.

If you want the best single site for new construction specifically, I’d start with NewHomeSource.

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by country or by type of new home (builder communities, custom homes, condos, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

Best picks for new construction homes:

  1. NewHomeSource — probably the strongest specialized portal for new builds; it says it has the largest collection of new-construction listings nationwide and extensive builder reviews. (newhomesource.com)
  2. Realtor.com — best all-around national portal for new homes if you also want a mainstream search experience; it has a dedicated new-homes section and builder/community pages with floor plans, photos, and virtual tours. (realtor.com)
  3. Homes.com — very solid for new construction, with a dedicated marketplace for communities, builders, floor plans, and move-in-ready homes. (homes.com)
  4. Zillow — good for broad coverage and builder directories, especially if you’re comparing new builds with resale homes. (zillow.zendesk.com)

My quick take:

If you want, I can also give you the best portal by state/metro or best for pre-construction vs move-in-ready.

What are the best listing portals for suburban home searches? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For suburban home searches, the best listing portals are usually:

  • Zillow — biggest inventory, strong map/filters, good for broad suburb browsing.
  • Realtor.com — often the most reliable for active MLS data and recent status changes.
  • Redfin — best if you want a clean interface, fast alerts, and solid price-history tools.
  • Homes.com — improving quickly, good neighborhood and lifestyle browsing.
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood-focused searches like schools, commute, and local insights.
  • Movoto — decent for suburban filtering and discovery in some markets.

If you want the best overall combo, use:

  1. Zillow for coverage
  2. Realtor.com for accuracy
  3. Redfin for alerts and tracking

If you want, I can also rank them specifically for schools, commute, or price accuracy.

retrieval Not mentioned

For suburban home searches, my top picks are:

  1. Realtor.com — best for MLS freshness + school/commute search. It supports school-based search and map layers for things like schools and commute-related context. (realtor.com)
  2. Zillow — best for broad inventory + commute-time filtering. Zillow’s app includes a commute-time filter and school search/filter options. (zillowgroup.com)
  3. Redfin — best for map-based neighborhood hunting. You can search by neighborhood, ZIP code, city, or by drawing your own area on the map. (support.redfin.com)
  4. Trulia — best for neighborhood feel. Trulia emphasizes local info and neighborhood overlays like schools and average commute times. (support.trulia.com)
  5. Homes.com — worth checking if schools matter a lot; it partners with GreatSchools to show nearby school data. (homes.com)

Best overall for suburban buyers:

  • Realtor.com if you care most about school zones and neighborhood context. (realtor.com)
  • Zillow if you want the easiest all-around search experience. (zillowgroup.com)
  • Redfin if you want to draw a very specific suburban search area. (support.redfin.com)

If you want, I can also rank these for school districts, commute, or new-construction suburbs.

Which websites are best for finding foreclosed homes nationwide? discovery 320/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best nationwide websites for foreclosed homes:

  • Zillow — strong nationwide coverage; filter for Foreclosures, Pre-foreclosures, and Auction.
  • Realtor.com — good MLS-based listings; search foreclosures and bank-owned homes.
  • Redfin — easy map/search tools; includes some foreclosure/auction inventory.
  • Foreclosure.com — one of the most foreclosure-focused sites; heavy on pre-foreclosures, REOs, auctions.
  • Auction.com — best for live foreclosure and bank auction listings nationwide.
  • HomePath (Fannie Mae) — good for Fannie-owned foreclosed homes.
  • HomeSteps (Freddie Mac) — Freddie Mac’s REO inventory.
  • HUD Home Store — for HUD-owned homes, often discounted.
  • RES.NET / XOME — useful for bank-owned and auction properties.
  • Wholesale/REO portals like RealtyTrac — large database, though some features are behind a paywall.

Best picks by use:

  • Best overall: Zillow + Realtor.com
  • Best for auctions: Auction.com
  • Best for serious foreclosure hunters: Foreclosure.com
  • Best for bank-owned homes: HomePath, HomeSteps, HUD Home Store

If you want, I can also give you the top free sites only or the best sites by state.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best nationwide options:

  • HUD Home Store / HUD homes — best if you want official FHA/HUD-owned foreclosure listings. HUD says the Home Store lists homes resold after foreclosure. (hud.gov)
  • HomePath (Fannie Mae) — best for Fannie Mae–owned REO homes; Fannie says HomePath lets you search Fannie Mae-owned properties for sale nationwide. (fanniemae.com)
  • HomeSteps (Freddie Mac) — best for Freddie Mac–owned foreclosures; HomeSteps says it has nationwide listings and homes in many areas throughout the country. (homesteps.com)
  • FDIC Real Estate & Property Sales — useful for properties retained from failed banks, including residential homes, land, and commercial property. (fdic.gov)

If you want the best overall strategy, check HUD Home Store + HomePath + HomeSteps first, then use FDIC as a secondary source. (hud.gov)

If you want, I can also give you the best foreclosure sites for investors vs. first-time buyers.

What are the best real estate portals for rental listings and leases? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are the best real estate portals for rental listings and lease management:

Best rental listing portals
  • Zillow Rentals — biggest reach in many U.S. markets; strong search filters and good photos.
  • Apartments.com — excellent for apartment hunting; very detailed listings and solid availability data.
  • Realtor.com Rentals — good MLS-backed inventory and clean search experience.
  • HotPads — great for urban rentals and map-based searching.
  • Zumper — fast application flow and good for quick-moving rentals.
  • Trulia Rentals — useful neighborhood info and renter reviews.
  • Facebook Marketplace — lots of local listings, but quality varies a lot.
Best for leases / landlord rental management
  • TurboTenant — best simple all-in-one for landlords: listings, applications, screening, and leases.
  • Avail — strong for independent landlords; good lease and tenant management.
  • Zillow Rental Manager — easy if you already list on Zillow.
  • Buildium — better for larger portfolios and property managers.
  • AppFolio — powerful, more professional/enterprise-grade.
Best overall picks
  • Renters: Zillow Rentals + Apartments.com
  • Landlords: TurboTenant + Avail
  • Property managers: Buildium or AppFolio

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by country/city or best ones for luxury, student, or short-term rentals.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best picks, by use case:

  • Best overall for renters + landlords: Apartments.com — huge audience, strong listing distribution, and built-in tools for applications, screening, lease creation/signing, and rent collection. (apartments.com)
  • Best for reusable rental applications: Zillow Rentals / Zillow Rental Manager — one application can be reused across participating rentals for 30 days, with background/credit info included. (zillow.com)
  • Best mainstream listing site for broad search: Realtor.com Rentals — strong for browsing apartments, condos, and houses for rent nationwide. (realtor.com)
  • Best map-first search: HotPads — especially useful if you want to search rentals visually by neighborhood/map. (hotpads.com)
  • Best for independent landlords needing lease signing: TurboTenant — easy lease creation and e-signatures, plus applications/screening. (turbotenant.com)
  • Best for tenant-friendly online lease signing: Avail — clean digital lease review/signing workflow and online lease forms. (avail.co)

My short recommendation:

  • Renters: start with Apartments.com + Zillow + Realtor.com
  • Small landlords: use Apartments.com or TurboTenant
  • Lease signing only: Avail or TurboTenant

If you want, I can also rank them for large multifamily owners, single-family landlords, or renters in a specific city.

Which national listing portals are best for mobile home buyers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For mobile homes / manufactured homes, the best national listing portals are:

  1. MHVillage
    • The biggest and most specialized portal for manufactured/mobile homes.
    • Best for: dedicated mobile home listings, park homes, and communities.
  2. MHVillage Homes (same network, but worth calling out separately for search quality)
    • Best search filters for home type, community, and price.
  3. Zillow
    • Good national reach, especially for manufactured homes on land.
    • Best for: broader home search plus manufactured homes mixed in.
  4. Realtor.com
    • Strong national coverage and often has listings Zillow misses.
    • Best for: manufactured homes listed through agents.
  5. Homes.com
    • Growing inventory and decent filters.
    • Best for: comparing more mainstream listing sources.
  6. MobileHome.net
    • More niche, with a lot of manufactured-home-specific inventory.
    • Best for: buyers focused only on mobile/manufactured homes.

Best overall: MHVillage Best for homes on land: Zillow or Realtor.com

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by state or the best sites for cheap mobile homes under $50k.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best national portals for mobile home buyers:

  • MHVillage — best overall. It’s the largest/nation’s leading marketplace for manufactured and mobile homes, with homes, parks, dealers, and floor plans all in one place. (mhvillage.com)
  • MobileHome.net / MHBay — good second stop for a broad national inventory and rentals, especially if you want another dedicated mobile-home-only search site. (mobilehome.net)
  • ManufacturedHomes.com — useful for buyers looking at new homes, dealer inventory, and floor plans from across the country. (manufacturedhomes.com)
  • Zillow — good for manufactured homes with land and broader market comparison; it has a manufactured-home category in its search filters. (zillow.com)
  • Redfin — also useful for broader home search, including manufactured-home listings in many markets. (redfin.com)

If you want the shortest answer: start with MHVillage, then check MobileHome.net and ManufacturedHomes.com, and use Zillow/Redfin for land-attached homes.

What are the best property marketplaces for filtering by price and commute time? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best options for price + commute-time filtering:

UK
  • Rightmove — strongest for commute time searches; also great price/location filters.
  • Zoopla — good filters and alerts; commute tools are decent.
  • OnTheMarket — simpler, but useful if you want more listed inventory.
US
  • Redfin — probably the best for commute/time-to-work style filtering plus strong map search.
  • Zillow — excellent price filters and saved searches; commute filtering is less central but still useful.
  • Realtor.com — solid filters, good listing coverage, easy commute-style location targeting.
Best overall
  • Rightmove for the UK
  • Redfin for the US

If you tell me your country/city, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 sites for that market.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want both price and commute-time filtering, the best picks are:

  1. Zillow — strongest overall. It has a commute time filter plus price/affordability search options. (zillow.com)
  2. Realtor.com — also very good. It offers a Commute Time Filter (with rush-hour vs. off-peak) and standard price filters. (realtor.com)
  3. Redfin — solid for price filters and commute tracking, but commute is more centered on commute reports / adding a commute than a simple all-in-one commute filter. (support.redfin.com)

Bottom line:

  • Want the easiest commute+price search? Zillow. (zillow.com)
  • Want a strong alternative with traffic-aware commute settings? Realtor.com. (realtor.com)
  • Want robust price filtering and commute tracking? Redfin. (support.redfin.com)

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-use-case list for buying vs renting.

Which home listing websites are best for virtual tours? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best home listing sites for virtual tours:

  • Zillow — usually the best overall for 3D Home tours, video walkthroughs, and lots of listings.
  • Redfin — great for clean interface and often includes 3D tours and detailed photos.
  • Realtor.com — strong national coverage; many listings have virtual tours and open-house videos.
  • Trulia — good for browsing; virtual-tour support varies, but many listings link through to Matterport or agent videos.
  • Homes.com — growing fast, with increasing support for video tours and 3D walkthroughs.

If you want the best virtual-tour experience, start with Zillow and Redfin. If you want, I can also list the best sites for rentals or luxury homes with 3D tours.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best bets for virtual tours:

  1. Zillow — probably the strongest all-around option. Zillow has its own free 3D Home tour tool, and tours can appear on Zillow listings and also syndicate broadly. Zillow says these tours can also be posted to Trulia and shared via MLS. (zillow.com)
  2. Realtor.com — very good for Matterport-style 3D tours. Realtor.com says it supports Matterport virtual tours on for-sale and for-rent listings and has worked with Matterport for years. (realtor.com)
  3. Redfin — strong if you want an immersive 3D walkthrough on the listing page. Redfin’s walkthroughs are powered by Matterport virtual tour tech. (redfin.com)

Quick take:

  • Best overall: Zillow
  • Best for professional 3D/Matterport tours: Realtor.com
  • Best for browsing listings with built-in walkthroughs: Redfin (zillow.com)

If you want, I can also rank them for buyers vs. sellers.

What are the best national real estate portals for finding homes with acreage? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

The best national portals for homes with acreage are:

  1. Zillow — biggest inventory overall; good filters for lot size, acreage, and map search.
  2. Realtor.com — strong MLS coverage and solid “lot size” filtering.
  3. Redfin — clean map tools and useful for finding acreage in suburban/rural markets.
  4. LandWatch — best if you want larger acreage, rural homes, farms, or mixed-use land.
  5. Land.com — includes LandWatch, Land And Farm, and Lands of America; excellent for acreage-heavy searches.
  6. Homes.com — improving quickly, good national coverage and search filters.

Best combo:

  • For regular homes with some land: Zillow + Realtor.com
  • For larger acreage/rural properties: LandWatch + Land.com

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by region or by property type (farm, horse property, cabin, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

Best national portals for homes with acreage:

  1. Land.com — probably the strongest all-around national portal for rural properties, including farms, ranches, acreage, and country homes. (land.com)
  2. LandWatch — excellent for “homes with acreage” and rural lifestyle properties nationwide. (landwatch.com)
  3. LandSearch — very good for searching homes with land, recreational acreage, horse property, and similar niche listings. (landsearch.com)
  4. Zillow — best if you want a broad national inventory plus acreage filters in many markets. (zillow.com)
  5. Realtor.com — strong mainstream portal with nationwide search and good listing data. (realtor.com)
  6. Homes.com — solid general portal with dedicated acreage pages by state and city. (homes.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best 3 sites specifically for horse properties, hobby farms, or ranches.

Which listing platforms are best for searching co-ops and condos? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best platforms for co-ops and condos:

  1. StreetEasy — best overall for NYC co-ops and condos. Strong filters, board package notes, maintenance/common charges, and very complete listings.
  2. Compass — great for higher-end condos/co-ops and good agent data; especially useful in major metros.
  3. Corcoran — strong in NYC and good for co-ops/condos with polished listing details.
  4. Zillow — broad coverage and easy search, but co-op data can be less complete than NYC-focused sites.
  5. Realtor.com — solid general search, useful for comparing options across areas.
  6. Redfin — good UI and maps, but co-op coverage varies by market.
  7. LoopNet — only if you’re looking for condo/co-op investment or mixed-use properties, not typical home searches.

If you’re searching in New York City, start with StreetEasy, then cross-check on Compass and Corcoran. For outside NYC, use Zillow and Realtor.com first.

If you want, I can also give you the best platforms by city.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you’re searching co-ops and condos, the best platforms are usually:

  • StreetEasy — best for NYC-area co-ops/condos; it has dedicated co-op/condo search pages and a lot of building-level detail. (streeteasy.com)
  • Zillow — strongest national option; it has large condo inventory and also surfaces co-op listings in markets like New York. (zillow.com)
  • Redfin — great for map-based searching and filters; it supports condo searches and lets you search by neighborhood/city/zip or draw custom areas. (support.redfin.com)
  • Realtor.com — good national coverage, and its data feed/specs explicitly support condo and co-op property types. (realtor.com)

Quick pick:

  • NYC: StreetEasy
  • Elsewhere in the U.S.: Zillow + Redfin + Realtor.com

If you want, I can also rank them by best inventory, best map search, and best filters for your city.

What are the best real estate search sites for out-of-state buyers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For out-of-state buyers, the best sites are the ones with strong map search, good neighborhood data, and lots of photos/video:

  1. Zillow
    • Best all-around for broad inventory and easy map browsing
    • Strong filters, Zestimate, school info, commute, and tour links
  2. Realtor.com
    • Best for up-to-date MLS-style listings
    • Usually very accurate on status changes and price history
  3. Redfin
    • Best search tools and clean interface
    • Great for map-based searching, listing alerts, and market data
  4. Homes.com
    • Good for exploring neighborhoods and listing details
    • Strong mobile experience and easy comparison tools
  5. Trulia
    • Best for neighborhood feel
    • Useful crime maps, local amenities, and lifestyle data
  6. LoopNet (if you mean investment/commercial)
    • Best for commercial and income properties

For remote buyers, I’d also use:

  • Google Maps / Street View for neighborhood scouting
  • Matterport virtual tours when available
  • HomeLight to find a top local agent quickly

If you want, I can also rank the best sites by accuracy, virtual tour quality, or best for first-time out-of-state buyers.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best picks for out-of-state buyers:

  • Zillow — best all-around for scale and remote search: strong map search, side-by-side comparisons, and 3D Home virtual tours. Zillow also says it supports searching across multiple areas at once, which is handy when comparing states or metros. (zillow.com)
  • Redfin — best for seeing homes virtually: Redfin offers 3D walkthroughs, live video-chat tours with an agent, and even eClosings in participating states. (redfin.com)
  • Homes.com — best for data-heavy neighborhood research: its app includes many search layers, push alerts, Matterport 3D tours, interactive floorplans, school data, and full-inventory search. (homes.com)
  • Realtor.com — best for quickly scheduling showings: it lets you request a private tour from a listing page and connects you with a local agent fast. (realtor.com)

If you want, I can also rank them for schools, relocation, new construction, or luxury homes.

Which property portals are best for finding pet-friendly rentals nationwide? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

The best nationwide property portals for pet-friendly rentals are:

  1. Rightmove
    • Biggest rental inventory in the UK
    • Good filters for pets allowed and alerts
  2. Zoopla
    • Strong nationwide coverage
    • Easy rental search and map tools
  3. OnTheMarket
    • Often picks up listings not everywhere else
    • Worth checking alongside Rightmove/Zoopla
  4. OpenRent
    • Direct-from-landlord rentals, often more flexible on pets
    • Good if you want to ask about pet policies upfront
  5. SpareRoom
    • Best for room rentals/shared housing
    • Pet-friendly options are more common in some listings than you’d expect

Best approach: Use Rightmove + Zoopla first, then check OpenRent for more pet-flexible landlords.

If you want, I can also give you a country-specific list (UK, US, Canada, Australia, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

Best nationwide portals for pet-friendly rentals:

  • Zillow Rentals — best overall for sheer inventory and pet-policy filtering. Zillow has nationwide pet-friendly rental pages and explicitly supports searching by pet policy. (zillow.com)
  • Apartments.com — best for apartment-heavy searches and clear pet filters (dog-friendly / cat-friendly / both) plus a visible Pet Policy section on listings. (apartments.com)
  • Realtor.com — good nationwide backup, with dedicated “pets allowed” rental pages and pet-friendly listing labels. (realtor.com)
  • HotPads — useful for house rentals and metro-area searches; it also has pet-friendly filters and dedicated pet-friendly result pages. (hotpads.com)
  • Zumper — solid nationwide option, especially if you want pet-policy details surfaced directly in listings. (zumper.com)
  • Rentable — worth checking as a supplemental search portal for pet-friendly inventory. (rentable.co)

My quick ranking: Zillow, Apartments.com, Realtor.com, HotPads, Zumper, Rentable. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can also give you a best-portal-by-rental-type list: apartments, single-family homes, or big dogs/no-breed-restriction searches.

What are the best national listing portals for vacation homes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best national portals for vacation homes / vacation rentals:

  • Vrbo — best for entire homes, family trips, and longer stays
  • Airbnb — biggest inventory, especially unique stays and city/beach rentals
  • Booking.com — strong global reach; good if you want hotels + vacation homes in one place
  • Expedia / Vrbo network — useful for bundled travel bookings and wide coverage
  • Homes & Villas by Marriott Bonvoy — higher-end vacation homes
  • Tripadvisor Rentals — helpful for comparing reviews across properties
  • Blueground — best for furnished, longer-term vacation-style stays in major cities

If you mean buying a vacation home rather than renting, the best national portals are usually:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Trulia

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by country (US, UK, Canada, Spain, Mexico, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean where to list a vacation home nationally in the U.S., the strongest portals are usually:

  1. Airbnb — best all-around reach; huge brand recognition and strong demand for entire homes. (airbnb.com)
  2. Vrbo — best if your property is a whole-home / family / group rental; it’s built around “entire place” stays. (vrbo.com)
  3. Booking.com — best for broad travel demand and exposure beyond just vacation-rental shoppers; it actively lists vacation homes/apartments too. (booking.com)
  4. HomeToGo — best as an aggregator/meta-search portal; it says it has millions of vacation homes and compares thousands of providers. (hometogo.com)
  5. Tripadvisor/FlipKey — useful for extra visibility, especially if you want travelers who rely on reviews, though it’s usually not my first pick over the four above. (en.wikipedia.org)

My short ranking:

  • Best overall: Airbnb
  • Best for whole-home vacation houses: Vrbo
  • Best extra channel: Booking.com
  • Best aggregator: HomeToGo

If you want, I can also give you the best portals for hosts vs. best portals for guests, or a U.S.-only listing strategy.

Which websites are best for browsing all residential listings in one place? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you’re looking to browse the widest selection of residential listings in one place (especially in the U.S.), these are the best:

  • Zillow — biggest overall inventory, easiest filters, strong map search
  • Realtor.com — very comprehensive and often quickest to update from MLS data
  • Redfin — clean interface, good pricing history, solid search tools
  • Homes.com — growing fast, simple browsing experience
  • Trulia — good neighborhood-focused browsing, owned by Zillow
  • Movoto — decent coverage, especially for casual browsing

If you want the most complete local inventory, also check your local MLS site or a brokerage site like Compass, Coldwell Banker, or Keller Williams in your area.

If you tell me your country or city, I can give the best sites for that market.

retrieval Not mentioned

For one-stop browsing of U.S. residential listings, I’d start with:

  1. Zillow — biggest overall audience / broadest mainstream portal. (similarweb.com)
  2. Realtor.com — strong if you want MLS-backed listings and market data. (realtor.com)
  3. Redfin — good search UI, fast updates, and lots of listing detail. (similarweb.com)
  4. Homes.com — worth checking as a second/third pass for extra inventory and comparisons. (similarweb.com)
  5. Trulia — useful for neighborhood/context info since it’s part of Zillow’s network. (en.wikipedia.org)

Best practical combo: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin. That usually covers most of what’s on the market, but no single website is guaranteed to show every home. Realtor.com explicitly emphasizes MLS-listed homes, while Zillow’s standards can exclude certain private/off-market-style listings. (realtor.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best site for buyers vs. renters vs. luxury homes vs. new construction.

What are the best alternatives to the biggest national listing portal? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean Zillow, the best alternatives are:

  • Redfin — best overall for home search + agent tools
  • Realtor.com — usually the most MLS-aligned data
  • Homes.com — strong growing alternative, cleaner search experience
  • Trulia — good neighborhood and lifestyle info
  • Movoto — decent secondary home-search portal
  • Local MLS portals — often the most accurate listing data, usually through an agent

For rentals:

  • Apartments.com
  • Zumper
  • HotPads

For commercial:

  • LoopNet

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best alternative for buying, renting, or selling.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean Zillow, the best U.S. alternatives are:

  1. Realtor.com — best for MLS-backed listing coverage and “real” listing data. It’s the official site of the National Association of REALTORS® and says it connects directly to 800+ MLSs. (realtor.com)
  2. Redfin — best if you want a search portal plus brokerage help, with strong app alerts and agent support. (redfin.com)
  3. Homes.com — best for neighborhood detail and a more research-heavy experience; it says it has millions of listings and deep neighborhood/school info. (homes.com)
  4. Trulia — best for neighborhood insights; it pulls listings from brokers, agents, MLSs, and vendors nationwide. (support.trulia.com)

Quick pick:

  • Most accurate: Realtor.com
  • Best all-around app: Redfin
  • Best neighborhood info: Homes.com / Trulia (realtor.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to buyers, sellers, renters, or agents.

Which national real estate portals are better for buyers than the leading marketplace? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the portals most often better for buyers than the main marketplace are:

  • Redfin — best overall for buyers; cleaner search, strong map tools, lower-friction touring.
  • Realtor.com — usually best for freshest MLS-style listings and status updates.
  • Homes.com — good for simple browsing and fewer ad-heavy distractions.
  • Trulia — useful if you care about neighborhood details, schools, and lifestyle data.

Best pick by goal:

  • Most buyer-friendly UX: Redfin
  • Most reliable listing data: Realtor.com
  • Least clutter / easiest browsing: Homes.com

If you tell me your country, I can name the best national portals there too.

retrieval Not mentioned

Assuming the “leading marketplace” means Zillow, the national portals I’d pick as more buyer-friendly are:

  1. Realtor.com — best for buyers who want fresh inventory, map layers, and collaboration. Realtor.com says many listings update every 15 minutes, and its newer map layers help buyers compare deal quality, competition, and neighborhoods. (mediaroom.realtor.com)
  2. Redfin — best for buyers who want strong alerts and a more active search feed. Redfin offers saved-search alerts, text/email notifications, a home feed, and buyer-agent/tour workflows. (support.redfin.com)
  3. Homes.com — best if you want a cleaner buyer/search experience with interactive maps, 3D tours, alerts, and co-shopper collaboration. (homes.com)

Short take:

If you want, I can rank them specifically for first-time buyers, luxury buyers, or bargain hunters.

What are the best alternatives for searching homes nationwide online? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best nationwide home-search alternatives:

  • Realtor.com — best all-around MLS-style listings and usually the cleanest data.
  • Redfin — great maps, fast updates, strong search filters, solid estimate tools.
  • Homes.com — improving fast, easy to browse, good nationwide coverage.
  • Trulia — best for neighborhood info, schools, crime, and local lifestyle context.
  • Movoto — useful for broad searches and simple browsing.
  • HomeFinder — decent secondary option for nationwide listings.
  • Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, Century 21 — good if you want direct brokerage inventory.

If you’re also looking beyond portals:

  • MLS websites in each area are often the most current.
  • Houses.com and PropertyShark are good for more advanced searching and property details.

If you want, I can rank these by best for buyers, best mobile app, or best low-price search tools.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best nationwide home-search alternatives:

  • Realtor.com — strongest for broad for-sale inventory and clean search by state/city/type. (realtor.com)
  • Redfin — great map-based search, strong filters, and handy tools like Ask Redfin in the app. (redfin.com)
  • Homes.com — good for buyers who want search plus neighborhood/market insights and AI-guided search. (homes.com)
  • Zillow — best all-around consumer portal; useful for homes, rentals, and estimate-style data. (zillow.com)
  • Trulia — especially good if you care about neighborhood details and rentals. (trulia.com)
  • Apartments.com — best if you’re searching rentals nationwide, including houses, condos, and townhomes. (apartments.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by best for buyers, best for rentals, or best mobile app.

Which property listing websites compete with the largest home search site? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean Zillow, its main competitors are:

  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Trulia (owned by Zillow, but still a major brand)
  • Homes.com
  • Homesnap
  • Movoto

For commercial listings, LoopNet is a big competitor in a different category.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean Zillow (the largest U.S. home-search site by traffic), its main competitors include Realtor.com, Redfin, Trulia, Homes.com, and Apartments.com. Similarweb’s March 2026 ranking has Zillow #1, with Realtor.com and Redfin next. (similarweb.com)

Other competing property-listing sites include Movoto, RE/MAX, and Rocket Homes. (similarweb.com)

If you want, I can also rank them by traffic or focus on rental vs for-sale sites.

What are the best alternatives to a big national apartment listing site? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives to the big national apartment sites are usually:

  • Zumper — good for fast searches and direct landlord listings
  • HotPads — strong map-based search, good in cities
  • PadMapper — simple, aggregated listings, good for browsing neighborhoods
  • Realtor.com Rentals — solid if you want a more traditional listing source
  • RentCafe — great for large property managers and apartment communities
  • Facebook Marketplace — useful for private landlords and sublets, but vet carefully
  • Craigslist — still good in some markets, especially for local/private rentals
  • Local property management company sites — often the best source for “hidden” inventory
  • Neighborhood/tenant Facebook groups — strong for sublets and off-market leads

If you want, I can also give you the best options by city type (big city, college town, suburban, luxury, cheap rentals).

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want to skip the big national portals, these are the best alternatives:

  • HotPads — great for map-based searching and local feel. (help.hotpads.com)
  • PadMapper — also map-first, and especially handy for roommates, sublets, and smaller-city searches. (apps.apple.com)
  • Realtor.com Rentals — solid if you want apartments, condos, and houses for rent in one place. (realtor.com)
  • Craigslist — still useful for local, owner-posted, and smaller-market listings. (lancaster.craigslist.org)
  • StreetEasy — best if you’re renting in NYC specifically. (apps.apple.com)

My quick take:

  • Best overall: HotPads
  • Best for roommates/sublets: PadMapper
  • Best for broad inventory: Realtor.com Rentals
  • Best for bargain/local leads: Craigslist
  • Best for NYC: StreetEasy

If you tell me your city and budget, I can narrow it to the best 3 for your area.

Which home marketplaces are best if I want more listings than a major portal? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean home-buying marketplaces, the best places that often have more or fresher listings than a single major portal are:

  • Realtor.com — usually one of the broadest, most up-to-date U.S. listing feeds
  • Homes.com — strong MLS coverage, growing fast
  • Redfin — good MLS integration and fast updates
  • Local MLS sites — often the earliest and most complete source in a market
  • Brokerage sites like Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, Compass, and eXp Realty — sometimes they show listings before the big aggregators
  • For rentals: Apartments.com, Zillow Rentals, Rent.com, HotPads

If you want the most listings overall, the usual best combo is:

  1. Realtor.com
  2. Redfin
  3. Homes.com
  4. Local MLS
  5. Top local broker sites

If you tell me your country/city and whether you mean buying or renting, I can name the best marketplaces for that market.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean more total homes than Zillow/Realtor/Redfin, the best move is usually not another major portal—it’s sites that pick up different inventory or let you see off-market / specialty listings. Most big portals draw from MLS feeds, so their public inventory overlaps a lot. (zillow.com)

Best bets:

  • Realtor.com — very broad MLS coverage and fast updates; good if you want a different national feed than Zillow. (mediaroom.realtor.com)
  • Homes.com — direct MLS feed, and it’s aggressively built around listing exposure for sellers/agents. (homes.com)
  • Auction.com — best for foreclosures, bank-owned, and auction inventory you usually won’t see on standard portals. (auction.com)
  • FSBO.com — useful for for-sale-by-owner listings that may not be on the big portals yet. (fsbo.com)
  • NewHomeSource — best for new construction inventory and builder-direct listings. (newhomesource.com)

If you want the most listings overall: 1) MLS access via an agent, 2) Realtor.com + Homes.com, 3) then Auction.com / FSBO / NewHomeSource for extra inventory. (mediaroom.realtor.com)

If you want, I can rank these specifically for buying a primary home, investing, or finding off-market deals.

What are the best alternatives for nationwide rental searches? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best nationwide rental search alternatives:

  • Apartments.com — best overall for big inventory, filters, and verified listings
  • Zillow Rentals — strong nationwide coverage, especially for houses and condos
  • RentCafe — good for apartment communities and direct property management listings
  • HotPads — useful for map-based searching and urban rentals
  • Trulia Rentals — similar to Zillow, good for neighborhood info
  • Realtor.com Rentals — solid for wider MLS-backed rental listings
  • Apartment List — good matching tools and personalized recommendations
  • ForRent.com — decent nationwide apartment and multifamily listings
  • Facebook Marketplace — lots of local listings, but use caution for scams
  • Craigslist — still useful in some markets, but requires extra screening

If you want, I can also rank these by best for apartments, houses, pet-friendly rentals, or low-scam risk.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best nationwide rental search alternatives:

  1. Apartments.com — best all-around; it says it has over 1.4 million apartments, houses, condos, and townhomes for rent. (apartments.com)
  2. Zillow Rentals — strongest for broad U.S. coverage and filtering; Zillow’s U.S. rentals page shows 1.5M+ rentals available. (zillow.com)
  3. Realtor.com Rentals — good if you want a major national portal with a dedicated rentals section and a large inventory. (realtor.com)
  4. ApartmentList — nice for a more guided search; it says it has more than 7 million apartments for rent. (apartmentlist.com)
  5. ForRent.com — solid nationwide option with over a million available rentals. (forrent.com)
  6. RentCafe — useful nationwide ILS, especially if you want listings from property managers. (rentcafe.com)
  7. HotPads — good map-based search, and it markets itself as searching millions of apartments and houses. (hotpads.com)

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Apartments.com
  • Best broad backup: Zillow
  • Best third check: Realtor.com

If you want, I can also rank these for houses vs apartments, roommates/sublets, or least scammy listings.

Which real estate websites are better than the top listing portal for filters? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean Zillow, these often have better search filters:

  • Redfin — usually the best for practical home-buying filters: price cuts, HOA, hot homes, open houses, days on market, school, commute.
  • Realtor.com — strong for standard filters and often cleaner status/MLS data.
  • Homes.com — improving fast, with solid basic filters and map tools.
  • Trulia — good neighborhood-oriented filters like crime, commute, and lifestyle.
  • PropertyShark — great for power users: ownership, tax, liens, parcel, and investment-style filters.
  • LoopNet — best if you want commercial property filters.
  • LandWatch / Land.com — better for land-specific filters.

If you want, I can also rank them by best filters for buyers, renters, investors, or commercial real estate.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want better filters than a typical broad listing portal, the strongest picks are:

  • Realtor.com — best for map-based filters: schools, crime, transit, lifestyle amenities, and now dynamic map layers for things like home age, lot size, and home values. (realtor.com)
  • Redfin — best for fine-grained home-search controls and natural-language filtering like commute time, school proximity, or “more modern kitchen.” It also supports drawing your own search area. (redfin.com)
  • Homes.com — good if you want a cleaner search experience and are open to AI-assisted searching instead of lots of manual filters. (homes.com)

My quick ranking for filters:

  1. Realtor.com
  2. Redfin
  3. Homes.com

If you want, I can also break this down by buying vs renting and give the best site for each.

What are the best alternatives for finding off-market homes online? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best online alternatives for finding off-market homes:

  1. PropStream

Best for serious buyers/investors. Great for pulling pre-foreclosures, absentee owners, vacant, tax delinquent, and skip-traceable leads.

  1. BatchLeads

Very strong for off-market lead lists and direct outreach. Good if you want to market to owners yourself.

  1. DealMachine

Best for driving for dollars + off-market lead follow-up. Handy app for tagging houses and contacting owners.

  1. Privy

Good for finding distressed and investor-friendly deals before they hit the MLS.

  1. Redfin / Zillow / Realtor.com

Not true off-market platforms, but useful for spotting expireds, FSBOs, price drops, and stale listings that may be negotiable.

  1. Facebook Marketplace + local real estate groups

Surprisingly good for FSBO and pocket listings in some markets.

  1. Craigslist

Old-school, but still useful for for sale by owner and landlord-sale opportunities.

  1. HomeLight / Opendoor / Offerpad

More for direct-sale opportunities and seller leads than hidden inventory.

Best overall picks:

  • PropStream for data and search
  • BatchLeads for outreach
  • DealMachine for finding homes in the field and online

If you want, I can also rank these by best for investors vs. homebuyers.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best online alternatives for off-market homes:

  • PropStream — strongest if you want true off-market lead generation. It’s built around on- and off-market property data, filtering, skip tracing, and outreach tools. (propstream.com)
  • Realtor.com “Coming Soon” — good for seeing homes before they’re fully live in some markets. (realtor.com)
  • Homes.com “Coming Soon” — another solid source for pre-market inventory and builder/community previews. (homes.com)
  • Redfin — useful for Coming Soon and Private Exclusive listings where available. (redfin.com)
  • Auction.com — best for distressed, foreclosure, and bank-owned properties that often never hit the normal MLS path. (auction.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by best for homebuyers vs investors.

Which national property portals are best if I want a cleaner search experience? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want a cleaner, less cluttered search experience, these are usually the best bets:

  • Redfin (US) — clean UI, fast map search, fewer distractions.
  • OnTheMarket (UK) — simpler than Rightmove/Zoopla, generally less busy.
  • Domain (Australia) — polished, straightforward filtering.
  • ImmoScout24 (Germany) — strong filters, fairly organized.
  • Idealista (Spain/Portugal/Italy) — good search tools, though can feel ad-heavy.

If you’re in the UK, I’d try OnTheMarket first, then Rightmove if you want the biggest inventory.

If you tell me your country, I can name the single best portal for that market.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want the cleanest search UX, I’d start with:

  • Redfin — probably the most streamlined in the US; strong map/list views and now conversational search on web/mobile. (redfin.com)
  • Realtor.com — very tidy, with clear list/map toggles, draw-on-map search, and solid filters. (mediaroom.realtor.com)
  • Rightmove (UK) — straightforward, less cluttered than many portals, with filters front-and-center. (rightmove.co.uk)
  • Domain (Australia) — a cleaner-feeling option there, especially if you like shortlist/map-based browsing. (help.domain.com.au)

If you’re okay with a busier but very powerful experience, Zillow is great for broad search and natural-language queries. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can rank the best portals for your country specifically.

How do I find all homes for sale in a city on a national listing portal? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use the portal’s map + location filter:

  1. Search the city name in the location box.
  2. Switch to Map view.
  3. Set the filter to “For sale” and remove extras like price/type unless needed.
  4. If available, use “Draw” or polygon search to cover the whole city boundary.
  5. Zoom in/out and check for “new listings” or “expand search area.”
  6. Save the search and turn on alerts.

Best portals for this:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com

Tip: no portal is perfect for city boundaries, so cross-check at least Zillow + Realtor.com to avoid missing listings.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use the portal’s location search and filters:

  1. Go to the site/app.
  2. Enter the city name in the search bar.
  3. Set the listing type to For Sale.
  4. Open Filters and set:
    • Price range
    • Home type (house, condo, etc.)
    • Beds/baths
    • Lot size, year built, etc. if needed
  5. Make sure map view is turned on so you can see all matching homes in the city limits.
  6. If available, use sort options like newest, price, or open house.
  7. Save the search and turn on alerts if you want new listings automatically.

Tips:

  • Use the city + state to avoid wrong results.
  • Some portals include nearby suburbs by default, so check the map boundary carefully.
  • On sites like Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin, you can often draw a custom area if the city search isn’t exact.

If you want, I can give you the exact steps for one portal.

How can I search for houses within my budget on a property marketplace? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use the site’s price filter and set your max budget.

Typical steps:

  1. Go to the property marketplace.
  2. Enter the location you want.
  3. Open Filters or More filters.
  4. Set Price / Budget / Maximum price.
  5. Optionally filter by:
    • bedrooms
    • property type
    • area size
    • move-in date
  6. Sort by lowest price or best match.

If you want, I can also show you how to do this on Zillow, Rightmove, Realtor.com, or Redfin.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use the site’s price filter:

  1. Open the property marketplace.
  2. Set your budget range (e.g. max price or min/max price).
  3. Add any other filters you want:
    • location
    • bedrooms/bathrooms
    • home type
    • lot size
    • move-in date
  4. Sort results by price if needed.
  5. Save the search so you get alerts for new listings.

If you want, I can also help you set up a smart home-buying search based on your budget and location.

How do I filter home listings by number of bedrooms and bathrooms? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use the Beds / Baths filters on the home-search site or app.

Quick steps:

  1. Go to the listings page.
  2. Open Filters.
  3. Set Bedrooms (e.g., 2+ beds).
  4. Set Bathrooms (e.g., 2+ baths).
  5. Apply the filters.

If you want, I can show you how to do this on a specific site like Zillow, Redfin, or Realtor.com.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use the Beds and Baths filters in the listing search page.

Typical steps:

  1. Open the home search results.
  2. Click Filters.
  3. Set Bedrooms to the minimum you want, e.g. 3+.
  4. Set Bathrooms to the minimum you want, e.g. 2+.
  5. Apply/save the filter.

If you tell me which site or app you’re using (Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, etc.), I can give exact steps.

How do I find newly listed homes before they sell? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

To catch homes before they sell, you need the fastest listing alerts and a local agent with MLS access.

Best ways:

  1. Set instant alerts on major apps
    • Zillow
    • Redfin
    • Realtor.com
    • Homes.com

Use saved searches with:

  • “new today”
  • your price range
  • exact neighborhoods
  • “coming soon” if available
  1. Ask a buyer’s agent to set up MLS alerts
    • MLS notifications are often faster and more accurate than public sites.
    • Ask them to send you listings the moment they hit the MLS.
  2. Look for “Coming Soon” listings
    • Some agents market homes before the full launch.
    • Redfin and Realtor.com sometimes surface these.
  3. Use a local real estate agent with strong off-market access
    • Agents at Keller Williams, RE/MAX, Coldwell Banker, or Compass often know about listings early through their network.
  4. Watch hot neighborhoods daily
    • New listings in competitive areas can move in hours.
    • Check morning and evening.
  5. Get pre-approved
    • Sellers move faster on buyers who already have financing.

Best combo: Redfin + Zillow alerts + MLS alerts from a buyer’s agent

If you want, I can help you set up a perfect home-alert search for your city and budget.

retrieval Not mentioned

Fastest way: set up instant saved-search alerts on a major site like Redfin or Zillow, then have a local buyer’s agent also watch the MLS for you. Redfin says its instant alerts can go out about 15–30 minutes after a home is listed because of direct MLS integration, and Zillow/Redfin both support saved searches with new-listing notifications. (redfin.com)

What to do:

  1. Create a tight saved search

Set your exact neighborhood(s), price cap, beds/baths, and must-haves. Turn notifications to instant if possible. (support.redfin.com)

  1. Use more than one source

Run the same search on Redfin and Zillow so you don’t miss homes that surface differently across sites. Zillow notes saved searches sync and can send instant on-screen notifications and daily emails. (zillow.com)

  1. Ask an agent to set MLS alerts

A good buyer’s agent can monitor new MLS listings and often hear about homes before they hit public sites. That’s the best way to catch homes early. (redfin.com)

  1. Watch open houses and “coming soon”

Open-house schedules can help you spot fresh inventory quickly, and some markets have “coming soon” listings on Zillow. (support.redfin.com)

  1. Be ready to move fast

Have pre-approval done, tour slots open, and your offer materials ready—because the best listings can move quickly. (realtor.com)

If you want, I can help you build the best saved-search setup for your city and budget.

How do I look for homes with photos and virtual tours online? problem 2,400/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use major real estate sites/apps that show photos and 3D tours:

  • Zillow — great filters for photos, 3D Home tours, and video walkthroughs
  • Redfin — strong map search and often has virtual tours plus detailed photos
  • Realtor.com — lots of listings with photo galleries, 3D tours, and open house info
  • Homes.com — easy browsing with high-res photos and virtual tour tags
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood info along with photos

Quick tips:

  1. Search by city/ZIP on one of those sites.
  2. Filter for “3D Tour,” “Virtual Tour,” “Open House,” or “Photos.”
  3. Click listings that mention Matterport or 3D walkthroughs for the best tours.

If you want, I can also suggest the best site for your price range or city.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use real-estate sites and filter for photos, 3D tours, or virtual tours.

Good places to search:

  • Zillow
  • Redfin
  • Realtor.com
  • Homes.com
  • Local MLS/public listing sites

What to do:

  1. Search by city, ZIP code, or neighborhood.
  2. Turn on filters like:
    • Photos
    • 3D tour
    • Virtual tour
    • Video tour
    • Open house
  3. Open listings with:
    • lots of interior photos
    • floor plans
    • “Matterport” or “3D walkthrough” labels
  4. Use map view to compare nearby homes.
  5. Check the listing description for tour links.

Tips:

  • If a listing doesn’t show a tour, sometimes the agent’s site has one.
  • For the best results, search with terms like:

“homes for sale with virtual tour in [city]”

If you want, I can also help you find homes in a specific city or price range.

How can I find listings near a specific school or neighborhood? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use the map/search tools on a real estate site or app and search by the school or neighborhood name.

Good options:

  • Zillow: search the school/neighborhood, then use Map View and draw a boundary
  • Redfin: great for school boundary and neighborhood filtering
  • Realtor.com: search by area, then narrow by school district
  • Apartments.com or HotPads: useful if you want rentals near a school

Quick steps:

  1. Type the school name or neighborhood in the search bar.
  2. Switch to map view.
  3. Zoom in and use filters like:
    • Near school / school district
    • Price
    • Beds/baths
    • Property type
  4. If available, turn on school boundaries or walkability.

If you want, I can help you find listings near a specific school or neighborhood right now.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use the map + school/neighborhood name as your anchor.

Quick ways:

  • In Zillow/Redfin/Realtor, search the school name or neighborhood.
  • Zoom the map to the area, then draw a boundary if the site allows.
  • Use filters like:
    • “within X miles”
    • school district
    • walkability
    • price / beds / baths
  • For schools, also search by:
    • district name
    • attendance zone
    • “near [school name]”

Tip: Listings near a school can be misleading if the address is close but not in the school boundary. Always verify the assigned school district.

If you want, I can help you find listings near a specific school or neighborhood right now.

How do I search for rentals that allow pets? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use rental sites’ pet-friendly filters and search keywords like “pets allowed,” “dog friendly,” or “cat friendly.”

Good places to search:

  • Zillow Rentals — filter for pets
  • Apartments.com — “Pets Allowed”
  • Rent.com — pet-friendly filter
  • HotPads — pet-friendly listings
  • Facebook Marketplace / Craigslist — search “pet friendly” (double-check details)

Also ask the landlord:

  • What pets are allowed?
  • Breed/size limits?
  • Pet deposit / pet rent?
  • Any restrictions on number of pets?

If you want, I can also give you a copy-paste message to landlords asking about pet policies.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use pet-friendly filters on rental sites.

Search terms:

  • “pet friendly apartments”
  • “houses for rent pets allowed”
  • “rentals with dogs allowed”
  • “cat friendly rentals”

Tips:

  • On sites like Zillow, Apartments.com, HotPads, or Realtor, turn on the Pets Allowed filter.
  • Check for limits on:
    • dogs/cats only
    • breed or weight restrictions
    • pet rent
    • pet deposit
  • Read the listing details carefully, then confirm with the landlord/property manager.

If you want, I can also give you a copy-paste search template for Zillow or Google.

How do I find homes with price drops on listing sites? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use the “price drop” or “price reduced” filter on major listing sites:

  • Zillow: Search an area → Filters → look for Price Reduced / Price Drop → save the search
  • Redfin: Search → FiltersPrice reduced or sort by Price reduced recently
  • Realtor.com: Search → More filtersPrice reduced
  • Trulia: Search → More filtersPrice drop

Best move: save the search and turn on alerts so you get notified when a home drops in price.

Tips:

  • Check “price history” on the listing page
  • Compare days on market and recent reductions
  • Search a wider area if inventory is low

If you want, I can give you the exact clicks for Zillow, Redfin, or Realtor.com.

retrieval Not mentioned

Look for filters like:

  • Price reduced
  • Price drop
  • Reduced listing
  • Motivated seller
  • Recent price change

Where to check:

  • Zillow: search results filters / “Price Reduction”
  • Redfin: filter for homes with price drops
  • Realtor.com: sort or filter by price changes
  • Homes.com / local MLS sites: often have “price reduced” badges

Tips:

  • Use saved searches and turn on email/app alerts for price drops.
  • Set a max price slightly below your budget so reduced homes stay in range.
  • Check the listing’s price history if available.
  • Search by days on market too—older listings are more likely to negotiate.

If you want, I can give you the exact steps for Zillow, Redfin, or Realtor.com.

How do I search for properties in another state from where I live? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Start online, then build a local team.

1) Search remotely Use big listing sites with map, filters, and saved alerts:

  • Zillow
  • Redfin
  • Realtor.com
  • Homes.com

Set filters for:

  • price, beds/baths, lot size
  • school district
  • commute/town
  • HOA, new construction, waterfront, etc.

2) Research the area Check:

  • property taxes
  • flood/fire risk
  • crime and schools
  • insurance costs
  • HOA rules
  • state/local closing costs

Tools: Google Maps, FEMA Flood Map Service, GreatSchools.

3) Find a local agent Look for a buyer’s agent in that state who does video tours and remote closings. Ask for:

  • recent sales in your target area
  • a virtual tour process
  • referrals for inspectors, lenders, and attorneys

4) Get financing lined up Talk to a lender licensed in that state. Good national options:

  • Rocket Mortgage
  • Chase Home Lending
  • Wells Fargo Home Mortgage

5) Tour remotely Ask for:

  • live FaceTime/Zoom walkthroughs
  • room measurements
  • exterior/neighbor videos
  • drone footage if needed

6) Plan for travel or closing If you find a candidate, budget for 1 trip to inspect finalists. Many closings can be done remotely with a remote online notary (RON), depending on the state.

If you want, I can give you a state-by-state checklist or help you search for homes in a specific state.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use a mix of online listings, local experts, and a clear buying plan.

How to search remotely
  1. Pick the target area first
    • Choose the state, then narrow to city/neighborhood/school district.
    • Look at commute, taxes, crime, flood risk, and amenities.
  2. Search on national listing sites
    • Use Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, and Homes.com.
    • Filter by price, home type, lot size, HOA, and days on market.
  3. Hire a local real estate agent
    • Find an agent who works in that exact market.
    • Ask for video tours, neighborhood guidance, and off-market options.
  4. Get pre-approved
    • A pre-approval letter helps if you need to act fast.
    • Also check whether the lender handles out-of-state purchases.
  5. Use virtual tools
    • Request live video walkthroughs.
    • Review 3D tours, drone footage, and neighborhood videos.
  6. Research state-specific costs
    • Property taxes
    • Transfer taxes
    • Insurance rates
    • State income tax implications
    • HOA fees
  7. Visit once before buying if possible
    • If you can, do a short trip to see your top picks in person.
Good search terms

Try:

  • “homes for sale in [city], [state]”
  • “best neighborhoods in [city], [state]”
  • “property taxes in [county], [state]”
  • “local real estate agent in [city], [state]”

If you want, I can help you build a remote home-buying checklist or find the best websites for a specific state.

How do I find all open houses near me? problem 140/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best ways to find open houses near you:

  • Zillow: Search your area, then filter for Open House.
  • Realtor.com: Use the Open House filter in the homes section.
  • Redfin: Very good for live open-house listings and map view.
  • Homes.com: Also has an open house filter.
  • Google Maps: Search “open houses near me” or “real estate open house”.

Quickest method:

  1. Open Zillow or Redfin
  2. Turn on location
  3. Set your home search area
  4. Apply the Open House filter
  5. Sort by date/time

If you want, I can also help you find them for a specific city or ZIP code.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use a few sources at once:

  • Zillow / Redfin / Realtor.com: search your area and filter for Open House
  • Google Maps: search “open houses near me”
  • Local real estate agents/brokerages: many post weekend open houses on their sites and social media
  • MLS/public listing sites: if available in your area, they often have the most complete list
  • Neighborhood signs: especially on weekends

Best method:

  1. Pick your area or ZIP code.
  2. Filter for open house or coming soon.
  3. Sort by date/time.
  4. Confirm details before driving there—times can change.

If you want, I can help you find them for a specific city or ZIP code.

Are national listing portals free to use? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Usually yes for browsing, but not always for listing.

  • Free to use for buyers/renters: Most national portals let you search, save, and contact agents for free.
  • Often paid for sellers/agents: Posting a listing or running ads is usually paid.

Examples:

  • Zillow — free for users searching homes; selling/agent tools can cost money.
  • Realtor.com — free to browse; agents pay for marketing/listing services.
  • Rightmove — free to browse; estate agents pay to advertise.
  • Zameen / 99acres — search is free; listing packages are typically paid.

If you tell me your country, I can name the main portals there and say which parts are free.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually yes for buyers/renters, but not always for sellers/agents.

  • Searching/browsing listings: often free
  • Posting a listing: often paid or limited/free trial
  • Premium features: usually paid

If you mean a specific portal, tell me which one and I’ll check.

Do home listing websites charge buyers any fees? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Usually no—most home listing websites (Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, Trulia) are free for buyers to browse.

What buyers may still pay:

  • Agent commission: often paid by the seller, but it can indirectly affect the deal
  • Closing costs: lender fees, title fees, taxes, etc.
  • Optional paid services: premium home reports, mortgage tools, or buyer-agent services on some platforms

If you want, I can break down which sites are free vs. which ones sell premium tools.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually no: home listing sites like Zillow and Redfin are free to browse for buyers. Zillow says listing a home on Zillow is free, and its revenue comes from ads, agent connections, and mortgage-related services; Redfin also offers free home search and notes that any buyer-agent fee is tied to representation, not just browsing. (zillow.com)

But buyers can still pay fees indirectly, depending on what they use:

  • Buyer’s agent fees/commissions if you hire an agent. (redfin.com)
  • Mortgage or lender fees if you finance through a linked lender. (zillow.com)
  • Optional service fees for some tools or premium services. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can tell you which fees are common when buying a house in the U.S. versus which are paid by sellers.

What is the cost to advertise a home on a national listing portal? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

It depends on which portal and what kind of exposure you want.

  • Basic listing via MLS-fed portals (e.g., Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin): usually included in your agent/listing fee, not paid directly to the portal.
  • For-sale-by-owner (FSBO) listings on sites like ForSaleByOwner.com: often about $100–$400 one-time, depending on package.
  • Paid promotion / boosted visibility on portals like Zillow Premier Agent or Realtor.com: typically custom pricing, often hundreds to thousands per month, based on ZIP code and competition.

If you want, I can give you a portal-by-portal cost breakdown for your area.

retrieval Not mentioned

It depends on the portal and how you list:

  • MLS-synced listings: often $0 to the homeowner if your agent posts it to the MLS; portals like Zillow and Redfin then display it automatically. (zillow.com)
  • FSBO / flat-fee listing services: commonly $0–$400 for a basic MLS/online listing package. Realtor.com’s guidance says a flat-fee MLS listing can be up to $400. (sell.realtor.com)
  • Premium/paid marketing: can cost more, depending on upgrades, lead-gen, or agent services. Zillow also notes that some agent connections are paid advertising, while consumer home listings themselves are free. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can break this down by Zillow vs Realtor.com vs Redfin or by FSBO vs agent listing.

How much does it cost to list a property on a real estate portal? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

It depends on the portal and how you’re listing:

  • Zillow / Trulia / Realtor.com / Redfin:

Usually free for standard listings if your property is already in the MLS through an agent/broker.

  • For Sale By Owner (FSBO) / direct owner listing:

Often free or low-cost, but some portals charge for premium exposure. Example: Zillow For Sale By Owner is typically free to post, while Homes.com and others may offer paid boosts.

  • Paid featured listings / advertising:

Commonly range from $20–$500+ per month depending on the portal, market, and placement.

  • Commercial portals or premium markets:

Costs can be much higher, sometimes $1,000s per month for top placement.

If you want, I can give you the exact listing cost for a specific portal like Zillow, Realtor.com, Rightmove, Zoopla, or Homes.com.

retrieval Not mentioned

It depends on how you list:

  • Direct homeowner/FSBO listing on Zillow: free. Zillow says you can “list your home for free.” (zillow.com)
  • FSBO with MLS exposure: often a flat fee up to about $400 for MLS listing services, according to Realtor.com’s seller guide. (sell.realtor.com)
  • Using a real estate agent: typically 5–6% commission total, per Realtor.com; Redfin notes it offers lower listing-fee options in some markets, including as low as 1% in certain cases. (realtor.com)

If you tell me which portal and which country, I can give you the exact current fee.

Do national property portals have free listings for agents? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Sometimes — but often only in a limited way.

Examples:

  • Zillow / Realtor.com: usually not true free agent “full listings” in the same way as paid MLS-based tools.
  • Rightmove / Zoopla (UK): typically require agency subscriptions.
  • realestate.com.au / Domain: usually paid for agent listings.
  • ImmobilienScout24 / idealista: commonly paid or freemium, depending on country and package.

So the short answer: yes, some portals have free or trial listings for agents, but most national portals charge for regular agent advertising.

If you tell me your country, I can name the exact portals and which ones are free.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually yes for basic exposure, but not always for full agent access.

Examples:

  • Zillow (US): agents can post listings for free, and free agent profiles are available. (zillow.com)
  • Realtor.com (US): Realtor.com says Realtor® listings display on the site for free, and free agent-profile/training resources exist. (realtor.com)
  • Rightmove (UK): agent membership/listing products are subscription-based, though some agent-profile features are free. (media.rightmove.co.uk)

So the short answer is: some national portals do offer free listings for agents, but many limit free access to basic profiles or syndication and charge for premium placement or full membership. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can compare free agent listing options by country.

What is the pricing for premium listing placement on property websites? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Pricing for premium listing placement on property websites varies a lot by site, market, and ad format:

  • Basic “featured”/boosted listings: often $20–$200 per listing/month
  • Higher-visibility placement on local portals: often $100–$500+ per listing/month
  • Broker/agent advertising packages on major portals: often $500–$5,000+ per month
  • Large-market/display campaigns: can run $1,000s to $10,000s+

Common platforms to check:

  • Zillow Premier Agent / Showcase
  • Realtor.com
  • Homes.com
  • Redfin (more limited ad options)
  • Trulia
  • Local MLS/portal partners

If you want the best value, ask each site for:

  1. CPL/lead pricing
  2. Zip-code exclusivity
  3. Impression and click estimates
  4. Featured placement duration
  5. Setup fees or minimum spend

If you tell me your city/country and whether you’re an agent, broker, or property owner, I can narrow it to realistic price ranges.

retrieval Not mentioned

Pricing varies a lot by site and market:

  • Zillow Premier Agent: no fixed public rate; Zillow says pricing varies by market/home values, and it cites an average cost per connection of $223 in major metros and $139 in non-major metros. (zillow.com)
  • Apartments.com Premium: pricing varies by property type and is shown inside the upgrade flow; the premium term lasts 30 days. (propertyhelp.apartments.com)
  • Rightmove Premium Listing: Rightmove’s current sales leaflet shows a recommended price of £250 RRP for a Premium Listing. (hub.rightmove.co.uk)
  • Realtor.com Spotlight Listings: Realtor.com says pricing is shown in real time for your ZIP code in its online store; it doesn’t publish one flat national price. (realtor.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to one website (e.g. Zillow, Realtor.com, Apartments.com) and tell you the current pricing model for that platform.

Are there any free national listing portals for home searches? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—if you mean free to browse national home-search portals, here are some big ones:

U.S.

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Trulia
  • Homes.com

UK

  • Rightmove
  • Zoopla
  • OnTheMarket

Canada

  • REW.ca
  • Realtor.ca

Most are free for buyers/renters to search, save homes, and set alerts. If you tell me your country, I can give you the best free national portals there.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — for home searches, several major national portals are free to use, including Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin, and Homes.com. They all let you browse listings, filter by price/bed/bath, and save searches at no cost. (zillow.com)

A practical shortlist:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com (zillow.com)

One caveat: the portals are free for buyers/searchers, but listing exposure for sellers/agents may involve paid products on some platforms. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can also rank them for best search filters, most accurate listings, or best for FSBO/private listings.

How much does a featured home listing cost online? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

It varies a lot by site and market.

Typical ranges:

  • $0–$100 for a basic “boost” or promoted listing on smaller sites/social ads
  • $100–$500+ on major real estate portals for featured placement
  • $20–$50 per day for ad-style promotion on platforms like Facebook Ads or Google Ads if you’re driving traffic yourself

Examples:

  • Zillow Premier Agent / featured exposure: usually sold to agents, pricing is market-based and can run hundreds to thousands per month
  • Realtor.com: agent-ad products are also quote-based
  • Redfin: generally not sold as standalone featured listings like classifieds sites

If you mean for a homeowner selling a property, the best-known paid options are usually:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Homes.com
  • Facebook Marketplace + boosted ad

If you tell me your country and the website, I can give you a more exact estimate.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean a featured/promoted home listing on a real estate site, the cost usually varies by platform and market—there isn’t one fixed price. On Zillow, basic listing placement is free, but paid advertising via Premier Agent varies by market and competition; Zillow says the average cost per connection is $223 in major metro areas and $139 in non-major metros. (zillow.com)

If you want, I can look up the pricing for a specific site like Zillow, Realtor.com, Homes.com, or Facebook Marketplace.

What are the best value national listing portals for agents? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most agents, the best value national portals are:

  1. Realtor.com
    • Usually the best all-around ROI for serious buyer leads.
    • Strong brand trust, high-intent traffic, and good listing exposure.
  2. Zillow Premier Agent
    • Best for raw lead volume.
    • More expensive, but often worth it in high-traffic markets if you have fast follow-up.
  3. Homes.com
    • Often the best emerging value play.
    • Lower competition than Zillow/Realtor.com in many markets, with improving traffic and less crowded leads.
  4. Redfin
    • Good for visibility, especially in metro areas.
    • Strong consumer audience, but less flexible for traditional agent lead gen than Zillow/Realtor.com.
  5. Trulia
    • Useful mainly because it’s part of the Zillow ecosystem.
    • Not usually the best standalone spend, but can add incremental exposure.

Best value by goal:

  • Best overall ROI: Realtor.com
  • Most leads: Zillow Premier Agent
  • Best budget-friendly upside: Homes.com
  • Best metro exposure: Redfin

If you want, I can rank these by cost, lead quality, and best use case for your specific market.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most agents, the best value national portals are:

  1. Homes.com — best if you want listing-first exposure and lead control. It says buyers are connected to the listing agent 100% of the time, and its network is over 100M monthly visitors. It also offers subscription-style memberships/boosts, so the value case is strong if you list regularly. (homes.com)
  2. Realtor.com — best middle-ground for reach + audience quality. Realtor.com says it reaches 73M unique visitors and offers targeted ads, email, video, and custom content aimed at serious shoppers. (realtor.com)
  3. Zillow Premier Agent — best if you want the largest consumer flow and are willing to pay for it. Zillow says pricing varies by market, with average cost per connection of $223 in major metros and $139 in non-major metros, so it can work well but is usually the priciest option. (zillow.com)
  4. Redfin — best for brand advertising, not usually the top value for direct listing lead gen. Redfin’s ad page is positioned around display/native/email campaigns and says 48M real estate enthusiasts visit Redfin properties each month. (redfin.com)

My short take:

  • Best overall value: Homes.com
  • Best balanced buy: Realtor.com
  • Best for scale (if budget allows): Zillow
  • Best for branding: Redfin (homes.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a budget-based recommendation (e.g. under $500/mo, $1k/mo, $2k+/mo).

Do property marketplaces offer paid ads for real estate listings? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes. Most property marketplaces offer paid ad / promoted listing options for real estate.

Common formats:

  • Featured/Boosted listings — higher placement in search results
  • Premium listings — extra photos, badges, longer exposure
  • Sponsored ads — banner or native ads on the platform
  • Agent profile ads — promote an agent or agency, not just one property

Examples:

  • Zillow Premier Agent (US)
  • Realtor.com Advertising Solutions
  • Rightmove Featured Property (UK)
  • Zoopla Premium Listings (UK)
  • PropertyGuru Featured Listings (Asia)
  • Domain Premier / Highlight listings (Australia)
  • Realestate.com.au Premiere products

If you want, I can compare the best paid listing options by country or platform.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes. Many property marketplaces offer paid promotion for listings, usually as premium placement, boosted visibility, or sponsored listing products rather than “ads” in the social-media sense. Zillow offers paid agent/listing products like Premier Agent and Listing Showcase, which can give listings priority placement and promoted visibility. (zillow.com)

Realtor.com also sells advertising and listing-visibility products, including Spotlight Listings, which are designed to increase views and placement in search/results. (realtor.com)

So the short answer is: yes, often—but usually through the agent/broker and as premium listing tools, not just a simple “pay to advertise this house” button. (zillow.com)

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best national listing portals for finding homes across the U.S.?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Best national listing portals in the U.S.:

  1. Zillow — biggest audience, huge inventory, very easy to use
  2. Realtor.com — often the most directly tied to MLS data; very reliable for fresh listings
  3. Redfin — clean search tools, strong map/price filters, good market data
  4. Homes.com — fast-growing, solid nationwide coverage, simple browsing
  5. Trulia — good neighborhood/lifestyle info, now part of the Zillow network
  6. Apartments.com — best if you’re also looking for rentals, not just for-sale homes
  7. HomeFinder — useful secondary portal with broad U.S. coverage

If you want the shortest answer: Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin are the top three to start with.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The best national home-listing portals in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow — biggest overall, very broad inventory, strong filters, Zestimate, good for buying and renting.
  • Realtor.com — often the most directly connected to MLS data, usually very up to date.
  • Redfin — great search tools, map features, and price-history data; strong for buyers.
  • Homes.com — fast-growing national portal with solid listings and a clean interface.
  • Trulia — useful if you care about neighborhood info, schools, and local context.
  • Apartments.com — best for rental homes, apartments, and multi-family listings nationwide.

If you want the shortest “best overall” list: Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

The best national listing portals in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow — biggest all-around search experience; strong map tools, estimates, and alerts.
  • Realtor.com — very good for accurate, up-to-date MLS-style listings.
  • Redfin — great search filters, fast updates, and strong market data.
  • Homes.com — improving fast; clean interface and broad listing coverage.
  • Trulia — useful if you want neighborhood insights alongside listings.
  • Apartments.com — best for rentals, especially apartments and multifamily units.

If you want just the top 3 for most buyers: Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

The best national U.S. home listing portals are:

  • Zillow — biggest reach, very user-friendly, lots of filters, strong for for-sale and rent listings.
  • Realtor.com — often the most current MLS-linked data; great if you want very broad, reliable listings.
  • Redfin — excellent search tools, map view, price history, and market data.
  • Homes.com — solid national coverage, increasingly strong search experience, backed by the CoStar network.
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood info, commute, and lifestyle details, though it overlaps heavily with Zillow.

If you want the short answer: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin covers most needs.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  1. best for accuracy,
  2. best for fastest listings, or
  3. best for mobile app experience.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

The best national U.S. home-search portals are:

  1. Zillow — biggest reach, strongest filters, lots of photos, maps, and estimate tools.
  2. Realtor.com — often the most up-to-date MLS-based listings; very solid for accuracy.
  3. Redfin — great UX, fast updates, and useful agent/search tools.
  4. Homes.com — strong national coverage and simpler browsing experience.
  5. Trulia — good neighborhood info, commute, and lifestyle context.
  6. Movoto — decent broad search, especially for casual browsing.

If you want the shortest “best overall” list: Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

If you want, I can also give you the best portal by use case (best for accurate listings, rentals, luxury homes, new construction, etc.).

Which national listing portal is most popular for home buyers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most popular home-buying listing portal is Zillow.

Close alternatives:

  • Realtor.com — very strong MLS coverage
  • Redfin — popular for search tools and estimates

If you meant another country, tell me which one and I’ll name the top portal there.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., Zillow is generally the most popular national listing portal for home buyers.

Other major ones:

  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin

If you tell me the country, I can name the top portal there.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

In the U.S., Zillow is generally the most popular national listing portal for home buyers.

Close runners-up:

  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin

If you want, I can also compare them for accuracy, inventory, and buyer tools.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most popular national listing portal for home buyers is Zillow.

Other major ones:

  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com

If you want, I can also rank them by traffic, user trust, or listing coverage.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

In the U.S., Zillow is generally the most popular national listing portal for home buyers.

Close alternatives:

  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin

If you mean a different country, tell me which one and I’ll name the top portal there.

What are the top national real estate listing websites? 20/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top national real estate listing websites in the U.S. include:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer-facing search site, lots of listings and home value data
  • Realtor.com — official site tied to the National Association of Realtors; very broad MLS coverage
  • Redfin — strong search tools, maps, and agent/service integration
  • Trulia — owned by Zillow; good neighborhood and lifestyle info
  • Homes.com — fast-growing listing site from CoStar
  • eXp Realty / eXp World properties — not a pure portal, but large national brokerage listing presence
  • Compass — major national brokerage with a polished listing experience
  • Century 21 — large national franchise with wide listing reach
  • Coldwell Banker — major national brand with many listings
  • Keller Williams — huge brokerage network and strong listing coverage

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best by category (accuracy, MLS coverage, luxury homes, rentals), or
  • a ranked top 5 for buyers/sellers.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Top national U.S. real estate listing websites:

  1. Zillow — the biggest consumer-facing home search site; strong map search, estimates, and filters.
  2. Realtor.com — very broad listing coverage, often fastest to update from MLS feeds.
  3. Redfin — good search tools, market data, and agent support in many metros.
  4. Homes.com — large national inventory, improving fast, good for browsing listings.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow; useful for neighborhood insights and lifestyle info.
  6. Movoto — broad national search site with simple browsing and local market info.
  7. Homesnap — strong MLS-connected listing data; more common among agents and buyers in some areas.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for buyers, best listing accuracy, or best for sellers.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Top national U.S. real estate listing websites:

  1. Zillow — biggest consumer-facing search site; strong map/search tools and Zestimate.
  2. Realtor.com — highly comprehensive MLS-based listings; very strong for fresh inventory.
  3. Redfin — good search experience, fast updates, and strong agent/data tools.
  4. Homes.com — major national site with growing listings coverage and clean UX.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow; useful neighborhood/lifestyle info plus listings.
  6. Homesnap — MLS-connected app/site, especially useful for agents and active listings.
  7. Movoto — broad national search with straightforward filters.
  8. HomeFinder — long-running national listing site with rental and purchase search.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  • best for buyers
  • best for rentals
  • best for new listings
  • best MLS coverage
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Top U.S. national real estate listing websites include:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer brand; strong for homes for sale, rentals, and Zestimates.
  • Realtor.com — official site of the National Association of Realtors; very broad MLS coverage.
  • Redfin — good listing search plus brokerage tools, often with detailed market data.
  • Trulia — owned by Zillow; useful for neighborhood and lifestyle info.
  • Homes.com — major listings site with growing national reach.
  • Movoto — listing search with local market data and agent connections.
  • Coldwell Banker, Century 21, Keller Williams, RE/MAX — large brokerage sites with national listing networks, though not as centralized as the big portals.

If you want the best all-around options, start with Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top national real estate listing websites in the U.S. include:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer-facing search site; strong listings, estimates, and filters
  • Realtor.com — official National Association of Realtors site; often very complete MLS data
  • Redfin — good map/search tools, pricing insights, and agent services
  • Homes.com — fast-growing national portal with strong listing coverage
  • Trulia — owned by Zillow; good for neighborhood and lifestyle info
  • Apartments.com — best-known national site for apartment rentals
  • LoopNet — leading national site for commercial real estate
  • Apartments for Rent / Rent.com — solid rental listing platforms

If you want, I can also rank them by best for buyers, sellers, rentals, or commercial properties.

What are the most recommended property listing portals nationwide?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most recommended nationwide property listing portals are:

  • Zillow — biggest mainstream audience; strong for buying, renting, and market data
  • Realtor.com — very accurate MLS-fed listings; popular with serious buyers
  • Redfin — great search tools, price history, and user-friendly maps
  • Trulia — strong for neighborhood insights and rental/home searches
  • Homes.com — growing fast; solid nationwide inventory
  • Apartments.com — best for rental listings, especially apartments
  • HotPads — good for rentals in urban areas
  • LoopNet — top portal for commercial real estate
  • HomeFinder — broad residential search coverage
  • Century 21 / Coldwell Banker / Keller Williams — useful if you want agent-backed local inventory through major brokerage sites

If you want, I can also rank these by best for buyers, sellers, or renters.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most recommended nationwide property listing portals are:

  1. Zillow — biggest consumer-facing portal; great for broad inventory and search tools.
  2. Realtor.com — very strong MLS data coverage and often more up-to-date than others.
  3. Redfin — excellent for search UX, market insights, and agent services.
  4. Homes.com — fast-growing portal with strong listings and simple browsing.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow; good neighborhood and lifestyle info.
  6. LoopNet — best-known nationwide portal for commercial real estate.
  7. Apartments.com — top choice for nationwide rentals/apartments.

If you want, I can also rank these by accuracy, inventory, rentals, or commercial properties.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most recommended nationwide property listing portals are:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer-facing reach; best overall for buyers/renters
  • Realtor.com — strong MLS coverage and generally reliable listing data
  • Redfin — great search tools, map filters, and home-value estimates
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood insights and renter-friendly searches
  • Homes.com — growing fast, solid alternative for browsing listings
  • Apartments.com — best for rental listings, especially apartments
  • Craigslist — still useful for local rentals, but less verified

For agents/brokers, also look at:

  • MLS systems (most accurate source)
  • LoopNet — best for commercial properties
  • CoStar — premium commercial platform

If you tell me your country, I can give the best nationwide portals there too.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most recommended nationwide property listing portals are:

  1. Zillow — biggest audience, very strong for buyers/renters/sellers
  2. Realtor.com — excellent MLS coverage and generally very up-to-date
  3. Redfin — great search tools, strong for home buyers
  4. Homes.com — growing fast, good nationwide reach
  5. Trulia — solid for neighborhood insights, owned by Zillow
  6. Apartments.com — one of the best for rental listings
  7. Apartment List — good renter-focused portal with matching tools

If you want the best overall picks:

  • For buying/selling: Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin
  • For rentals: Apartments.com, Apartment List
  • For broad visibility: Zillow + Realtor.com

If you mean a different country, tell me which one and I’ll give the best nationwide portals there.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the most widely recommended nationwide property listing portals are:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer audience, strong for buying/renting/selling
  • Realtor.com — very reliable MLS-backed listings, strong search filters
  • Redfin — great user experience and updated listings
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood/lifestyle insights, now part of Zillow
  • Homes.com — fast-growing portal with broad national coverage
  • Apartments.com — best for rental listings
  • LoopNet — top choice for commercial real estate
  • Craigslist — still useful for local rentals, but less curated

If you want, I can also rank them for buyers, sellers, landlords, or renters.

Which online listing portals show homes for sale all over the country?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

The main nationwide home-listing portals in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com
  • Trulia
  • Rocket Homes

If you want the broadest national coverage, start with Zillow and Realtor.com. If you want, I can also give you the best one for pricing accuracy, newest listings, or lowest fees.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the main national home-search portals are:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com
  • Trulia
  • Coldwell Banker
  • Century 21
  • ERA
  • Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices

For the widest nationwide coverage, start with Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

If you want, I can also list the best portals for new construction, foreclosures, or luxury homes.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

If you’re looking in the U.S., the main nationwide home-listing portals are:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Trulia
  • Homes.com
  • Movoto
  • Rocket Homes

If you want, I can also rank them by best inventory, best filters, or best for mobile app.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the main nationwide home-sale listing portals are:

  • Zillow — huge national coverage, very popular
  • Realtor.com — strong MLS-based listings, very broad coverage
  • Redfin — nationwide search plus useful price/history tools
  • Homes.com — growing national inventory
  • Trulia — now part of Zillow, still useful for neighborhood info
  • Movoto — nationwide listings in many markets
  • Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, Century 21, RE/MAX — brokerage sites with national search
  • Homesnap — MLS-focused listings and agent tools

Best starting points: Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

If you mean another country, tell me which one and I’ll list the top portals there.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the main nationwide home listing portals are:

  • Zillow
  • Realtor.com
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com
  • Trulia (owned by Zillow)
  • Movoto

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best one for buyers
  • the best one for agents
  • or a country-specific list if you mean outside the U.S.
What are the best websites for searching residential listings nationwide?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top nationwide residential listing sites:

  • Zillow — biggest overall inventory, strong filters, good maps and Zestimates.
  • Realtor.com — very strong MLS coverage and usually the most up-to-date for active listings.
  • Redfin — great search tools, price history, and easy-to-use interface.
  • Homes.com — improving fast; clean search and solid nationwide coverage.
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood info and lifestyle filters, though less comprehensive than Zillow/Realtor.
  • Apartment List / Apartments.com — best if you’re searching rentals nationwide.
  • Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, Century 21, eXp Realty — useful for brokerage-specific searches, but not as broad as the big portals.

Best overall picks:

  1. Realtor.com
  2. Zillow
  3. Redfin

If you want, I can also give you the best sites by category: homes for sale, rentals, luxury, foreclosures, or new construction.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The best nationwide residential listing sites are:

  • Zillow — biggest all-around search site for homes, rentals, and new construction.
  • Realtor.com — very strong for up-to-date MLS-backed listings.
  • Redfin — great search tools, map filters, and strong data detail.
  • Homes.com — improving fast, good nationwide coverage.
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood insights and renter-focused searches.
  • Apartments.com — best for nationwide apartment rentals.
  • LoopNet — if you also want residential investment properties or multifamily.

If you want the best single site, I’d start with Zillow and Realtor.com. If you want, I can also rank them for accuracy, UX, rentals, or off-market leads.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best nationwide residential listing sites:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer database; strong filters, photos, Zestimate, map search
  • Realtor.com — very good for current MLS-backed listings and accuracy
  • Redfin — great search tools, fast updates, and agent integration
  • Homes.com — clean interface, growing inventory, good neighborhood info
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood insights, schools, commute, and lifestyle data
  • Movoto — decent nationwide coverage and easy browsing
  • Century 21 / Coldwell Banker / Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices — good if you want brokerage-specific listing portals

If you want, I can also rank them for accuracy, inventory, or best mobile app.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Top nationwide sites for residential home searches:

  1. Zillow — Biggest inventory, strong map/search filters, good for browsing nationwide.
  2. Realtor.com — Often the most up-to-date MLS-fed listings; very solid for accuracy.
  3. Redfin — Great search tools, clean interface, and useful price/history data.
  4. Homes.com — Fast-growing site with broad coverage and simple search.
  5. Trulia — Good for neighborhood info and lifestyle filters, owned by Zillow.
  6. Homesnap — Useful listing details and agent/MLS-style data in many markets.
  7. Coldwell Banker / Keller Williams / RE/MAX — Good if you want to search within major broker networks.

If you want the best overall combo, start with Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin. If you want, I can also rank them by accuracy, inventory, or ease of use.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top nationwide residential listing sites:

  1. Zillow — huge inventory, strong map search, estimates, filters, and great mobile app.
  2. Realtor.com — very reliable MLS-fed listings, often updates quickly.
  3. Redfin — excellent search tools, listing alerts, and solid market data.
  4. Homes.com — growing fast, clean interface, good listing detail pages.
  5. Trulia — good for neighborhood info, schools, and lifestyle filters.
  6. Homesnap — useful for real-time MLS-style searches in many markets.

Best overall picks:

  • Best general search: Zillow
  • Best for listing accuracy/timeliness: Realtor.com
  • Best for data + tools: Redfin

If you want, I can also rank the best sites specifically for buying, renting, luxury homes, or new construction.

Which property marketplaces are best for house hunting nationwide?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide house hunting in the U.S., the best property marketplaces are:

  1. Zillow — best overall for listing volume, filters, photos, and browsing by area
  2. Redfin — great map search, fast updates, and solid property data
  3. Realtor.com — very good for MLS-fed listings and broad coverage
  4. Trulia — useful for neighborhood-focused search and lifestyle info
  5. Homes.com — improving fast, easy to use, good nationwide coverage

Best picks by use case:

  • Best overall: Zillow
  • Best map/search tools: Redfin
  • Best MLS-style coverage: Realtor.com
  • Best neighborhood research: Trulia
  • Best up-and-coming alternative: Homes.com

If you want, I can also rank the best ones for buyers, investors, or rental hunting.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the best nationwide house-hunting marketplaces are:

  1. Zillow — biggest all-around search experience, strong filters, good map view.
  2. Redfin — often best for fast updates, clean UI, and price history.
  3. Realtor.com — very strong MLS coverage and usually very current listings.
  4. Homes.com — improving fast, good for browsing and neighborhood info.
  5. Trulia — good for lifestyle/neighborhood data, though it shares a lot with Zillow.
  6. Movoto — useful secondary source for additional listing coverage.

Best overall: Zillow or Realtor.com Best for freshest listings: Redfin or Realtor.com Best for neighborhood research: Trulia

If you want, I can also give you the best marketplaces by country or a ranked list for buyers vs. investors.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide house hunting, the best property marketplaces are:

  1. Zillow — biggest overall inventory, strong filters, good map search, price history, and alerts.
  2. Realtor.com — often the most up-to-date MLS-fed listings; great for serious buyers.
  3. Redfin — excellent search tools, fast updates, and good for seeing comps and neighborhood data.
  4. Homes.com — cleaner experience lately, solid nationwide coverage, easy browsing.
  5. Trulia — good for neighborhood details, schools, commute, and lifestyle info.

Best overall: Zillow + Realtor.com

  • Zillow for breadth and usability
  • Realtor.com for accuracy/timeliness

If you want, I can also give you the best marketplaces by use case (cheap homes, luxury, foreclosure, new construction, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide house hunting in the U.S., the best property marketplaces are:

  1. Zillow — biggest overall inventory, strong filters, good map search, solid for first pass.
  2. Realtor.com — often the most up-to-date MLS-based listings; great if you want fresher data.
  3. Redfin — excellent search tools, fast updates, and great for tracking price drops.
  4. Homes.com — improving fast, good neighborhood info and easy browsing.
  5. Trulia — best if you care about neighborhood vibe, schools, commute, and local context.

Best pick by use case:

  • Best overall: Zillow
  • Best for accuracy/timeliness: Realtor.com
  • Best search experience: Redfin

If you want, I can also give you the best marketplaces for buying vs renting or by state/country.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide house hunting in the U.S., the best property marketplaces are:

  1. Zillow — biggest inventory, strong filters, great map search, good for browsing everywhere.
  2. Realtor.com — often fastest/most complete MLS updates, especially good for active listings.
  3. Redfin — excellent search tools, clean interface, and strong price-history/comps.
  4. Homes.com — improving fast, useful nationwide coverage, good listing details.
  5. Trulia — better for neighborhood info, crime, amenities, and lifestyle context.
  6. Homesnap — solid for MLS-based searches and mobile use in many markets.

Best overall combo:

  • Zillow for broad discovery
  • Realtor.com for fresh listings
  • Redfin for analysis and alerts

If you want, I can also rank them by best mobile app, best for off-market deals, or best for new construction.

What are the leading home search portals in the U.S.?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

The leading U.S. home search portals are:

  1. Zillow — the biggest consumer-facing real estate site; broadest listing reach and strong search tools.
  2. Realtor.com — heavily tied to MLS data; often very current and detailed.
  3. Redfin — popular for its map-based search, pricing tools, and integrated brokerage services.
  4. Trulia — now part of Zillow Group; known for neighborhood insights and lifestyle filters.
  5. Homes.com — fast-growing portal from CoStar, with a big push in marketing and listing coverage.
  6. Apartments.com — best known for rentals, but a major home/apartment search destination overall.
  7. HomeFinder — smaller, but still used for national home and rental searches.
  8. HotPads — another strong rental-focused search portal, owned by Zillow Group.

If you want, I can also rank them by traffic, listing accuracy, or best for buyers vs. renters.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The leading U.S. home search portals are:

  • Zillow — the biggest consumer-facing home search site; very broad listings and tools.
  • Realtor.com — strong MLS-based listings and widely used by buyers/sellers.
  • Redfin — popular for home search plus brokerage services and pricing insights.
  • Trulia — part of Zillow Group; good neighborhood and lifestyle data.
  • Homes.com — fast-growing portal from CoStar with heavy marketing.
  • Apartments.com — best known for rentals, but a major U.S. property search brand.
  • LoopNet — mainly for commercial real estate, not residential.

If you mean single-family home buying, the top 3 are usually Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

The leading home search portals in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow — the biggest consumer-facing home search site
  • Realtor.com — strong MLS-backed listings, closely tied to the National Association of Realtors
  • Redfin — popular for search tools, market data, and brokerage services
  • Homes.com — growing fast, especially after major parent-company investment
  • Trulia — part of Zillow Group, still widely used for neighborhood and listing info
  • Apartments.com — best-known for rentals, especially apartments
  • Movoto — smaller than the top three, but still a recognized search portal

If you want, I can also rank them by traffic, listing accuracy, or best for buyers vs. renters.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

The leading U.S. home search portals are:

  • Zillow — the biggest all-around home search site
  • Realtor.com — official MLS-focused listings portal
  • Redfin — strong search tools and agent integration
  • Homes.com — fast-growing portal from CoStar
  • Trulia — now part of Zillow, still widely used
  • Apartments.com — best-known for rentals, not just homes
  • Homesnap — popular with agents and MLS-connected searches

If you want, I can also rank them by traffic, listing accuracy, or best for buyers vs. renters.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

The main home search portals in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow — the biggest general-purpose home search site; very broad listings, estimates, and filters.
  • Realtor.com — closely tied to MLS data; often strong on fresh listings and detailed property info.
  • Redfin — popular for its agent integration, map tools, and pricing insights.
  • Homes.com — growing fast, backed by CoStar; increasingly competitive in listings and search.
  • Trulia — owned by Zillow; useful for neighborhood-focused search and lifestyle data.
  • Apartments.com — best known for rentals rather than for-sale homes.
  • Homesnap — more agent/MLS-oriented, but still used for home search in some markets.

If you want, I can also rank them by traffic, listing accuracy, or best for buyers vs. renters.

Which national real estate marketplaces are worth using?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

If you’re looking at national real estate marketplaces, the ones most worth using in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow — best all-around for browsing inventory, filters, and market data
  • Realtor.com — usually strongest for accurate, timely MLS-based listings
  • Redfin — great UX, helpful price history, and strong map/search tools
  • Homes.com — improving fast; worth checking because it aggregates a lot of listings
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood/lifestyle info, though it’s basically Zillow-adjacent now
  • LoopNet — the go-to for commercial real estate
  • Apartments.com — best for rentals/apartments nationally
  • HotPads — good for rental searches, especially in major metro areas
  • LandWatch — strong if you’re looking for land, farms, or rural property

My short take:

  • Buying a home: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin
  • Renting: Apartments.com + Zillow Rentals
  • Commercial: LoopNet
  • Land/rural: LandWatch

If you want, I can also rank them by best for buyers, sellers, renters, or investors.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean U.S. national real estate marketplaces, the main ones worth using are:

  • Zillow — biggest reach, best general-purpose search, lots of photos/data.
  • Realtor.com — often the most accurate MLS-fed listings, very solid for active buyers.
  • Redfin — best for usability, map search, and many markets have strong agent support.
  • Homes.com — growing fast, simple interface, decent for browsing.
  • Trulia — still useful for neighborhood info and lifestyle filters, but less essential now.

For investors / off-market / deal finding:

  • LoopNet — best-known commercial marketplace.
  • Crexi — strong for commercial listings and broker network.
  • Auction.com — foreclosure and auction properties.
  • LandWatch / Land.com — best for land and rural properties.

My quick recommendation:

  • Buyers: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin
  • Sellers: Zillow and Realtor.com exposure matters most
  • Investors: LoopNet, Crexi, Auction.com

If you want, I can also rank them by best for buyers, sellers, rentals, or investors.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean U.S. national real estate marketplaces, the ones worth using are:

  • Zillow — best all-around for broad inventory, filters, and market data
  • Realtor.com — often the most reliable for fresh MLS-backed listings
  • Redfin — great search UX, map tools, and price history
  • Homes.com — improving fast; good if you want another broad listing source
  • Trulia — useful mainly for neighborhood insights and lifestyle data
  • Apartments.com — best for rentals
  • LoopNet — best for commercial real estate

Best picks by use case:

  • Buying a home: Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin
  • Renting: Apartments.com + Zillow Rentals
  • Commercial: LoopNet

If you tell me your country and whether you’re buying, renting, or investing, I can narrow it to the best 3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you’re in the U.S., the national real estate marketplaces worth using are:

  • Zillow — best all-around for listings, estimates, and filters
  • Redfin — great search experience, often fastest updates, strong for buyers
  • Realtor.com — very solid listing data and broad coverage
  • Homes.com — improving fast, good alternative to Zillow
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood info and lifestyle data
  • Apartments.com — best for rentals
  • HotPads — good for apartment rentals in cities

My quick take:

  • Buying: Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com
  • Renting: Apartments.com, HotPads, Zillow
  • Neighborhood research: Trulia, Zillow
  • Best single app to start with: Zillow or Redfin

If you tell me your country and whether you’re buying, selling, or renting, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean major real estate marketplaces by country, the ones most worth using are:

  • US: Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, Homes.com
  • UK: Rightmove, Zoopla
  • Canada: REW.ca, Zolo, Realtor.ca
  • Australia: realestate.com.au, Domain
  • New Zealand: Trade Me Property, realestate.co.nz

Best overall picks (by use case):

  • Buying/selling: Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com
  • Rentals: Apartments.com, Zillow Rentals, Zumper
  • Fastest market coverage: Rightmove (UK), realestate.com.au (Australia)

If you tell me your country, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options there.

What are the most popular sites for browsing homes for sale?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular sites for browsing homes for sale are:

  • Zillow — biggest overall audience; great for broad searching and neighborhood info
  • Realtor.com — very strong for accurate MLS listings and up-to-date inventory
  • Redfin — popular for clean search tools, map view, and pricing data
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood-focused browsing and lifestyle info
  • Homes.com — growing fast, easy to browse listings
  • Movoto — simple search experience, good for comparing areas
  • Compass — useful if you want a polished agent-led experience
  • Coldwell Banker, Century 21, Keller Williams, ERA — good brokerage sites with local listings

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best site for first-time buyers,
  2. the best site for rental-to-buy comparisons, or
  3. the best sites by country.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular home-search sites in the U.S. are:

  • Zillow — biggest overall for browsing listings, estimates, and neighborhood info
  • Redfin — strong search tools and updated listing data
  • Realtor.com — very popular and closely tied to MLS listings
  • Homes.com — fast-growing, easy-to-browse listings
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood details and lifestyle info
  • Compass — popular in many major markets, especially higher-end homes
  • Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, Century 21, RE/MAX — good if you want listings from a specific brokerage

If you want, I can also give you the best sites for:

  • cheap homes
  • luxury homes
  • new construction
  • foreclosures
  • international homes
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular sites for browsing homes for sale are:

  • Zillow — biggest all-around search site
  • Realtor.com — very strong for MLS-based listings
  • Redfin — great maps, search tools, and price history
  • Homes.com — growing fast, lots of listing coverage
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood info
  • Compass — more agent-focused, but good listings in many markets
  • Opendoor — good for direct home-buying inventory in some areas

If you want, I can also give you the best site for first-time buyers, luxury homes, or off-market listings.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular sites for browsing homes for sale are:

  • Zillow — biggest name overall; huge listings, photos, maps, and estimates
  • Realtor.com — very complete MLS-based listings, often the most up-to-date
  • Redfin — great search filters, market data, and a polished app
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood info, schools, and lifestyle details
  • Homes.com — simple browsing with lots of listing coverage
  • Century 21 / Coldwell Banker / Keller Williams — useful if you want to browse directly through major brokerages

If you want, I can also give you the best site by use case (cheap homes, luxury homes, new construction, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular home-search sites are:

  • Zillow — biggest general-purpose listing site
  • Realtor.com — very widely used, often strong on MLS data
  • Redfin — great search tools and pricing history
  • Homes.com — growing fast, easy browsing
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood info
  • Movoto — simple search and alerts
  • Coldwell Banker, Keller Williams, Century 21 — useful if you want brokerage-specific listings

If you want, I can also rank the best ones for:

  • first-time buyers
  • luxury homes
  • rental-to-buy search
  • off-market / MLS listings
What are the best real estate portals for buyers and renters nationwide?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide buyers and renters, the strongest real estate portals are:

Best all-around
  • Zillow — biggest inventory for homes and rentals, great filters, maps, and alerts.
  • Realtor.com — very strong for MLS accuracy and listing freshness, especially for buyers.
  • Redfin — great search tools, price history, and buyer-focused data.
Best for renters
  • Apartments.com — best overall for apartments and large rental inventory.
  • Zumper — strong for apartment searching and fast applications.
  • HotPads — very good map-based rental search, especially in cities.
Best for homebuyers
  • Homes.com — improving quickly, simple search, good nationwide coverage.
  • Trulia — useful neighborhood info, commute, and lifestyle data.
  • Movoto — decent buyer search and local market browsing.
If you want commercial too
  • LoopNet — best-known nationwide portal for commercial real estate.
Quick picks
  • Buyers: Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin
  • Renters: Apartments.com, Zillow Rentals, HotPads

If you want, I can also rank them by best UX, most listings, or most accurate MLS data.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best nationwide real estate portals for buyers and renters:

Best overall
  • Zillow — biggest listing inventory, strong search filters, great for both homes and rentals.
  • Realtor.com — very good for accurate MLS-based listings, especially for buyers.
  • Redfin — best for buyers who want deeper market data and alerts; also good rentals in many markets.
Best for renters
  • Apartments.com — best overall rental portal for apartments nationwide.
  • Zillow Rentals — widest reach for houses, condos, and apartments.
  • HotPads — strong for urban rental searches and map-based browsing.
Best for buyers
  • Realtor.com — excellent for current listings and fast updates.
  • Zillow — best overall discovery and broad inventory.
  • Redfin — best for data-driven buyers and competitive-market tools.
Good extras
  • Trulia — helpful for neighborhood info, commute, schools, and local insights.
  • Homes.com — improving fast; worth checking for extra inventory.
If you only want 3
  1. Zillow
  2. Realtor.com
  3. Apartments.com for rentals / Redfin for buyers

If you want, I can also rank them by best for luxury, best for first-time buyers, or best for apartment rentals.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Best nationwide real estate portals for buyers and renters:

For buyers

  1. Zillow — biggest inventory, strong search filters, good estimates and map tools.
  2. Realtor.com — usually the best for up-to-date MLS listings and timely status changes.
  3. Redfin — great for buyers who want strong map search, comps, and agent support.
  4. Trulia — useful if you care about neighborhood insights, schools, and lifestyle data.

For renters

  1. Apartments.com — best overall for apartments nationwide; large inventory and solid search tools.
  2. Zillow Rentals — broad coverage, especially for houses and apartment listings.
  3. HotPads — strong for urban rentals and map-based searching.
  4. Rent.com — decent nationwide rental listings and simple interface.
  5. Apartment List — good for matching renters to listings based on preferences.

Best all-around picks

  • Buyers: Zillow + Realtor.com
  • Renters: Apartments.com + Zillow Rentals

If you want, I can also rank them by accuracy, inventory size, fees, or ease of use.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide home search, the best portals are usually:

Best all-around
  • Zillow — biggest inventory, great filters, strong for both buying and renting.
  • Realtor.com — often the most up-to-date MLS-style listings for buyers.
  • Redfin — excellent search tools, map view, and buyer-friendly data.
Best for renters
  • Apartments.com — best overall for apartments and larger rental inventory.
  • Zumper — good for fast rental search and applying.
  • HotPads — especially strong for rentals in city/suburban markets.
  • Trulia Rentals — solid neighborhood-focused rental search.
Best for buyers
  • Realtor.com
  • Zillow
  • Redfin
  • Homes.com — improving fast and worth checking alongside the big three.
My quick ranking
  • Buyers: Realtor.com, Redfin, Zillow
  • Renters: Apartments.com, Zillow, HotPads

If you want, I can also give you the best portal by state or by home type (houses, apartments, luxury, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide U.S. home search, the best portals are:

  • Zillow — biggest inventory, strongest filters, good for both buyers and renters
  • Realtor.com — very reliable listings, often more accurate/updated than others
  • Redfin — great search UX, strong data, good for buyers tracking market trends
  • Apartments.com — best for rental apartments nationwide
  • Apartment List — strong renter matching and apartment search
  • Trulia — good neighborhood info and renter-friendly search
  • Homes.com — improving fast, good for browsing homes for sale and rent
  • HotPads — solid for rentals, especially in bigger cities

Best overall for buyers: Zillow or Realtor.com Best overall for renters: Apartments.com or Apartment List Best “data + search experience”: Redfin

If you want, I can also rank them by accuracy, inventory, or user experience.

Which listing sites have the most homes across the country?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

In the U.S., the biggest nationwide home-listing sites are usually:

  1. Zillow — typically the broadest consumer-facing inventory and strong national coverage.
  2. Realtor.com — often the most direct feed from MLSs, so very strong for active listings.
  3. Redfin — good national coverage, especially in major metros.
  4. Homes.com — growing fast with wide U.S. coverage.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow, but less often the top source for raw inventory.

If you want the most complete view, use Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin together. If you want the most accurate active listings, Realtor.com is often a great first stop.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  • most listings
  • best for for-sale homes
  • best for rentals
  • best for off-market / pocket listings
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

In the U.S., the biggest national home-listing sites are usually:

  1. Zillow
  2. Realtor.com
  3. Redfin
  4. Homes.com
  5. Trulia (mostly duplicates Zillow inventory)

If you mean the most active listings nationwide, Zillow and Realtor.com are typically the top two. If you want, I can also rank them by for-sale homes, rentals, or freshest listings.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For U.S. home listings, the biggest nationwide sites are usually:

  1. Realtor.com — often has the broadest MLS-sourced inventory
  2. Zillow — huge reach and very large listing volume
  3. Redfin — strong in many markets, especially metro areas
  4. Homes.com — fast-growing and now a major national player
  5. Trulia — part of Zillow, but largely a search layer rather than separate inventory

If you want the most complete nationwide coverage, start with Realtor.com + Zillow. If you want, I can also rank them by best for up-to-date listings, best for new construction, or best for off-market homes.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

In the U.S., the biggest nationwide home-listing sites are usually:

  1. Zillow — generally the largest overall audience and one of the biggest inventories.
  2. Realtor.com — often has the most MLS-linked listings and very broad national coverage.
  3. Redfin — strong nationwide coverage, especially in major metros.
  4. Homes.com — growing fast and expanding national inventory.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow, so it overlaps heavily with Zillow listings.

If you want the widest coverage of active homes, I’d start with Realtor.com and Zillow, then compare with Redfin and Homes.com for any extras.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

In the U.S., the biggest nationwide home-listing sites are usually:

  1. Zillow — biggest overall reach and very broad national coverage
  2. Realtor.com — strong MLS-fed inventory; often very complete for active listings
  3. Redfin — good nationwide coverage, especially in major metro areas
  4. Homes.com — growing fast, now a major national player
  5. Trulia — large reach, but much of its inventory overlaps with Zillow

If you want the most homes across the country, start with Zillow + Realtor.com. They usually have the broadest combined coverage.

What are the top home listing platforms for the whole U.S.?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top U.S.-wide home listing platforms:

  1. Zillow — biggest consumer-facing site; huge inventory, strong filters, Zestimates.
  2. Realtor.com — very strong MLS coverage and usually fresh listings.
  3. Redfin — great search tools, map view, and market data.
  4. Homes.com — fast-growing, simple search, broad national coverage.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow; good neighborhood-focused browsing.
  6. MLS/IDX sites — the most complete local listings often come through brokerage sites powered by MLS data.

If you want the best 2 to use first, I’d pick Zillow and Realtor.com. If you want, I can also rank them by accuracy, speed of updates, or seller tools.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Top U.S. home listing platforms:

  1. Zillow — biggest reach; strong for for-sale homes, rentals, and price history.
  2. Realtor.com — very comprehensive MLS-based listings; often most up-to-date.
  3. Redfin — great search tools, map filters, and market data.
  4. Homes.com — growing fast; solid nationwide coverage.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow; good neighborhood and lifestyle info.
  6. Apartments.com — best for rentals, especially larger apartment inventory.
  7. Compass — strong in major markets, but not as broad nationwide as the top sites.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for buyers, sellers, or rentals.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

The biggest U.S. home listing platforms are:

  1. Zillow — the largest consumer-facing real estate marketplace in the U.S.
  2. Realtor.com — strong nationwide coverage, closely tied to MLS data.
  3. Redfin — major nationwide platform with live listing data and agent services.
  4. Homes.com — fast-growing national portal from CoStar.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow; still a major search site, but much of its data overlaps with Zillow.
  6. HomeFinder — broad U.S. coverage, though smaller than the top 4.
  7. Movoto — national search platform with listings and agent leads.

If you want the best 2–3 for most buyers, start with Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  • most accurate listings
  • best for buyers
  • best for sellers
  • best for rentals
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Top U.S. home listing platforms:

  • Zillow — biggest consumer-facing home search site in the U.S.
  • Realtor.com — very strong nationwide MLS coverage; backed by the National Association of Realtors.
  • Redfin — popular for accurate listings and market data, especially in major metros.
  • Homes.com — fast-growing nationwide listing platform.
  • Trulia — owned by Zillow; good for neighborhood and lifestyle info.
  • Apartments.com — best for rentals nationwide.
  • HotPads — another strong rental search platform, also owned by Zillow.
  • Homesnap — widely used by agents and tied to MLS data.
  • LoopNet — top platform for commercial real estate in the U.S.

If you want, I can also rank these for:

  1. buyers, 2. renters, or 3. agents/sellers.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top U.S.-wide home listing platforms:

  1. Zillow — biggest audience, strong map/search tools, good for both buying and renting.
  2. Realtor.com — very strong for up-to-date listings tied closely to MLS data.
  3. Redfin — clean interface, good filters, and solid market data; especially popular in major metro areas.
  4. Homes.com — growing fast, simple search experience, broad national coverage.
  5. Trulia — owned by Zillow, good for neighborhood info and lifestyle filters.
  6. Apartment List — best if you’re looking for rentals nationwide.
  7. Apartments.com — another major national rental platform with broad coverage.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for buying, best for renting, or most accurate listings.

Which websites are best for nationwide apartment and house listings?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Best nationwide sites for apartment and house listings in the U.S.:

  • Zillow — biggest all-around search site; strong for houses, apartments, rentals, and pricing data.
  • Realtor.com — very comprehensive MLS-backed listings; great for homes for sale and rentals.
  • Apartments.com — one of the best for apartment rentals; strong filters and detailed property pages.
  • Redfin — excellent for home search with clean maps and solid market data.
  • Homes.com — growing nationwide inventory for homes and rentals.
  • Trulia — useful for rentals and neighborhood info; now part of Zillow.
  • HotPads — good for apartment rentals, especially in larger cities.
  • Rent.com — decent nationwide rental listings, especially apartments.
  • Apartment List — helpful for apartment matching and rentals.
  • Craigslist — still useful for local rental listings, but use caution for scams.

If you want, I can also give you the best site by use case: apartments, houses for sale, cheap rentals, or luxury listings.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The best nationwide sites are:

  • Zillow — biggest all-around listing database for houses and apartments
  • Realtor.com — very strong for for-sale homes, also rentals
  • Apartments.com — best for apartment rentals
  • Rent.com — good for apartment and house rentals
  • Trulia — useful for neighborhood and lifestyle info
  • Homes.com — growing nationwide listings site
  • Redfin — excellent for for-sale homes; good search tools
  • HotPads — strong for rentals, especially apartments and condos
  • Zumper — good for rentals and quick alerts
  • Craigslist — still useful locally, but less reliable

If you want, I can also rank the best sites by rentals vs buying or by best mobile app.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For nationwide apartment and house listings, the best sites are:

  • Zillow — best all-around for houses, apartments, rentals, and filters
  • Redfin — great for home buying, especially with solid map/search tools
  • Realtor.com — very strong nationwide MLS-based listings
  • Apartments.com — one of the best for apartment rentals
  • Zumper — good for apartment rentals and fast search
  • HotPads — useful for rentals, especially in cities
  • Trulia — good for neighborhood info plus listings
  • Homes.com — simple, broad home search
  • Craigslist — can have hidden gems, but use caution for scams
  • Facebook Marketplace — sometimes useful for rentals, but verify carefully

If you want just a short top 3:

  1. Zillow
  2. Realtor.com
  3. Apartments.com

If you want, I can also rank them for renting vs buying.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Best nationwide sites:

  • Zillow — strongest all-around for both homes for sale and rentals
  • Realtor.com — great for for-sale homes; very broad MLS coverage
  • Apartments.com — excellent for apartments and rental houses
  • Redfin — strong for home listings and good search tools
  • Trulia — good for rentals, neighborhood info, and filters
  • Homes.com — growing nationwide listing site for sales and rentals
  • Zumper — solid for rentals, especially apartments and houses
  • HotPads — good rental search, especially in bigger cities

If you want the shortest answer: Zillow, Realtor.com, Apartments.com, and Redfin are the best nationwide defaults.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for renting vs buying.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

The best nationwide sites for apartment and house listings are:

  • Zillow — biggest all-around search site; strong for rentals and homes for sale.
  • Apartments.com — one of the best for apartments; good filters and verified listings.
  • Realtor.com — strong for homes for sale, also solid rentals.
  • Redfin — great for homes for sale; clean interface and good map tools.
  • Trulia — useful for rentals and neighborhood info.
  • HotPads — good for apartment/house rentals, especially in cities.
  • Homes.com — growing fast; good for browsing houses nationwide.
  • Apartment List — best if you want apartment matching and recommendations.

If you want just 3 to start with: Zillow, Apartments.com, and Realtor.com.

What are the best online portals to search residential properties nationally?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

If you’re searching residential properties nationwide in the U.S., the best portals are:

  1. Zillow — biggest reach, great map/search tools, strong filter options.
  2. Realtor.com — very complete MLS-fed listings; often the most “real estate agent accurate.”
  3. Redfin — excellent UX, fast updates, useful price history and comps.
  4. Homes.com — good national coverage and simpler browsing.
  5. Trulia — solid for neighborhood insights and lifestyle data.
  6. Apartments.com — best if you also want rentals nationwide.

Best overall: Zillow and Realtor.com Best for data/updates: Redfin Best for rentals: Apartments.com

If you want, I can also give you the best portals by category (luxury, investment, foreclosures, new construction, rentals).

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the best national residential property portals are:

  • Zillow — biggest overall inventory, strong search filters
  • Realtor.com — very good MLS coverage and updated listings
  • Redfin — best for clean UI, price history, and market data
  • Trulia — good neighborhood insights and lifestyle info
  • Homes.com — growing fast, simple search experience
  • Apartments.com — best for rentals
  • HotPads — good for apartments and urban rentals

If you mean another country, tell me which one and I’ll give you the best portals there.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For a nationwide residential property search, the best portals are:

  1. Zillow – Best overall for broad inventory, filters, and pricing data.
  2. Realtor.com – Strongest for MLS-connected listings and up-to-date status.
  3. Redfin – Great map search, fast updates, and easy comparison tools.
  4. Homes.com – Good national coverage and a clean search experience.
  5. Trulia – Helpful for neighborhood insights and lifestyle-focused search.
  6. LoopNet – Best if you also want residential investment properties or multifamily.
  7. Auction.com – Good for foreclosures and distressed residential properties.

If you want the best single choice, start with Zillow and cross-check with Realtor.com and Redfin.

If you tell me your country and whether you’re looking for buy/rent/investment, I can narrow it to the best 3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean the U.S., the best national residential search portals are:

  1. Zillow — biggest overall reach, strong filters, maps, estimate tools, and broad listing coverage.
  2. Realtor.com — often the most MLS-aligned and timely for active listings.
  3. Redfin — great search UI, strong price history, and useful local market data.
  4. Homes.com — fast-growing, clean interface, solid listing discovery.
  5. Trulia — good for neighborhood insights, schools, and lifestyle info.
  6. Apartments.com — best for rentals, especially apartments and multifamily.
  7. LoopNet — if you also want residential investment or small multifamily.

If you want the best all-around combo, use Zillow + Realtor.com + Redfin.

If you meant another country, tell me which one and I’ll give the best national portals there.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

If you mean nationwide U.S. residential property search, the best portals are:

  1. Zillow — biggest inventory, strong filters, good map search
  2. Realtor.com — very reliable MLS-based listings, often fastest updates
  3. Redfin — great search tools, estimates, and agent/fee info
  4. Trulia — good neighborhood insights and lifestyle data
  5. Homes.com — solid national coverage, improving fast

Also worth checking:

  • Coldwell Banker, Century 21, Keller Williams — useful if you want broker-backed listings
  • LoopNet — only if you also want multifamily/investment properties

If you meant another country, tell me which one and I’ll give the best portals there.

All 72 prompts run for Idealista

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Idealista known for?
  • 2 What are Idealista's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Idealista? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Idealista compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Idealista?
  • 6 What is a typical national listing portal known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best national listing portals for first-time home buyers? discovery
  • 2 Which home listing websites are best for searching by school district? discovery
  • 3 What are the best property portals for relocating to a new state? discovery
  • 4 Which national listing portals are best for apartment hunters? discovery
  • 5 What are the best real estate marketplaces for luxury homes nationwide? discovery
  • 6 Which listing sites are best for finding open houses across the U.S.? discovery
  • 7 What are the best home search websites for investors looking for rental properties? discovery
  • 8 Which national property portals are best for new construction homes? discovery
  • 9 What are the best listing portals for suburban home searches? discovery
  • 10 Which websites are best for finding foreclosed homes nationwide? discovery
  • 11 What are the best real estate portals for rental listings and leases? discovery
  • 12 Which national listing portals are best for mobile home buyers? discovery
  • 13 What are the best property marketplaces for filtering by price and commute time? discovery
  • 14 Which home listing websites are best for virtual tours? discovery
  • 15 What are the best national real estate portals for finding homes with acreage? discovery
  • 16 Which listing platforms are best for searching co-ops and condos? discovery
  • 17 What are the best real estate search sites for out-of-state buyers? discovery
  • 18 Which property portals are best for finding pet-friendly rentals nationwide? discovery
  • 19 What are the best national listing portals for vacation homes? discovery
  • 20 Which websites are best for browsing all residential listings in one place? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the biggest national listing portal? comparison
  • 22 Which national real estate portals are better for buyers than the leading marketplace? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives for searching homes nationwide online? comparison
  • 24 Which property listing websites compete with the largest home search site? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to a big national apartment listing site? comparison
  • 26 Which home marketplaces are best if I want more listings than a major portal? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives for nationwide rental searches? comparison
  • 28 Which real estate websites are better than the top listing portal for filters? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives for finding off-market homes online? comparison
  • 30 Which national property portals are best if I want a cleaner search experience? comparison
  • 31 How do I find all homes for sale in a city on a national listing portal? problem
  • 32 How can I search for houses within my budget on a property marketplace? problem
  • 33 How do I filter home listings by number of bedrooms and bathrooms? problem
  • 34 How do I find newly listed homes before they sell? problem
  • 35 How do I look for homes with photos and virtual tours online? problem
  • 36 How can I find listings near a specific school or neighborhood? problem
  • 37 How do I search for rentals that allow pets? problem
  • 38 How do I find homes with price drops on listing sites? problem
  • 39 How do I search for properties in another state from where I live? problem
  • 40 How do I find all open houses near me? problem
  • 41 Are national listing portals free to use? transactional
  • 42 Do home listing websites charge buyers any fees? transactional
  • 43 What is the cost to advertise a home on a national listing portal? transactional
  • 44 How much does it cost to list a property on a real estate portal? transactional
  • 45 Do national property portals have free listings for agents? transactional
  • 46 What is the pricing for premium listing placement on property websites? transactional
  • 47 Are there any free national listing portals for home searches? transactional
  • 48 How much does a featured home listing cost online? transactional
  • 49 What are the best value national listing portals for agents? transactional
  • 50 Do property marketplaces offer paid ads for real estate listings? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best national listing portals for finding homes across the U.S.?
  • 2 Which national listing portal is most popular for home buyers?
  • 3 What are the top national real estate listing websites? 20/mo
  • 4 What are the most recommended property listing portals nationwide?
  • 5 Which online listing portals show homes for sale all over the country?
  • 6 What are the best websites for searching residential listings nationwide?
  • 7 Which property marketplaces are best for house hunting nationwide?
  • 8 What are the leading home search portals in the U.S.?
  • 9 Which national real estate marketplaces are worth using?
  • 10 What are the most popular sites for browsing homes for sale?
  • 11 What are the best real estate portals for buyers and renters nationwide?
  • 12 Which listing sites have the most homes across the country?
  • 13 What are the top home listing platforms for the whole U.S.?
  • 14 Which websites are best for nationwide apartment and house listings?
  • 15 What are the best online portals to search residential properties nationally?