Focus:

User research, responsive design, design system

Clarity for the most complex decision in real estate

This was the decision spot of a real estate investment app, where users weigh photos, numbers, and neighborhood data to decide if a home is worth buying. The old page overwhelmed newcomers and left agents skeptical. Redesigning it was key: if users trusted this page, they’d trust the whole product.

Industry:

Real estate

Role:

Lead designer

Year:

2024—2025

Main Project Image
Main Project Image
Main Project Image

The problem

Agents and investors needed a clear way to evaluate properties, but the detail page buried essential insights in complexity. Through demos, usability tests, and stakeholder reviews, here is what we uncovered:

Cognitive overload

The page presented too many decisions at once: toggles, filters, and scattered entry points. Users feel overwhelmed and “lost” inside the tool.

Cognitive overload

The page presented too many decisions at once: toggles, filters, and scattered entry points. Users feel overwhelmed and “lost” inside the tool.

Cognitive overload

The page presented too many decisions at once: toggles, filters, and scattered entry points. Users feel overwhelmed and “lost” inside the tool.

Too many clicks to key info

Reaching critical metrics like cap rate and comps often took 6+ clicks. Users lost context and struggled to retrace their steps.

Too many clicks to key info

Reaching critical metrics like cap rate and comps often took 6+ clicks. Users lost context and struggled to retrace their steps.

Too many clicks to key info

Reaching critical metrics like cap rate and comps often took 6+ clicks. Users lost context and struggled to retrace their steps.

Not mobile-friendly

Agents work on the go, but the desktop-heavy design made it nearly impossible to scan or act quickly on mobile devices.

Not mobile-friendly

Agents work on the go, but the desktop-heavy design made it nearly impossible to scan or act quickly on mobile devices.

Not mobile-friendly

Agents work on the go, but the desktop-heavy design made it nearly impossible to scan or act quickly on mobile devices.

The hypothesis:

For property evaluation to succeed, it had to feel clear, fast, and trustworthy. By reducing noise and surfacing only the most important signals first, we could help agents and investors move from hesitation to confident action.

Large Project Gallery Image #1
Large Project Gallery Image #1
Large Project Gallery Image #1

Mobile first, then everything else

We started on mobile on purpose: the constraints forced real priorities. The first fold carries only what belongs there: address, status, the most important KPIs, and clear calls to action. It mattered for agents who work on the go, and the mobile slice became the rulebook we later applied to desktop.

Cut 30+ targets to 6 key actions on above the fold

The first version left people overwhelmed. Too many clickable targets. We stripped it down to only the essentials above the fold, with comps and financials within one scroll, making the page faster to scan and easier to trust.

Progressive complexity: clear signals upfront

Originally, the property page was spread across tabs. Later version had ~5 clicks to reach the financials. We combined it into one simplified page by surfacing only the most important signals upfront, while keeping depth accessible. This structure cut back on navigation friction and gave confidence that they could dive deeper without getting lost.

Cut comp selection from 6-8 steps down to 3-4

The original wide table + tiny map slowed people down. We redesigned comps with photo-first cards, a larger map, and Street View quick action. Subtle but powerful details (like the difference between the target and comp on hover) made it easier to compare visually first, then confirm with numbers.

Al underwriting cut analysis from hours to minutes

We already had automated analysis, but it required expert setup. The new AI assist takes the first pass automatically. Pulling from photos, and other data, and returns a recommendation “Keep” or “Pass”. It breaks results into four categories: Potential, Renovation, Risk, Location.

Outcomes

Early tests showed less overwhelm and smoother navigation — and the design itself became our strongest sales differentiator. By simplifying the experience into one clear page, we reduced bug reports, aligned the team more easily, and made development faster.

Project Gallery Image for 50% width of the screen #2
Project Gallery Image for 50% width of the screen #2
Project Gallery Image for 50% width of the screen #2