FAQ
A structured estate record can include name, county, verified date of death, age, key heirs with role labeling, heir contact when available, property addresses and estimated valuation, probate status, probate type and case details when filed, and career/affiliation context when stated. Confidence is labeled; fields stay blank when not safely determinable.
Unknown means we could not determine a value without assuming facts not supported by available information. Absence of confirmation often reflects jurisdictional complexity, filing delays, or incomplete records — not a negative outcome. We label uncertainty instead of implying an answer.
We surface death-event information as early as it becomes publicly available, subject to jurisdiction and record timing. Coverage varies by jurisdiction; timing is presented conservatively and never implied.
Information is labeled as:
- Verified — explicitly confirmed by available records
- Suggested — derived from enrichment or contextual inference
- Unknown — not safely determinable
These labels are intentional; use them when interpreting the record.
Pricing is based on coverage and access — geographic breadth, seats, and visibility depth. Higher tiers unlock more counties, more seats, and expanded intelligence. See the Pricing page for tiers.
Yes. Coverage, seats, and access levels can be adjusted as needs evolve. Enterprise and API access are provisioned by agreement.