What The Site Does
Komand helps users search completed NSW property sales and review major planning activity. The site is designed as an information starting point, with links back to official records where they are available.
The property sales module focuses on recorded transaction data. It helps users filter sales by place, date, price, land area, zoning, and other available fields. The planning module focuses on State Significant Development and State Significant Infrastructure records, with map tools for browsing major projects and reviewing location context.
The purpose is practical access. Public datasets are valuable, but they are often difficult to search together or view in a way that supports repeated checking. Komand brings selected public records into one working interface so users can find relevant records faster and then verify them with the official source.
Who It Is For
The site is built for people who need to understand a place before making further enquiries. That may include property owners, buyers, advisers, and people following development activity in New South Wales.
Different users may approach the site with different questions. A buyer might want to see recent nearby sales. A property owner might want to understand major planning activity near their area. An adviser might use the site to find records worth checking before preparing a more detailed review. A community member might use it to follow significant projects in their region.
Komand is not designed to replace expert advice. It is designed to make public records easier to find and compare before the user decides what further checking is needed.
How To Use It
Start with a suburb, LGA, address, or project number. Use the results to identify records worth checking, then confirm important details with the official source or a qualified adviser.
For sales checking, narrow the results until the remaining records are genuinely relevant. For planning information, check the project status, project type, location, and official link. If a map point appears unusual, read the location text and source record before assuming the marker is exact.
The best use of the site is as a filter and discovery tool. It can help users move from a broad question to a smaller set of records that deserve attention. The final interpretation should always account for source documents, current conditions, and professional judgement where the decision is important.
Operator
Komand Property Intelligence is operated by Moonlight Technology Pty Ltd. The site presents public records and supporting context; it does not provide legal, financial, planning, or valuation advice.
Questions about the site, display issues, or record handling can be sent through the contact page. Questions about official record correction, policy, assessment, title, valuation, or planning decisions should be directed to the relevant NSW Government agency or professional adviser.