For decades, the people closest to real estate — investors, developers, brokers, ranchers, and municipal planners — have been forced to do their work the hard way.
A typical deal still starts with a county GIS portal that loads slowly, hides its data behind a maze of disclaimers, and is impossible to filter. From there, you bounce to a separate site for zoning, another for flood maps, another for ownership history, and a fourth for utility lines. By the time you have a complete picture of a single property, you have lost half a day — and you still cannot tell at a glance whether the ten parcels next to it are worth a closer look.
We built Land Owl because the people doing the work deserve better tools. Property intelligence should not require six tabs and a spreadsheet. It should live on a map, county-verified, refreshed regularly, and ready to surface a finished answer in seconds.
“One platform, every layer of property intelligence. That is the entire idea.”
Today, Land Owl unifies 160 million parcels — residential, commercial, industrial, and agricultural — across all fifty states, with direct links back to the county source for every record. On top of that base map, we layer zoning, land use, flood and wetland boundaries, soil drainage, transmission lines, gas pipelines, and substations — fifteen layers and counting. Each one is something you used to need a separate vendor for. Each one is filterable, exportable, and visible on the same map at the same time.
We also built the platform around how property professionals actually work: save and tag properties, leave due diligence notes, compare parcels side by side, run an AI search across owner names or APN ranges, and export portfolio-ready reports for investors, lenders, and stakeholders. None of it is a feature we tacked on. All of it is the baseline you should have had years ago.
We are a small, focused team — geospatial engineers, real estate operators, and product designers — building Land Owl in the open with our customers. If you have ideas, frustrations, or feature requests, we want to hear them. The product gets better every week, and most of what we ship traces back to a real conversation with a real user.
The way real estate is researched is changing. The tools should keep up.

