Tool Builder

Write one prompt. We handle the rest.

Keep it short. Add a market only if it matters. The builder turns one use case into one tool page with inputs, result flow, guide, and preview.

BuilderRefine current draft

Refine this tool

Only change the prompt if you want a stronger rebuild. For small fixes, use the editor below.

Create account
Refine guidanceRebuild only for a narrower angle, another market, or a stronger structural rewrite.
Prompt strength0/100
Reference toolNone
Start here

Finish this draft

Verify it, fix issues, save it, then publish.

Needs reviewGeneral
Duplicate riskClear enough
FormulaValid
AI quality reportStrong · 90/100
Language consistencyOne language used across public content.
Scenario realism2 practical examples detected.
FAQ utility2 FAQ items look usable.
AI self-checkNo blocking self-check issues found.
Fix nextResolve top governance warnings before sending to review.

Sign in to save and publish your tools.

Tool preview

Use the preview as your main working area.

Tap any section for a quick fix.

Calculator

Rent Affordability Checker

Check how much of monthly income goes to housing so users can make a simple everyday affordability decision.

Quick startUses a realistic starter scenario so you get to a meaningful result faster.

Monthly income 4,500, rent 1,500, and utilities 250 gives a quick housing share check.

Inputs

Housing cost share

--Run the calculator to get an AI-style explanation of the result.

Guide

How to use this tool

Use this checker to understand how much of income is consumed by housing before the month gets too tight. It is a small but useful daily helper for renters because it gives a fast affordability share that can be compared across apartments or cities without overcomplicating the decision.

Examples

Try these scenarios

FAQ

Common questions

What is a good housing cost share?

Many people try to keep housing at a manageable share of income, but the ideal number depends on debt, savings goals, and local rent levels. This checker gives a simple starting point for that decision.

Should I include bills here?

Yes, if they are closely tied to housing and recur every month. That makes the affordability result more useful for real-life planning.