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Homebot
Homebot reaches 13 million homeowners through a client-engagement platform used by 10,000+ loan officers and agents, operating from Denver since 2015.
Homebot
Founded in Denver in 2015, Homebot built a software layer that loans officers and real estate agents license for their own books of business — a parallel to how a family office might underwrite a SaaS subscription for its portfolio operations. The firm has not disclosed outside venture funding that names a lead investor, a gap that leaves its capital structure opaque. Its model sits at the intersection of client retention and transactional intelligence: each digital digest Homebot generates carries a refinance or trade-in signal that licensees can act on. Homebot operates as a B2B2C platform. Its asset-class exposure is concentrated entirely in residential-property data rights and the recurring subscription payments of the mortgage and brokerage enterprises that embed the tool. The firm claims a 75% higher client transactability rate for its mid-tier users, a figure implying strong cohort stickiness. Deployment spans over 10 million homeowners tracked and 30,000 loan officers and agents as of the latest disclosed metrics. No direct-investment structures, co-investment pools, or fund-of-funds vehicles are publicly associated with the firm; its scale is assessed through user counts and transaction-attach rates rather than balance-sheet dollars. The firm operates from a single office at 3513 Brighton Boulevard in Denver. No headcount, AUM, or adjacent philanthropic vehicles are disclosed. No executive team members are named on any publicly accessible page. The most recent operational signal is the May 2024 web update confirming 13 million consumers on the platform and 10,000-plus professional subscribers, continuing a pattern of releasing scaled user counts without disclosing revenue or profitability. What separates Homebot from a generic marketing-automation vendor is its exclusive coupling of homeowner-level financial data to the point-of-sale relationships held by loan officers and agents. A single licensed seat becomes the hub of a recurring equity-surveillance loop — a dynamic that blends fintech infrastructure with an agent-channel distribution model unique among real-estate technology firms.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
2015
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Denver
Corporate office
3513 Brighton Boulevard, Suite 230, Denver, Colorado 80216, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Homebot?
Homebot does not publicly disclose its executive team, investment committee, or delegated decision-makers. No listed CEO, CIO, or managing principal was present on the firm's website or its associated public filings as of the latest review. Until a leadership structure is disclosed, the question cannot be answered from primary sources.
How does Homebot source proprietary deal flow?
Because Homebot is a software platform rather than an investment vehicle, its 'deal flow' is the transactional behavior identified inside its user base. Every digest the platform sends to a homeowner generates engagement data that mortgage lenders and real estate agents can use to originate loans and listings. This creates an exclusive behavioral lead stream that is the core value proposition.
Is Homebot structured as a single family office or does it operate more like a venture firm?
Neither. Homebot operates as a SaaS company that sells directly to mortgage professionals and brokerages. It has no publicly disclosed family-office backing, does not make market investments from a balance sheet, and has not been publicly linked to a proprietary investment vehicle. Its capital structure and shareholder register remain undisclosed.
Which sectors does Homebot explicitly avoid?
Homebot's functionality is structured entirely around residential real estate and the mortgage-lending value chain. It has not announced any product extensions into commercial real estate data, insurance underwriting, or non-mortgage consumer lending. The firm's public posture signals a deliberate focus — rather than an explicit avoidance — of adjacent fintech verticals.
Does Homebot maintain philanthropic structures, and how are they separated?
No philanthropic foundations, charitable trusts, or donor-advised funds have been disclosed by Homebot or linked to its leadership. The firm's public footprint is strictly commercial, and no legal separations between a business entity and a family-funded philanthropic vehicle are known.
Where does the underlying wealth come from?
Homebot has not publicly disclosed its founding capital source, wealth origin, or any single-family backing. The firm's funding history and cap table are absent from its website and from primary press documentation. Without a disclosed principal, the origin of its capital remains unknown.
What is Homebot's known posture on co-investments alongside external GPs?
Homebot has never disclosed participating in a co-investment, fund commitment, or direct principal investment alongside third-party general partners. The firm's public identity is strictly that of a software vendor serving the residential real estate industry. Any investment activity would represent a departure from that identity and has not been documented.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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