DealQuanta vs DealCheck: An Honest Comparison
One is a personal deal calculator. The other is a system for putting a defensible analysis in front of a client. Here's how to pick — without the marketing spin.
First, the disclosure you'd expect: this comparison lives on DealQuanta's site, and we built DealQuanta. So we'll hold ourselves to a simple rule — every DealCheck fact below was verified against their public pricing page in July 2026, and where DealCheck is the better choice, we say so plainly.
The short version
DealCheckis a personal deal calculator — and a good one. Free plan, $10–$20/month paid tiers, built-in sales and rental comps, listing import, native iOS and Android apps, and coverage for rentals, flips, wholesale and multi-family. It's built for you, at your desk or on your phone, running your own numbers.
DealQuanta is built around a different job: turning a rental into a decision someone else can trust. A transparent A–F score with the methodology published, a tested underwriting engine, 10-year IRR, sensitivity analysis and a max-offer solver — packaged as a branded report and a no-login share link designed to be handed to an investor client, a lender or a partner.
That's the real fork in the road. It's not "cheap tool vs expensive tool" — it's who the output is for. The tables below are grouped the same way.
Feature by feature
Three groups: the client-facing deliverable and the decision behind it, the research conveniences, and the price.
The deliverable & the decision
If your job ends with an analysis in front of a client, lender or partner — where the document reflects on you — this is the table that decides it.
| DealQuanta | DealCheck | |
|---|---|---|
| The verdict on a deal | Transparent A–F score (0–100) on every deal — a single defensible grade, not just a metrics dump | No composite deal score — you read the raw metrics and make the call yourself |
| When the client asks “why is this a B?” | Scoring methodology published in full; the underwriting engine is covered by an automated test suite | Methodology and test coverage not published |
| Hold-period returns | 10-year pro forma with IRR and equity multiple — the numbers a hold decision actually hinges on | Long-term buy-and-hold projections |
| What breaks the deal | Sensitivity analysis on rent, interest rate and vacancy, built into every analysis | Not advertised |
| BRRRR / refinance | Cash-out refi modeling with cash-left-in-deal — the number BRRRR investors actually track | BRRRR analysis supported |
| “What should my client offer?” | Max-offer solver: works backwards from your target cash-on-cash to a price | Offer calculator available |
| Your branding on the report | Yes — your logo and contact details on the cover | Yes — custom branding on all plans, including free |
| Sending it to the client | Branded PDF, or a read-only share link that opens with no login and no app — built to be the deliverable | Online or PDF reports, shareable with clients and lenders |
| Knowing it landed | View counts on every share link; revoke a link anytime | Not advertised |
| Judging the output before you pay | Public sample report — a real computed analysis, not a mockup | 14-day trial on paid plans to see it yourself |
Research conveniences — where DealCheck wins
These are real DealCheck advantages, and we won't pretend otherwise: they're about how fast you can get numbers into a calculator. DealCheck wins this table, and it isn't close. Just note what none of them change — the analysis and the document that come out the other end.
| DealQuanta | DealCheck | |
|---|---|---|
| Sales & rental comps | No — bring your own rent research; your assumptions are shown plainly in the report | Yes — built-in sales & rental comps (limits by plan) |
| Listing import | No — you type the numbers from the listing sheet (about two minutes) | Yes — import from public listings |
| Mobile | Web app — works in any phone browser, nothing to install | Native iOS & Android apps |
| Property types | Rentals only: buy-and-hold & BRRRR — the whole product is tuned to that one job | Rentals, flips, wholesale, multi-family & more |
Price & trying it
The prices look far apart because the tools are priced for different jobs — a point we make properly in the next section.
| DealQuanta | DealCheck | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | One plan with everything — $89/mo, or $71/mo billed annually | Free Starter plan; Plus $10/mo; Pro $20/mo (annual saves ~3 months) |
| Free way to start | Free rental calculator, no signup; 7-day trial with no credit card | Free Starter plan (up to 15 saved properties); 14-day trial on paid plans |
DealCheck details verified from dealcheck.io/pricing, July 2026. If something has changed, trust their site over this table.
Why is DealQuanta 4× the price?
Fair question — $89/month versus $20/month is not a rounding error, and if you compare them as calculators, DealCheck wins on price every time. But they're not priced as the same thing. DealCheck is priced as a personal calculator: a tool that helps youdecide. DealQuanta is priced as a client-winning tool: a tested engine, a published methodology you can defend line by line, and a branded report-and-share-link workflow whose whole purpose is to make you look rigorous to the person across the table. For an agent, one investor client won because your analysis looked and held up better than the next agent's covers the annual cost many times over; for an investor, so does walking away from a single bad deal. If nobody else ever sees your analysis, that math doesn't apply to you — and DealCheck is honestly the better buy.
The verdict: which job do you get paid for?
Both tools will run your own numbers. Only one is built to be handed over. So the deciding question isn't "which has more features?" — it's "which job do I get paid for?" If your income comes from your own buy box, buy the cheaper tool. If it comes from other people trusting your number — clients, lenders, partners — buy the one built to travel.
Choose DealCheck if…
You analyze flips, wholesale deals or larger multi-family too, you want built-in comps instead of doing your own rent research, you want native mobile apps, or budget is the deciding factor. For a personal calculator — running your own numbers, for your own eyes — it's the right default, and the free plan is a genuinely generous place to start.
Choose DealQuanta if…
Your analysis is a deliverable: you put it in front of clients, lenders or partners, and it reflects on you. You want to send a link the client opens with no login, know they viewed it, and answer "why is this a B?" with a published methodology instead of a shrug (it's published here). You want hold-period math — IRR, sensitivity, refinance outcomes — rather than a first-year snapshot. The fastest way to decide is to look at the actual output: the sample report is a real computed analysis, and it's exactly what your client would receive with your logo on the cover. And if you're an agent building an investor pipeline, here's how agents use it.
Try both for free
Neither of us asks you to take this page's word for it. DealCheck has a free plan and a 14-day trial on paid plans; DealQuanta has a free calculator with no signup and a 7-day trial with no card. Run the same deal through both, look at what each would put in front of your client, and keep whichever you'd be prouder to send.