Land Atlas captures listings as you browse any land marketplace, then scores every parcel with government-grade data: USDA soil quality averaged over the actual acreage, ten-year climate records, FEMA flood zones, wetlands, and distance to the power grid — distilled into one honest farmability score.
One capture pulls the listing into your Atlas and runs the full analysis automatically — no spreadsheets, no tab-juggling across six government websites.
Not a single point sample: soil is area-weighted across every USDA map unit inside the parcel's actual acreage — or inside a boundary you draw on the map.
Soil, climate, and land risk blended into one 0–100 score, plus a ranked list of the 16 crops that fit the parcel's pH, drainage, frost window, and heat profile.
FEMA flood-zone classification and National Wetlands Inventory overlap, scored with the terrain — so "cheap bottomland" surprises show up before you visit.
Distance to the nearest substation, transmission line, power plant, and highway — the site-selection data enterprise land platforms charge for.
Every parcel is percentile-ranked on price per acre against comparable listings you've captured in the same state and size band.
Group parcels into assemblage projects with blended stats, export filtered views to CSV, and print a clean per-parcel analysis report.
Three steps from "saw it on a listing site" to "fully analyzed in my Atlas."
One click adds the capture button to your browser. Works on the major land marketplaces — listing pages and search results alike.
Hit capture on any listing (or auto-save every listing you view). Title, price, acreage, photos, and location come along automatically.
Soil, climate, crops, risk, grid access, and comps are computed in the background and waiting on the map — on desktop or your phone.
The live demo is the actual Atlas — hundreds of analyzed parcels, browsable by anyone with the link.
▶ Open the live demo