# Fredy – Self-Hosted Real Estate Search & Alerts for Germany
Searching for an apartment or house in Germany can be frustrating.
Fredy makes it easier: it scrapes **ImmoScout24, Immowelt, Immonet, eBay Kleinanzeigen, and WG-Gesucht**, and notifies you instantly via **Slack, Telegram, Email, ntfy, and more** when new listings match your requirements.
Fredy includes a **web UI** to configure your searches, prevents duplicates even across multiple platforms, and stores results so you won’t receive the same listing twice.
 [](https://github.com/orangecoding/fredy/actions/workflows/docker.yml) 
_Fredy_ supports multiple services. Immonet, Immowelt and Ebay are just a few examples. Those services are called providers within _Fredy_. When creating a new job, you can choose one or more providers.
A provider contains the URL that points to the search results for the respective service. If you go to immonet.de and search for something, the displayed URL in the browser is what the provider needs to do its magic.
_Fredy_ supports multiple adapters, such as Slack, SendGrid, Telegram etc. A search job can have as many adapters as supported by _Fredy_. Each adapter needs different configuration values, which you have to provide when using them. An adapter dictates how the frontend renders by telling the frontend what information it needs in order to send listings to the user.
To create your first job, click on the button "Create New Job" on the job table. The job creation dialog should be self-explanatory, however there is one important thing.
When configuring providers, before copying the URL from your browser, make sure that you have sorted the results by date to make sure _Fredy_ always picks the latest results first.
As an administrator, you can create, edit and remove users from _Fredy_. Be careful, each job is connected to the user that has created the job. If you remove the user, their jobs will also be removed.
Immoscout has implemented advanced bot detection. In order to work around this, we are using a reversed engineered version of their mobile api. See [Immoscout Reverse Engineering Documentation](https://github.com/orangecoding/fredy/blob/master/reverse-engineered-immoscout.md)
The data includes: names of active adapters/providers, OS, architecture, Node version, and language. The information is entirely anonymous and helps me understand which adapters/providers are most frequently used.</p>