Reported sales vs. our reports — on the record, misses included
Every appraisal tool claims to be accurate. We would rather show you. Below are domains whose sale prices were publicly reported — each one next to the complete Appraise.net report, on the exact template subscribers get, with the engine version and the date the report was generated.
Nothing here is edited after publication, and the misses stay on the board. A valuation model that only shows its wins isn't showing you anything.
Where the prices come from. Sale prices are taken only from publicly reported sales — currently DNJournal's published charts — and every entry links to its source. We don't report private or unverified figures here.
Post-sale demonstrations are reports generated after a sale was already public. The engine is only ever given the domain name — never prices, sale records, or comparable data — but since the result was known when the report ran, we label these demonstrations, not predictions.
Appraised blind entries are generated on a schedule before the reported price is attached, and the report is frozen from that moment. As sales are reported each week, these accumulate — they're the entries that matter most, and the reason this page exists.
Nothing is retouched. Each entry shows the engine version and generation date, renders on the same template subscribers get, and is never edited after publication. When the engine misses, the miss stays published: auction dynamics, wholesale liquidations, and one-buyer premiums are real market forces, and seeing where a model lands relative to them is exactly what an appraisal is for.
Every report above is the standard Appraise.net report — same engine, same depth, no special treatment.