What's in a Qote: a chapter-by-chapter walk-through
From the cover sign-off to the line-by-line subsidies — what each of the 15 pages is for.
A genuine, anonymised case — Rue du Bailli 47, a 1924 Ixelles townhouse. See the intake it came from, the AI-plus-human validation behind it, and the print-ready PDF your bank, insurer and notary will accept.
Sophie was buying a townhouse and needed a renovation figure her bank would accept — fast. She answered the guided intake, dropped the seller's PEB certificate, and let the assistant suggest the work packages. No site visit, no waiting.
The engine structured Sophie's scope and matched it to the ABEX index in seconds. Then Mark, a reviewer in our Brussels office, checked the assumptions, corrected the façade area, and signed it. That signature is why the bank filed it without a query.
22 line items, ABEX 18A, 6 subsidies matched, PEB E → B path — generated in seconds from the intake.
Mark V. corrected the façade m², confirmed the heat-pump sizing, and signed off at 14:02 — his name is on page 1.
Mostly white, line-itemised and footnoted across 15 A4 pages. Scroll the live preview below, or open the full report to print or save as PDF.
From the cover sign-off to the line-by-line subsidies — what each of the 15 pages is for.
Every subsidy amount is quoted from the official formula. Here's the sourcing behind chapter D.
A document a credit officer can print, annotate and file beats a flashy web dashboard every time.