The questions you’d ask before the hype
No beating around the bush. We detect projects early in public sources and show you what can be verified before committing. Here is what we do — and what we don’t.
What it is and how it works
What exactly is OJOPY?
A radar of early real-estate signals in Paraguay, plus a layer that reads the public evidence. We detect projects in MADES/SIAM public environmental records, registries, and listings — many before they reach property portals — rank them with our engine, and open an Evidence Brief for each signal: what was found, what is missing, what risks exist, and what questions to bring. We are not a broker or an opportunity portal.
How does it work? What do I need to do?
Browse the radar via "See the radar": anonymised signals with a score, classification, evidence level, source, and zone location. When one catches your eye, open its Evidence Brief and you will see the project and developer identity, traceable sources, dimensions with their 0-100 score, red flags, missing data, and concrete questions to take to the seller, your lawyer, or the notary.
Where do the projects on the radar come from?
From public sources — no one brings projects to us. The earliest signal typically appears when a project enters the MADES/SIAM public environmental records, which usually precede the portals; we cross-reference that with portals, zone rental and surroundings (geo and census). That head-start is the moat: by the time a project is advertised, everyone has already seen it.
Does the algorithm decide the verdict?
The verdict is algorithmic, never a buy recommendation. The engine composes signals from multiple sources, measures their coverage and marks what is missing; the value is not a label but traceability: for each point you see what was found, in which source, and what remains unverified. You judge the evidence — not our word.
What we decide and what we don’t
Will you tell me whether to buy or not?
No. We do not give a buy order. We give you a structured analysis — signals, risks, missing documents, and questions to ask — so you can decide with more information and fewer blind spots. The decision remains yours.
Does it replace a lawyer or notary?
No, and it does not aim to. It helps you spot doubts early, prepare the right questions, and arrive better equipped for your lawyer or notary. It complements them: it does not formalise the transfer or replace the legal title review.
Do you guarantee the project is safe?
No. No responsible evidence analysis can guarantee that with preliminary information. What we do is reduce the information asymmetry: surfacing signals, risks, and gaps you would otherwise miss.
What if you find no information?
That is also information. The Evidence Brief will state clearly what could not be verified and why, and will tell you what to request and from whom. Missing data often matters just as much as confirmed data.
Which public sources do you cross-reference?
We cross-reference the public sources available for each case: the MADES/SIAM environmental registry (the earliest signal), portal comparables, zone rental (Airbnb/Booking), surroundings (OSM) and demographics (INE Census). The registry identity (cadastral account / registration number) is shown as declared data for you to verify with your notary, not as a check by us. We do not consult tax (DNIT) or municipal systems. Each data point carries its source and, where applicable, its date; anything that cannot be confirmed is declared unverified.
Access, plans, and delivery
What does the radar include and what does the evidence include?
The radar (free) is for exploration: anonymised signals with a score, classification, evidence level, source (MADES), and zone location, across /proyectos (construction), /suelo (land), and /mercado. The Evidence Brief is opened per signal and adds the project and developer identity, traceable sources, dimensions with their 0-100 score, red flags, missing data, and questions for the seller or your lawyer.
How much does it cost?
Browsing the radar is free. Unlock a card for US$24 (one-time) to open its full dossier — registry identity, traceable sources, the dimensions panel, reasoned red flags and the questions for the seller/notary. Or subscribe (US$49/mo · US$490/yr) for all cards and the new ones; the monthly digest is coming soon.
How do I unlock the evidence?
From the signal card itself, via "Unlock evidence": you buy that card (US$24) and open it fully. With the subscription, all cards, the comparator, the historical archive, and new signals are unlocked.
What if the evidence contains a material error?
If a data point we marked as verified turns out to be incorrect and that changes the reading, we correct it. We do not cover changes to the project that occur after delivery, nor decisions made on information the Evidence Brief itself flagged as unverified.
Independence
Do you charge the developer or the seller?
Never. No commission, no sponsorship, no success fee, no payment to soften the evidence. Nobody on the seller side pays us to appear on the radar. That is why we can flag risks even when they are uncomfortable for the seller.
Who does the analysis?
Cross-referencing sources and measuring coverage and risk is the engine’s job; what makes it useful is traceability: every point is attributed to its source with a date, and anything unverifiable is declared as such. We do not sell a signature or an authority opinion: we give you evidence you can check yourself.
I’m a foreigner — can I buy in Paraguay?
Generally yes. The exception: Paraguay has a 50 km border security zone with specific restrictions for certain foreigners from neighbouring countries and related legal entities, particularly for rural property, unless authorised by the Executive Branch (Law 2532/05). It is not a simple rule or a blanket veto: we treat it as a legal verification point when a signal falls near the border, not as a verdict.
OJOPY is not a broker and does not sell property. It does not guarantee that a project is safe, nor does it replace your lawyer or notary. Legal · Independence.