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How the Compliance Record Score works

Every property page layers original analysis on top of the raw public records, so it is never a raw data dump. The core of that analysis is the <strong>Compliance Record Score</strong> — and here is exactly how it is calculated.

What it is — and is not

The score is a transparent summary of a property’s code-enforcement record. A higher score means a cleaner record. It is not a statement about the people who own, manage, or live at a property; it is not a measure of the building’s current physical condition or safety; and it must never be read as an accusation of wrongdoing.

The formula

Each property starts at 100. We subtract points for the facts in the public record:

FactorPoints subtracted (each)
Case carrying a lien (most serious)−20
Case that is not closed (open, civil, referred, in lien process)−12
Closed / resolved case−3
Any case dated within the last 24 months (recency weight)−5

The result is clamped to a 0–100 range. The exact weights live in the open source of this site (src/lib/score.ts) so the score is fully reproducible.

Grades

GradeScoreMeaning
A90–100Clean record
B75–89Minor history
C55–74Moderate history
D35–54Elevated signals
F0–34High signal

Data sources

Each region is fed by its own official, free, anonymous open-data feed. Violations and permits are joined to a property by their normalized street address.

Coverage & freshness

Coverage currently spans 2 region(s) in South Florida and is expanding. County feeds cover unincorporated areas only; incorporated cities (e.g. Fort Lauderdale) are added as separate municipal sources. Data is republished from each jurisdiction “as-is” and may be incomplete, delayed, or — where noted — a historical archive. The static pages reflect the last data refresh; the Rental-Scam Checker queries Miami-Dade feeds live.

Our facts-only policy

We present public records and clearly-labeled, reproducible risk signals. We do not characterize any person or listing as fraudulent, and we link to the source so anyone can verify it.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Compliance Record Score?

A transparent 0–100 summary of a property’s government code-enforcement record — open cases, liens, recency, and total volume. A higher score means a cleaner record. It is not a measure of a building’s current condition or safety. The exact formula is above.

Is Sunshine Property Records an official government site?

No. It is an independent project, not affiliated with or endorsed by any government agency. It compiles official open-data records and adds plain-language analysis.

Can I use this to screen a tenant or employee, or for a background check?

No. This information is not a consumer report and Sunshine Property Records is not a consumer reporting agency. You may not use it for tenant screening, employment, credit, insurance, or any purpose covered by the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).

How current is the data?

The property pages are rebuilt daily from the source feeds and each shows its snapshot date. The Rental-Scam Checker queries Miami-Dade records live, so it always reflects the latest published data.

Where does the data come from?

Official open-data feeds: Miami-Dade County Open Data and the City of Fort Lauderdale GIS. Every property page links directly to the original source records so you can verify them.

Public records, provided as-is. This information is compiled from official government open-data feeds and may be incomplete, delayed, or contain errors. It describes a property’s code-enforcement and permit record — it is not a statement about any person, the current condition of a building, or its safety, and it must never be read as an accusation of wrongdoing. Always verify directly with the relevant city or county before relying on it. Coverage is limited to the jurisdictions listed on this site.