Real Estate Scams in Georgia
How to spot weak listings, fake discounts, bad source data, and due-diligence gaps before you waste time.
- In this guide
- 3 ideas
- Live pages
- 3
- Updated
- 9 Jun 2026
The thinking
Read it as a workflow, not an article.
Each idea below is a habit to apply on the live market pages — not theory to file away. Work through them in order, then open the data and start rejecting listings that don't hold up.
- 01
A cheap listing is not proof of a deal
Bad photos, bad coordinates, stale source pages, duplicate listings, and unexplained discounts are common enough to require a filter. Use value score as a prompt to investigate, not a green light.
- 02
Verify the source page
estate.sh keeps source attribution visible. Open the original listing before contacting anyone and compare price, address, images, and update date.
- 03
Be suspicious of urgency
Pressure, incomplete documents, mismatched owner details, and requests to move off-platform too early are all reasons to slow down.
Put it to work
Take this straight to the live data.
These are the live searches that match what you just read. Open one, sort by value, and the guide turns into a shortlist.
When you're ready
Skip the reading. Sort by value.
Guides exist to get you to the data faster. When you've read enough, jump to the live listings and let the value score do the first pass.