From a newsletter to the terminal that delivers deals.
Dealsletter was started by a real estate investor and first responder who got tired of the same spreadsheets and missed opportunities. What began as a simple newsletter has grown into the platform that brings institutional-grade deals straight to investors' inboxes.
Dealsletter was founded by a real estate investor and first responder who saw the same problem over and over: great deals were everywhere, but the tools to underwrite them quickly and confidently did not exist for individual investors.
It started as a simple weekly newsletter in 2023. One investor sharing real breakdowns. People thought we were crazy for the idea that you could consistently deliver high-quality, ready-to-analyze real estate deals straight to inboxes. Welp — we did it anyway.
That newsletter grew into a platform. Today we deliver deals through the Deal Desk (formerly Dealsletter) to over 2,400 subscribers, powered by the same terminal that turns an address into a full underwriting package in under 30 seconds.
What began as one person solving their own problem has become the operating system for a new generation of investors who want speed, precision, and an edge without the old-school gatekeepers.
Serious underwriting tools, without the institutional price tag.
Institutional investors have Bloomberg terminals and underwriting teams. Individual investors have Excel and gut instinct. Dealsletter is the middle ground — frontier AI models running real underwriting logic on real market data, available to any investor at any scale.
Started publishing weekly real estate deal breakdowns. First issue covered a Kansas City BRRRR. Grew to 2,200 subscribers across 150+ issues.
Built the first web app — address input, RentCast data pull, AI analysis. Solo-coded during night shifts.
Full SaaS rebuild: Pro and Pro Max tiers, multi-model AI (Claude + GPT + Grok), strategy-specific underwriting models, Stripe billing.
Complete redesign. Deal Scout autonomous agent, 48-metro market intelligence, saved deals pipeline, and the Bloomberg-style interface it was always meant to be.