(Most recent update March 2022)
We are thrilled to announce that we now have the most recent, 2020 data available for Puerto Rico.
Well, we’ve had Puerto Rico data for some years -- and helped develop a plan and budget for a community-driven island-wide property survey that could still come to life one day if the time is right -- however, since 2016, we were unable to get updated, refreshed data for the island.
Not anymore! We recently received the most recent & updated data for all of Puerto Rico for 2020. That’s right - straight from a PR source.
We have added 38,635 additional parcels for Puerto Rico to our dataset: that brings us up to 1,523,802 parcels in total.
If you're looking for the latest data for all of Puerto Rico, and we know many of you are since we get asked for this a lot, you can see it on the site at https://regrid.com/store/us/pr.
If you need to export the raw data for use outside the site, email us at parcels@regrid.com. It’s available for download and via API.
It is also available for self-serve download by the municipality on the Regrid Data Store: https://regrid.com/store/us/pr
Loveland team members have made numerous visits to Puerto Rico and developed some good friendships on the island since Maria. We look forward to being back when the pandemic passes and it's safe to travel, and we hope to be helpful on more local projects in the future.
Below, find some notable improvements & updates between the data we had in 2016 and the data we have now:
Attribute/Column Name |
Data from 2016 |
NEW PR Data (2020) |
Ll_uuid (total number of unique parcels) |
1,485,221 |
1,523,802 |
Parcel number |
1,473,852 |
1,467,502 |
Mailing Address |
Didn’t exist. |
715,569 (Woo Hoo) |
Parcel Address |
1,263,592 |
1,301,223 |
Owner |
737,183 |
1,301,821 |
Last Sale Date |
Didn’t exist. |
824,960 |
Our latest data update for PR also gave us some key insights into the possible impact of Hurricane Maria on the island’s property landscape - since Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico on Sept. 20, 2017, we have one dataset prior to the hurricane and one after.
Please bear in mind that the data we discuss below can NOT be directly a result or impact of Maria (although speculatively, they could very well be). It's also not possible for us to know the details of how the data is updated and maintained, and what might be missing that would add additional insight or otherwise impact the conclusions we draw below. We share some observations from the data here to help prompt further research and greater understanding of how things are changing over time.
Topo map, rainfall amounts, and Hurricane Maria’s path across Puerto Rico. Image from USGS. ^
A 'mailing address' is the place of record where an owner wants information (tax bills, other correspondence to property owners from the municipal government) to be sent. This makes it interesting data for analysis.
properties with non-Puerto Rico mailing addresses ^
Sale Data (Pre & Post Maria)
In an attempt to compare apples to apples as much as possible within this quick analysis, we took Hurricane Maria as the inflection point. Since we’re just about 2.5 years after Maria as of this writing, we took a corresponding 2.5 years prior to Maria (March 2015). All post- and pre- Maria data below, unless otherwise noted, are working with this 2.5 year span on either side.
There's much more to be learned from this dataset. If our software or the data itself can be helpful to your work, research, or advocacy in Puerto Rico please email us at parcels@regrid.com.
- Team Regrid