Review Points & Risk Flags
Review Points & Risk Flags
HomeRadar may highlight Review Points on project, developer or district pages. These are data-based signals that suggest a user may want to check a topic more carefully before making a decision.
A Review Point is not an accusation, legal conclusion, finding of wrongdoing, official warning, blacklist entry, or statement that a developer or project has violated any obligation. It is a due diligence prompt.
Why HomeRadar uses Review Points
Real estate decisions involve many moving parts: location, price, timing, documentation, developer history, rental assumptions, building management and liquidity. Review Points help users notice questions that might otherwise be hidden behind marketing materials or incomplete data.
Examples of safer public labels
· Completion timeline should be verified.
· Limited public track record in available data.
· Multiple active projects identified in the current dataset.
· Price positioning requires comparison with nearby alternatives.
· Rental assumptions depend strongly on seasonality.
· Additional legal/document review recommended before purchase.
· Data source incomplete or awaiting update.
What Review Points do not mean
· They do not mean that a developer is bad or unsafe.
· They do not mean that a project is illegal or defective.
· They do not mean that HomeRadar has completed a legal audit.
· They do not mean that a buyer should or should not purchase.
· They do not replace professional legal, tax, technical or investment advice.
How Review Points may be generated
Review Points may be generated from structured project data, public information, model thresholds, missing data, market assumptions or manual editorial review. Some indicators are quantitative. Others are editorial prompts based on incomplete or inconsistent information.
Because data can change, Review Points may also change after updates, corrections or new documentation.
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.