How it works
Three steps. That's genuinely it.
Checking land in Costa Rica normally means chasing records across separate government offices. This collapses that into one search.
- 01
Point at the land
Click anywhere on the map, type a plano catastrado or finca number, or upload a photo of an old plano and let the AI read it. No account needed to look.
Each of those three routes lands on the same parcel page.
- 02
We pull everything at once
We query the national cadastre for the parcel's official boundary, then hit 64 live data layers in parallel — terrain, climate, soil, seismic history, infrastructure, land cover — and compute the 6-pillar score from what comes back.
Government sources, satellite data, and global scientific datasets.
- 03
Read it, question it, take it with you
Read the report online, ask the AI plain-English questions about the parcel, work through the due-diligence checklist, and export the boundary and data as GeoJSON, KML or CSV.
Or print the whole thing to PDF and hand it to your lawyer.
What you end up with
A number, and the reasoning behind it.
The report on this real 6.4985 ha parcel in Santa Cruz scores 70.2 — but the number is the least interesting part. What matters is which of the 6 pillars dragged it down, and whether that's a problem for what you want to do with the land.
Honest about the gaps
Some data simply isn't there. OpenStreetMap has no land-cover tagging for much of rural Guanacaste, so on this parcel that pillar reads no data rather than a number we made up.
LandIQ also does notread the title registry — no liens, no encumbrances, no ownership history. That's a lawyer's job. What this does is tell you which parcels are worth paying a lawyer to look at.