For Real Estate Agents

A contractor your clients won’t complain about

Pre-sale prep. Post-sale punch lists. On real estate timelines.

Get in touch

You already know what’s hard about referring a contractor. The work has to get done, on the timeline the deal needs. And the contractor has to behave well in your client’s home — because if they don’t, it’s not the contractor’s reputation that takes the hit. It’s yours.

That’s the part of the job we take most seriously.

Move-in ready home

The work

Pre-sale prep

The list of things that need doing before the house hits the market — the door that sticks, outlets, fixtures, paint touch-ups, the wonky deck rail, the gate that drags. Usually a day or two, scheduled tight against your listing date.

Post-sale punch lists

The buyer’s inspection-driven list, with timelines tied to the close. Often it’s both sides of the same deal: the seller hires us first, the buyer asks for our name, and we work both ends of the same house.

Bigger projects when the timing works

When a listing benefits from a fuller refresh — kitchen updates, a basement finish, a deck rebuild — we can take those on too. Best when the timeline isn’t compressed.

The dynamic

We treat real estate work as an ongoing relationship, not a one-off. That changes a few things.

Your clients get prioritized. When you call about a quick turn, we move other things around to hold space for the timelines real estate runs on.

You don’t need to manage us. We show up on time, do the work, communicate directly with the client when that’s helpful, and stay out of the way when it isn’t.

Flexibility for partners we work with regularly. Once we’ve built a working rhythm with an agent, we find ways to flex on small tasks — folding a quick fix into a nearby job, holding time on short notice, working around your closing windows.

About being in your client’s house

A bad contractor in a client’s house creates a problem for the agent who referred them. We know that. We don’t track mud through houses. We don’t argue with clients. We don’t upsell them on work they didn’t ask about. We’re the person you can send to a stranger’s living room and not think about for the rest of the day.

And if something goes sideways during a project, you’ll hear about it from us before you hear about it from your client. That part matters.

Listing-ready kitchen

What this often looks like

A recent example from a regular agent’s pipeline: the seller needed the water pressure checked, a couple of outlets swapped, and a fixture replaced before listing. We handled it in a day. After closing, the buyer’s inspection list came back — deck tightened, a stuck gate fixed, water pressure turned back up, a mirror replaced. We did that too.

Same house, two clients, one contractor. Both sides got a finished punch list, the agent got a clean close, and we got two new homeowner contacts. That’s the model. It works for everyone in it.

What you and your clients can count on

From Zach, on every job:

Clean work, every day. Cleanup happens daily — nobody walks into a job site that looks like a mess. We also handle the in-between gaps most contractors leave behind, so the house gets handed back to your client finished, not 90% finished.

Honest communication. With you, with the client, and about what’s behind the wall once we open it. If something changes, you’ll know first.

Everything in writing. Estimates, scope changes, and any work added on-site. No surprise invoices.