About us

We think tenants should have the strength to use their rights.

We are building ReRadar to help make the Australian rental market more fair and equitable. Tenants already have rights, but rights are much harder to use when the other side has the data, the systems, and the language.

Our aim is to introduce tools that give renters practical leverage: ways to understand whether a rent looks fair, see what comparable homes suggest, keep track of problems, and turn that context into clearer action.

We believe the market gets fairer when tenants are not left guessing. Better knowledge, better records, and better tools can make it easier to ask for a fair deal and push back when something does not add up.

What we are working toward

A rental market where tenants can see the numbers, understand their position, and use the rights they already have with more confidence.

Trust and transparency

How ReRadar works

ReRadar helps tenants better understand the properties they rent and the market around them. When a tenant looks up a property, ReRadar uses public listings, market data, property information, and tenant feedback to generate insights that help renters make more informed decisions. This includes things like understanding whether a rent appears fair compared to similar homes, tracking changes in the local market, identifying potential issues, or having more context when problems or disputes arise.

Our aim is to reduce the amount of uncertainty involved in renting. In many parts of the rental market, agents and landlords have better access to data, systems, and experience than tenants do. We are building tools that help renters better understand their position, navigate problems more confidently, and make more informed decisions.

ReRadar is free for tenants, and makes money through optional tools, referrals, industry products, or broader market insights. We do not rely on money from agents or landlords to operate the platform and are committed to improving the lives of tenants.

Why we ask for a phone number

We ask for a phone number so tenants can securely return to their account and keep context around properties over time. We also intentionally try to avoid collecting more personal information than we need. Email addresses often contain identifying information such as a person's full name, workplace, or year of birth, whereas phone numbers are generally a more minimal identifier.

How ReRadar uses data

Information provided by tenants helps make ReRadar more useful for renters over time. Property information, tenant feedback, and market data can help improve insights, identify patterns, and provide better context around pricing, rental trends, common property issues, and situations tenants regularly encounter throughout the rental process. These insights are intended to help renters make more informed decisions and better understand their position in the rental market.

If you want the formal detail on how we handle personal information, you can read our Privacy Policy.

Why we started ReRadar

We started ReRadar because renting often puts tenants in a weak position from the start. The people on the other side usually have better data, better systems, and more experience, while renters are left trying to make big decisions with much less to work with.

That gap has real consequences. It shapes whether someone pushes back on a rent increase, follows up on a repair, or feels confident enough to question something that does not seem right.

We are building ReRadar to help tenants understand more about the properties they live in, keep better records, and have more context when something goes wrong.

The point is practical leverage. Better information, better records, and better tools can put tenants in a stronger position when they need to challenge a rent, deal with a problem, or make a call about what to do next.

Ben and Luke