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Introducing Maturr: every CRE loan, before it matures

Why we built it, who it's for, and what's next.

Maturr exists because the data has been public for a decade and nobody made it usable. SEC Reg AB II requires every CMBS trustee to file loan-level disclosures. HUD publishes its insured-mortgage portfolio. Ginnie Mae publishes pool and loan disclosures with delinquency buckets. The federal disclosure infrastructure is there. The product that exposes it at a price independent brokers can afford was not.

Trepp, CoStar, CRED iQ, and Moody's CRE all license normalized versions of the same data. They've built real product around it — and they sell into institutional procurement for $25,000 to $100,000 per seat per year. That's fine for a fund or a CMBS desk. It's a non-starter for a working broker.

Maturr is paid-only, from $97/month. Same data, normalized into a query-friendly Postgres schema, surfaced through a map and a filter rail and a watchlist and an export button. Try the public preview at /preview — no signup, no email — and you'll see what's possible. Then if you want full coverage across all 82,000+ properties, sign up.

This is post one of many. We'll publish market analysis written from Maturr's own data (Houston multifamily distress, Atlanta office watchlist counts), methodology pieces (entity resolution across sources, how to read DSCR across reporting periods), and distress watches on submarkets where things are moving. Subscribe by signing up — every paid account gets the digest by default.

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