What you should know before buying in Moscow

Moscow sits in Latah County, Idaho, with a population around 26,387. Type any Moscow address and we gather what public records say about the block around it, then explain it in plain English. Noise, contamination, crime, schools, flood risk, and the neighbors you can't see in the listing photos.

49 things we check on every block

One search runs all of them. Here's some of what turns up in a Moscow report.

Noise

  • Freight & passenger rail
  • Aviation noise
  • Outdoor gun ranges
  • Military & artillery ranges

Air quality

  • Regulatory air monitors
  • Industrial emissions
  • Permitted air emitters

Soil & groundwater

  • Superfund sites
  • Brownfields
  • State cleanup sites
  • Underground storage tanks
  • Former gas stations
  • Dry cleaners

Water quality

  • Impaired surface water
  • Permitted dischargers

Flood & climate

  • FEMA flood zone
  • Storm & tornado history
  • Federal disaster declarations

Power & EMF

  • High-voltage transmission lines
  • Cell towers
  • Power plants

Pipelines & extraction

  • Natural gas pipelines
  • Hazardous liquid pipelines

Industrial proximity

  • Factories & manufacturers
  • Landfills
  • Waste transfer stations
  • Wind turbines
  • Solar farms
  • Junkyards & scrap

Development constraints

  • Protected areas
  • Conservation easements
  • Critical habitat

Transportation

  • Transit access
  • Freight terminals

Parks & recreation

  • Parks & green space
  • Playgrounds
  • Recreation & sports
  • Trails & greenways
  • Water access

Crime & safety

  • Violent crime rate
  • Property crime rate
  • Nuisance reports (311)
  • Sex offender registry

Emergency services

  • Hospitals & trauma centers

Schools

  • Assigned attendance zone
  • School ratings
  • Private & charter schools
  • District boundaries
  • Colleges & universities
Active rail Freight Passenger Tap a line for details

Nearby cities

Rail is just the start.

Flood risk, road and flight noise, environmental hazards, and more are on the way. Leave your email and we'll tell you when they land.

More signals coming. No spam.

ReconNest reads from public datasets, federal, state, and local. We report distance and a proximity band, not a measured reading, and we say so when a match is uncertain (a rail line that runs underground, an address a map can't place exactly). It's a starting point for your own walk-through and inspection, not a replacement for them.