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Developer Score Methodology

Developer Score Methodology

The HomeRadar Developer Score is a comparative analytical indicator. It helps users understand how a developer appears in the available dataset, based on observable signals such as completed projects, current portfolio, years of activity, public information, and data consistency.

The score is not a legal opinion, credit rating, audit, certification, financial review, or official verification of any developer. It should be read as a structured data signal, not as a statement that a developer is safe, unsafe, good, bad, reliable, or unreliable.

Why this score exists

Buying a new-build property often means comparing projects long before the building is complete. Users usually ask practical questions: Has the developer completed projects before? How many active projects are in the pipeline? Is public information easy to find? Does the project portfolio look consistent?

HomeRadar organizes these signals into one model so users can ask better questions before contacting a developer, broker, lawyer, or consultant.

What the model may consider

·       Completed project history: visible evidence of previous delivered projects.

·       Market presence: estimated years of activity and visible public footprint.

·       Current project load: the number of active projects compared with known completed work.

·       Data transparency: how easy it is to find clear project and company information.

·       Portfolio consistency: whether available data appears structured, stable, and comparable.

·       Project-level context: location, stage, declared delivery timing, and public materials.

How to read the result

A higher score means that, under the current HomeRadar methodology and available information, the developer shows stronger comparative data signals. A lower score means the available data gives fewer positive comparative signals or requires more manual verification.

Neither result should be treated as a verdict. The score is a starting point for due diligence, not a replacement for legal checks, contract review, site visits, registry checks, or direct communication with the developer.

Careful language used by HomeRadar

HomeRadar avoids publishing statements such as “bad developer,” “unsafe developer,” “guaranteed reliable,” or “verified by HomeRadar” unless a specific verification process exists and is clearly described.

Preferred wording includes “limited public track record in available data,” “additional due diligence recommended,” “active portfolio load identified,” or “data transparency could be improved.”

When the score may change

The Developer Score may change when new projects are added, completed projects are identified, public information becomes available, data is corrected, or the HomeRadar methodology is updated. Real estate data is dynamic, and the score should be viewed as a current analytical snapshot.

What users should verify independently

·       Company registration and legal identity.

·       Ownership and project documentation.

·       Construction permits and declared completion timeline.

·       Payment schedule, penalties, cancellation terms, and handover obligations.

·       Past projects and actual delivery quality where possible.

·       Any promises about rental income, management, buyback, or guaranteed returns.

Important limitation:HomeRadar content is informational. It is not legal, financial, tax, valuation, brokerage, or investment advice. Users should independently verify prices, availability, documentation, ownership, construction status, rental assumptions, and contract terms before making a decision.