
Cabasta
Search BOE property auctions by map or list in one place.
Tagline
BOE auctions, actually searchable
The BOE property auction layer for Spain.
Stop reading BOE notices one by one.
Find auction deals without spreadsheet hell.
The BOE property auction layer for Spain.
This is the cleanest category-defining frame because the product is not a marketplace or transaction engine; it is a discovery interface for public auction inventory.
A faster alternative to reading BOE notices one by one.
The obvious substitute is manual browsing of the BOE and its notices. Cabasta wins by turning that grind into a map/list experience with key fields surfaced immediately.
Find auction properties without spreadsheet hell.
The page already presents auction IDs, locations, types, and prices in a compact format. Positioning against manual tracking resonates with users who currently copy listings into their own spreadsheets.
Primary user
Spanish property investors or bargain hunters actively scanning BOE auctions for under-market deals
ICP #1
Solo property investor in Spain hunting auction deals on evenings and weekends
Pain
They waste hours opening BOE notices and trying to figure out which auctions are actually relevant, where the asset is, and whether it is a flat, house, or land parcel.
Why this solves
Cabasta turns BOE auctions into a searchable surface with map and list views, so the investor can spot opportunities by location and asset type much faster than reading raw notices.
ICP #2
Small real-estate agency owner focused on distressed and off-market opportunities
Pain
They need a fast way to identify auctioned properties across multiple municipalities without manually combing government bulletins.
Why this solves
The product centralizes 1050 listings and exposes municipality, property type, and price at a glance, making it easy to build a pipeline of potential deals.
ICP #3
Auction consultant or property lawyer advising clients on BOE opportunities
Pain
They need a cleaner front end for quickly triaging auctions before digging into the legal details buried in official notices.
Why this solves
Cabasta is effectively a discovery layer on top of BOE listings, helping them shortlist by asset type, geography, and price before doing deeper due diligence.
Strengths
- +Immediate clarity on what the product does: BOE property auctions, not general listings.
- +Strong utility signal from the two browsing modes, map and list/grid.
- +Visible scale with "1050 propiedades," which builds trust and implies coverage.
Weaknesses
- −No explanation of who this is for, so the product feels like a raw data dump instead of a tool with a user promise.
- −No call to action, signup, alerts, or saved search flow; the page only invites browsing, not retention.
- −No differentiation versus manually using BOE or using idealist-style real-estate portals once a listing is identified.
- −The grid/list content is visually repetitive and hard to scan; every card seems to surface only a few fields.
- −No evidence of freshness, update cadence, data provenance details, or how complete the coverage is beyond the count.
Fix these
- Add a headline that speaks to the job-to-be-done, such as "Encuentra subastas BOE por ciudad, tipo y precio en segundos."
- Introduce save/search alerts for municipalities, provinces, and asset types so users return instead of browsing once and leaving.
- Surface richer listing detail on cards: deposit, auction date, reference number, and whether the listing has photos or documents.
- Add trust markers: last updated date, source methodology, and a note about how Cabasta maps BOE records into listings.
- Create audience-specific entry points for inversores, agencias, and abogados to make the value proposition feel intentional.
Drop-in replacement copy
Headline
Find BOE auctions faster
Browse Spanish property auctions by map, list, type, and price.
See relevant deals fast
Cabasta surfaces the details that matter first: municipality, province, property type, and starting price. You can decide which listings are worth opening without reading every BOE notice.
Browse how you think
Switch between map view and list/grid view depending on your workflow. If you search by area, the map is faster; if you compare options, the cards are easier to scan.
Filter by the asset you want
Focus on Piso, Casa, Terreno, or Otro instead of wading through irrelevant records. That makes it easier to build a shortlist for investing, brokering, or advisory work.
Work from one clean catalog
Cabasta centralizes 1050 public real-estate auction listings from the BOE in one place. No more jumping between notices, tabs, and spreadsheets just to understand what’s available.
FAQ
Is Cabasta a marketplace?
No. It’s a discovery layer for public BOE real-estate auctions. You browse listings here, then do your usual legal and investment due diligence elsewhere.
Who is this for?
Spanish property investors, small agencies, auction consultants, and lawyers who need to triage auction listings quickly. It’s especially useful if you currently scan BOE notices manually.
How fresh is the data?
Cabasta is built from public BOE auction records and should be checked against the original notice before any decision. Add a last-updated stamp and source note on the page for clarity.
Can I search by location and property type?
Yes. You can browse by map or list, and filter by property type such as Piso, Casa, Terreno, or Otro. Municipalities and provinces are visible on each listing.
Why use this instead of BOE directly?
Because the BOE is the source, but Cabasta makes discovery faster. It turns raw notices into a browsable catalog so you can shortlist opportunities without spreadsheet hell.
BOE auctions are still stuck in spreadsheets. I built Cabasta to turn 1050 Spanish property auctions into a map + list you can actually scan. Search by city, province, type, and price instead of opening raw notices one by one. cabasta.com
1050 property auctions, one ugly truth. Most people don’t need more data. They need a faster way to see which BOE listings are worth opening. So I made Cabasta: map view, list view, type filters, and the auction ID right there. Built for Spanish investors.
Spending hours on BOE notices? That was the problem. Cabasta shows Spanish property auctions in one place, with municipality, province, type, and starting price visible immediately. If you’ve ever copy-pasted listings into a spreadsheet, this is for you.
Search BOE property auctions by map. Pisos in Barcelona. Casas in Valencia. Terrenos wherever the upside is. Cabasta makes public auction browsing feel like a real product instead of government PDF archaeology.
People keep asking for this in Spain. Not a marketplace. Not a broker. Just a cleaner way to discover BOE real-estate auctions by location, property type, and price before you do the legal deep dive. That’s Cabasta.
Spanish property auctions need a better front end. Cabasta is a browsable catalog of BOE real-estate listings with map and list views. If you scan auctions on evenings and weekends, this saves a lot of dead clicks.
I hated the BOE browsing workflow. Open notice. Find the property. Figure out the location. Copy it somewhere else. Repeat 1000 times. Cabasta fixes the first 90% of that job.
Auction hunting should not require a spreadsheet. Cabasta centralizes public Spanish real-estate auctions and surfaces the fields people actually care about: place, type, price, and reference. Less tab chaos. More shortlists.
Map view for BOE auctions exists now. You can browse Spanish auction properties geographically instead of digging through bulletin entries. It’s simple, ugly in the right way, and much faster than the default workflow.
1050 listings is enough to matter. Cabasta gives solo investors, agencies, and property lawyers one place to scan BOE auctions without manual filtering. If your current process starts in the BOE and ends in Excel, try this.
Angle: job-to-be-done for Spanish investors
I built Cabasta for a very specific job: help people find BOE property auctions in Spain without spending hours reading raw notices. If you’ve ever tried to scan government bulletins for flats, houses, or land, you know the workflow is broken. You open one notice. Then another. Then another. You copy the reference number. You guess the location. You paste it into a spreadsheet. And after 45 minutes, you still don’t know which listings are worth a closer look. Cabasta turns that into a browsable catalog. - 1050 public real-estate auction listings - Map view for geographic browsing - List/grid view for quick scanning - Type filters: Piso, Casa, Terreno, Otro - Municipality, province, and starting price visible up front I’m not trying to replace due diligence. I’m trying to make the first 90% of discovery much less painful. If you work with BOE auctions in Spain, I’d love feedback from the people who do this every week: what fields would make a listing immediately useful?
Angle: positioning against spreadsheets and manual BOE reading
Most “real estate data” tools are really just cluttered portals. Cabasta is different. It’s a discovery layer for Spanish BOE property auctions. That sounds simple, but the difference matters: Manual BOE browsing is fine if you only check one notice a month. It breaks down fast if you scan dozens of opportunities across different municipalities. So the product focuses on the first decision: is this listing even worth opening? To help with that, Cabasta shows the basics immediately: location, property type, starting price, and auction reference. Then you can browse by map or list depending on how you work. For investors, that means faster shortlists. For agencies, a cleaner pipeline. For lawyers and consultants, a faster triage layer before deeper analysis. The interesting part is not the data itself. It’s how much time gets wasted before the data becomes usable. That’s the gap I’m building against.
Angle: shipping a niche utility with clear trust signals
One thing I’ve learned shipping niche tools: people don’t want more features first. They want trust. With Cabasta, the core promise is straightforward: public BOE real-estate auctions, collected in one place, made easier to browse. But the landing page still has to answer a few questions fast: - Is this fresh? - Is it complete enough? - Who is it for? - Why not just use BOE directly? That’s why I’m focusing on a few obvious trust markers next: last updated date, source methodology, richer listing cards, and saved searches for municipalities and property types. The goal is not to look big. The goal is to feel useful immediately. If you’re an investor in Spain, a small agency, or someone helping clients with auction properties, I’d be grateful for blunt feedback on the product and the copy. What would make you trust it in 10 seconds?
Tagline
Search Spanish BOE property auctions by map
Description
Cabasta turns 1050 Spanish BOE real-estate auctions into a browsable map and list. Filter by type, city, province, and price so you can spot deals faster than reading raw notices.
Maker's first comment
I built Cabasta because the BOE auction workflow is painful if you’re doing it seriously. The usual process is open notices, hunt for the property, guess the location, copy references into a spreadsheet, and repeat until your evening is gone. Cabasta is my attempt to make that first discovery step usable. It’s not trying to replace due diligence, legal review, or the BOE itself. It’s a cleaner front end for people who want to scan public real-estate auctions by map or list, then decide what deserves a deeper look. Right now it covers 1050 properties and surfaces the fields that matter most for triage: municipality, province, property type, and starting price. I’m shipping this in public and I’m especially looking for feedback from Spanish investors, agencies, and property professionals on what would make the listings more actionable. If you use BOE auctions today, I’d love to know what’s missing from the browsing experience.
Pinned maker comment
Would love feedback on the listing cards and the trust signals: what fields would make Cabasta immediately useful for your workflow?
Meta
Still reading BOE notices one by one?
Hypothesis: Spanish property investors and small agencies will click faster on a tool that surfaces BOE auction properties by map, type, and price than on raw bulletin pages. Cabasta shows 1050 public real-estate auctions in one place, so you can shortlist deals without spreadsheet chaos.
Google Search
BOE property auctions by map in Spain
Hypothesis: people searching for BOE auctions want faster browsing, not a marketplace. Cabasta organizes public Spanish real-estate auction listings by municipality, province, property type, and starting price so users can find relevant records faster.
Reddit Promoted
If you track auction deals in Spain, this helps.
Hypothesis: investors and deal hunters in auction-heavy communities are frustrated by manual BOE browsing. Cabasta turns public Spanish real-estate auctions into a searchable catalog with map and list views, making triage faster before legal due diligence.
Subreddits
r/SideProject
Show the product, the problem, and the exact workflow it replaces for BOE auction hunting.
Rules: No pure self-promo; share the build story, screenshots, and a concrete lesson.
r/indiehackers
Post the niche discovery problem and ask how others validate a narrow utility tool for a specific country.
Rules: Focus on founder lessons and traction signals, not just a launch link.
r/microsaas
Share how a small, data-focused utility can solve a painful niche workflow for Spanish property investors.
Rules: Keep it practical, show product screenshots, and avoid spammy language.
r/EntrepreneurRideAlong
Document the launch of a niche real-estate discovery tool and invite feedback on positioning and pricing.
Rules: Be transparent about what you’re building and what you learned.
r/realestateinvesting
Frame it as a time-saving tool for finding distressed Spanish auction properties faster.
Rules: Lead with utility and avoid hard-selling; check local posting rules carefully.
Communities
Share the niche problem, the data pipeline lesson, and the first usage insights. Comment on other makers’ launches before posting your own so the community knows you’re real.
Spanish Property Investors Facebook groups
Join only groups focused on Spanish investing or auctions, then ask a specific question about how people currently track BOE opportunities before mentioning Cabasta.
LinkedIn real-estate investor circles
Post a short before/after workflow and target Spanish investors, brokers, and legal professionals with a very concrete ask for feedback.
Discord communities for indie makers and scrapers
Share the data structuring challenge and the UI tradeoffs, not a pitch. Offer to compare notes on scraping, normalization, and map browsing.
Cold outreach template
Hi {firstName} - I built Cabasta because I kept seeing people waste time opening BOE notices one by one for Spanish property auctions. It turns public auction listings into a map/list view with type, location, and starting price up front. If {context} is something you deal with, I’d love 2 minutes of blunt feedback on what would make this useful.
Product Hunt timing
Launch on Tuesday at 9:00am Europe/Madrid time. That gives Spanish property investors, agencies, and legal professionals the best chance to see it during the workday, and Product Hunt traffic is still strong enough that morning UTC overlap helps early momentum.
Indie Hackers post ideas
- 01How I turned BOE property auctions into a searchable map
- 02What I learned building a niche tool for Spanish real-estate auctions
- 03From raw government notices to 1050 browsable listings: the data and UX tradeoffs
Competitor alternatives
Current tone of voice
Minimal, utilitarian, and lightly consumer-friendly; the page uses straightforward Spanish like "Descubre propiedades en subasta pública del Boletín Oficial del Estado" and simple navigation labels such as "Mapa" and "Lista".
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