How PadPickr works
Score homes while you tour them, then compare the results.
PadPickr is a home buying scorecard for people who are actively looking at houses. It helps you rate each property, compare your options, and see which home becomes the clear leader.
1. Set your buying criteria
Choose what matters most: location, commute, layout, condition, price fit, yard, neighborhood, schools, storage, natural light, or anything else driving your decision.
2. Score each home
As you tour a house, rate it while the details are fresh. PadPickr turns your ratings into a weighted score with a perfect score of 300.
3. Follow your leaderboard
After several showings, your leaderboard reveals which homes are actually strongest across the criteria you chose.
Why a 300-point score?
The idea is simple: bowling for houses. A perfect game is 300, and a perfect PadPickr score is 300. Most homes will not be perfect, but the score makes tradeoffs easier to compare.
One house might have the best kitchen. Another might have the better commute. Another might feel right emotionally but lose points on maintenance or layout. PadPickr keeps the comparison grounded.
Useful during real house hunting
PadPickr is meant to be used while you are looking at homes, not after the decision is already made. Add every serious property, score it, and let the ranking evolve over the course of your search.
After a month of tours, open houses, and second showings, the leaderboard can make your first-place home much easier to see.
Common questions
Is PadPickr a home buying checklist?
It works like a checklist, but it goes further by turning your ratings into comparable scores for every home.
Can I use it at open houses?
Yes. PadPickr is designed for scoring homes as you tour them so you do not lose important details later.
What is a good home score?
The best score is relative to your search. A home with 270 might be excellent for one buyer, while another buyer might need a different mix of strengths.
Does PadPickr replace a real estate agent?
No. PadPickr is a personal comparison tool. It is not legal, financial, real estate, or investment advice.