Type an address. Get a kit.
The planner pulls public property data — square footage, floors, construction — runs it through the same sizing rules we use on installs, and drafts a priced kit in seconds. It's the first 80% of a network design; a human does the last 20% free if you ask.
What it does with an address
No magic — the same checklist an installer runs in their head, automated. Four steps, each one inspectable.
County appraiser data: heated square footage, floor count, year built, and — the big one in Florida — construction type.
Wood frame passes 5 GHz; concrete block eats roughly half of it. Construction type sets the coverage radius per AP.
One per coverage zone, biased to central ceilings, plus the usual suspects: lanai, garage, detached office.
A gateway matched to your likely ISP tier and a PoE switch with 20% headroom over the AP and camera draw.
Where the planner is honest about guessing
Public records describe the shell of a building, not the inside of it. Three things the draft can't see — and what to do about each.
Interior walls
The record says “block construction,” not where the walls are. A long ranch and a square two-story with the same footage need different AP placement. A floor plan fixes this in one upload.
Renovations
Appraiser data lags additions and conversions. If you've enclosed a garage or finished an attic, tell the design request — the draft is sized to the building on file.
What you do in the rooms
A home office running all-day video calls wants an AP closer than the square footage demands. Usage is the 20% a human checks — free, one business day.
Send the draft to a human.
Run the planner, then submit the design request with your floor plan. An installer checks the AP placement, adjusts for how you actually use the rooms, and sends back the final kit.
Type your address. We'll spec the building.
Square footage, floors, rooms, construction type — turned into an AP count, a switch size, and a gateway that fits. No guesswork, no overbuying.
Four quick questions size the kit. Property-records autofill is in the build phase.
Enter an address and the plan appears here —
property facts first, then the kit.