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Nextdoor's Expanded AI Wants to Help You Sell Your Stuff Before Moving

Exclusive: It's the busiest time of the year for moving, and the neighborhood social media app is expanding its AI assistant to help you avoid moving headaches.

Headshot of Katelyn Chedraoui
Headshot of Katelyn Chedraoui
Katelyn Chedraoui Writer I
Katelyn is a writer with CNET covering artificial intelligence, including chatbots, image and video generators. Her work explores how new AI technology is infiltrating our lives, shaping the content we consume on social media and affecting the people behind the screens. She graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a degree in media and journalism. You can reach her at kchedraoui@cnet.com.
Expertise artificial intelligence, AI image generators, social media platforms
Katelyn Chedraoui
2 min read
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One of the most stressful parts of moving is selling all the stuff you don't want anymore and finding replacements for your new place. That's part of why Nextdoor, the social media app that connects real-life neighbors and communities, is expanding its generative AI assistant to its online marketplace. The upgraded feature is available in the US starting today.

One of Nextdoor's biggest features is its location-based "For Sale & Free" section, which operates similar to Facebook Marketplace. The upgraded AI assistant will now help you create the ideal sales listing to cut down time spent perfecting each detail on the post. Once you select the photos you want to include, the AI assistant will fill out the listing to write a title and description, suggest a price and arrange the photos. You can edit the post as needed.

four screenshots showing how to use Nextdoor's AI sales listing tool
Nextdoor

Summer is the busiest time of year for moving, according to Nextdoor data, with August in particular seeing the biggest increase in people leaving and joining new communities. Those moving costs can also stack with other seasonal expenses, like school supplies. CNET found that adults will spend an average of $662 on back-to-school supplies this year. Nextdoor reports that two thirds of parents on Nextdoor plan on using its online marketplace to help mitigate the increasing price tags for students and families. The company hopes that expanding the AI tool will help parents create and browse listings more easily.

Nextdoor's generative AI assistant is built with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, using the popular chatbot's API. Nextdoor's privacy policy states that your information can be shared with third-party service providers, including those for generative artificial intelligence. Previously, the company has used machine learning to power its kindness reminders, which are alerts that urge people to rethink and reword their messages before sending them.

For more, check out our full review of Meta AI and how to use the new Instagram Reels features.