Here is today's roundup of prop tech news for real estate photographers and 3D virtual tour pros.

3D Capture Hardware and Software

Insta360 teases new flagship camera for April 22 launch
Source: DPReview, April 2026
Insta360 is teasing a new camera reveal on April 22. Certification filings and industry leakers have placed the rumored Insta360 X6 in an April 2026 launch window, with reported specs including 8K at 60p capture and 10-bit color at a rumored $579. Deeper AI integration in Insta360 Studio is also expected.
Why it matters: An 8K at 60p flagship 360 camera would be a meaningful step up for real estate photographers shooting fast walk-throughs where current high-res modes are locked to lower frame rates.

Real Estate Tech and Platforms

Zillow economist calls out Redfin for mischaracterizing pre-marketing research
Source: Real Estate News, April 8, 2026
Following Compass's deal to syndicate Coming Soon listings on Redfin, Redfin published a report suggesting pre-marketing could boost inventory by 6 to 12 percent in some markets. Zillow Chief Economist Mischa Fisher publicly disputed the findings, saying data pulled from Zillow surveys was mischaracterized and "the math doesn't hold up."
Why it matters: The off-MLS listing war affects which platform your listing photos and tours are visible on. Photographers shooting for Compass, Redfin, and Zillow-affiliated agents need to track where exclusive inventory lands.

Over 460K documents and counting: FTC legal battle with Zillow and Redfin heats up
Source: Inman, April 8, 2026
The FTC lawsuit against Zillow and Redfin over a rental syndication deal crossed 460,000 produced documents as of April 6, 2026. The case centers on allegations that the companies colluded to reduce competition in rental listings.
Why it matters: The outcome could reshape how rental listings and the visual assets on them are syndicated, which is relevant for any photographer doing multifamily or rental work.

AI in Real Estate Photography and Tours

Collov AI design agent adds virtual staging and 360-degree tours
Source: HousingWire, April 2026
San Francisco-based Collov AI launched an AI Design Agent for object and environment edits plus a 360 Panorama tool for interactive tours. 70 percent of beta users adopted the agent, and panoramas start at about $7 per room. Collov positions the product as a lower-cost alternative to $300 to $1,000 full-home 3D tours, with an installed base of over 20,000 US agents.
Why it matters: Direct competition to traditional 3D tour workflows at a dramatically lower price point. Expect clients to ask about it, and plan your pricing response accordingly.

What to Double Check in an AI-Generated Listing Description
Source: RISMedia, April 9, 2026
With 82 percent of agents now using AI to generate listing descriptions, RISMedia outlines what to fact-check before publishing, covering accuracy of property details, disclosure compliance, and the risk of over-embellished claims. The National Association of Realtors has endorsed AI use for repetitive tasks.
Why it matters: Photographers often act as the quality-control stop before a listing goes live. Knowing the common AI copy mistakes helps you catch errors and look sharp to the agent.

Industry News, Funding, and M and A

Proptech funding surges in Q1 to 3B, up 64 percent year over year
Source: The Real Deal, 2026
Proptech firms raised roughly 3.3 billion dollars in Q1 2026, a 64 percent jump year over year, with 125 deals (up 9.6 percent). The top 10 deals accounted for about 2 billion dollars, or 62 percent of the total. AI-driven solutions, construction tech, and proptech fintech were the fastest-growing subsectors.
Why it matters: Renewed proptech investment usually means more tooling choices, but also more platform churn. Expect new entrants, pricing shifts, and consolidation across the 3D tour, floor plan, and AI-staging categories this year.

What caught your eye? Reply below with your take.

Tom