Legal & Compliance
Real estate transactions require strict adherence to federal, state, and local laws. This guide covers all compliance requirements for agents at Winslow Homes LLC across Florida, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.
I. FEDERAL REAL ESTATE LAWS
1. Fair Housing Act (Title VIII)
The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, familial status, and disability. Real estate agents must comply with all FHA rules in listing, showing, advertising, and financing activities.
Protected Classes: Race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, familial status (families with children under 18 or pregnant women), sexual orientation (some states), gender identity (some states).
Prohibited Practices: Refusing to sell, rent, or negotiate for housing. Representing that property is unavailable when it is available. Steering (directing buyers to or away from neighborhoods based on protected status). Blockbusting. Discriminatory advertising. Changing terms, conditions, or privileges of sale or rental. Harassment based on protected status. Discriminatory mortgage lending or appraisal practices. Steering toward or away from certain lenders based on protected status.
Testing: HUD and local fair housing organizations conduct testing to detect discrimination. Testers contact agents posing as buyers or renters to evaluate whether they receive equal treatment and information as other customers.
Penalties: Civil penalties up to $16,000 for first violation, $37,500 for second violation within 5 years, $65,000 for third or subsequent violation. Actual damages, court costs, attorney fees, and injunctive relief. Criminal penalties up to 1 year imprisonment and $10,000 fine.
Agent Responsibilities: Treat all clients equally. Show all available properties. Provide identical information and financing options. Use neutral language in advertising. Never make assumptions about buyer preferences based on protected status. Report fair housing violations to management immediately.
2. Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
The ADA requires that people with disabilities have equal access to goods and services. Real estate businesses must ensure accessibility of offices, provide reasonable accommodations, and market properties appropriately to disabled individuals.
Accessibility Requirements: Provide accessible parking, entrance, restrooms, and hallways in your office. Ensure website accessibility for screen readers and keyboard navigation. Offer TTY (telephone typewriter) or video relay services for deaf clients. Provide auxiliary aids like interpreters, note-takers, or written materials.
Service Animals: Service animals are allowed in all areas where clients are allowed. Service animals are dogs or miniature horses trained to perform specific tasks for disabled individuals. Emotional support animals are not service animals and do not have the same access rights. You may ask if the animal is a service animal and what tasks it performs, but you cannot demand documentation or medical information.
Reasonable Accommodations: Modify policies, practices, or procedures to allow equal access. Examples: allowing extra time for document completion, providing materials in large print or Braille, scheduling consultations at accessible locations, allowing family members or aides to attend meetings.
Property Showings: Describe property features accurately and in detail. Mention accessibility features (ramps, accessible bathrooms, widened doorways, elevators). Disclose any barriers to accessibility. Show the entire property including accessible routes.
Marketing: Include information about accessible features in MLS listings. Use photos and descriptions that highlight accessibility. Avoid segregating or targeting advertising specifically toward people with disabilities in a way that suggests properties are only suitable for disabled buyers.
Penalties: Civil penalties up to $75,000 for first violation, $150,000 for subsequent violations. Actual damages, corrective action, and attorney fees.
3. Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA)
ECOA prohibits discrimination in lending. While brokers do not extend credit directly, agents must not discriminate when referring clients to lenders or providing financing information.
Prohibited Discrimination: Denying credit based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age (provided applicant has capacity to contract), or because applicant receives income from public assistance programs.
Agent Role: Treat all buyers equally regarding financing options and lender recommendations. Provide identical information to all buyers. Refer buyers to multiple lenders if appropriate. Never suggest that certain buyers should use specific lenders based on protected status. Report discriminatory lending practices by lenders to management.
Penalties: Actual damages, punitive damages up to $10,000, attorney fees, court costs.
4. Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
RESPA requires clear disclosure of all settlement costs and prohibits kickbacks for referrals in real estate transactions.
Disclosure Requirements: Lenders must provide a Loan Estimate within 3 business days of application. Closing Disclosure must be provided 3 days before closing. All fees, points, and charges must be itemized and explained.
Affiliated Business Disclosure: If you refer clients to a service provider in which you or your company has a financial interest, you must disclose that relationship in writing. Examples: title companies, inspectors, appraisers, contractors owned by brokers or agents.
Kickback Prohibition: You cannot receive payment or referral fees from service providers (inspectors, appraisers, contractors, lenders) beyond reasonable charges for actual services rendered. Giving or accepting kickbacks for referrals violates RESPA.
Controlled Business Arrangements: If you own or have interest in a service provider, you must disclose this in writing before referring the client. Client has right to use another provider.
Agent Responsibilities: Do not accept referral fees from lenders, title companies, or other service providers for client referrals. Disclose any owned businesses in writing. Do not steer clients toward providers based on kickback agreements. Ensure clients understand all costs at closing.
Penalties: Civil liability up to $5,000 per violation. Criminal penalties up to 1 year imprisonment and $10,000 fine for knowing and willful violations.
5. Truth in Lending Act (TILA)
TILA requires clear disclosure of credit terms and cost information. Lenders must disclose APR, finance charges, payment schedules, and right of rescission.
TILA Disclosures: Annual Percentage Rate (APR), finance charge, amount financed, payment schedule, total payments, security interest, prepayment penalty policies, late payment penalties.
Right of Rescission: Borrowers have 3 business days to cancel certain loans secured by a dwelling (except for purchase transactions). Lender must return all fees and finances if borrower rescinds.
Agent Role: Provide accurate loan estimate information. Do not misrepresent loan terms. Refer buyers to lenders for detailed TILA disclosures. Ensure buyers understand APR is different from interest rate.
Penalties: Actual damages, statutory damages up to $5,000, attorney fees, court costs.
6. Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)
HMDA requires lenders to collect and report data on mortgage applications, approvals, and denials to identify discriminatory lending patterns.
Lender Obligation: Lenders must collect demographic information (race, ethnicity, sex, age) on mortgage applications. This data identifies lending disparities by demographic group.
Agent Role: Advise buyers that lenders will request demographic information. Explain this is for federal reporting purposes, not for underwriting decisions. Do not discourage buyers from disclosing demographic information.
Data Accuracy: Lenders report HMDA data publicly (with privacy protections). Data is analyzed to detect discrimination and enforce fair lending laws.
7. Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)
CRA requires lenders to demonstrate they serve credit needs of all communities, including low-income areas.
Lender Performance: Federal regulators rate lenders on CRA compliance. Poor ratings affect a lender's ability to expand or merge.
Agent Role: Understand that buyers in underserved communities deserve access to credit. Do not steer low-income buyers away from high-opportunity neighborhoods. Refer buyers to lenders with strong CRA ratings and community lending programs.
8. Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
Dodd-Frank created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and established strict mortgage lending rules.
Qualified Mortgage (QM) Standard: Lenders must ensure loans are affordable and meet underwriting standards. QM loans have better consumer protections and reduced lender liability. Non-QM loans face higher legal risk.
Ability to Repay Rule: Lenders must verify borrower ability to repay before loan approval. Lenders cannot issue loans that set borrowers up for default.
Escrow Requirements: Lenders must establish escrow accounts for property taxes and insurance on all loans except certain jumbo mortgages.
Appraisal Requirements: Appraisers must be licensed and independent. Appraisals must be accurate and unbiased. Pressure on appraisers to reach target values is prohibited.
Agent Role: Ensure buyers work with reputable lenders offering QM loans. Understand that loan qualification is more stringent than pre-Dodd-Frank standards. Advise buyers to provide accurate financial information to lenders.
9. Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act (SAFE Act)
SAFE Act requires all mortgage loan originators to obtain a license. Loan officers, brokers, and processors handling mortgage applications must be licensed.
Licensing Requirements: Pass pre-licensing exam, complete 20 hours of education, pass background check, fingerprinting, credit report review. Renew license annually with 8 hours continuing education.
NMLS Database: All mortgage licensees are listed in Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS). Check NMLS to verify lender and loan officer credentials before referring clients.
Agent Role: Verify that mortgage professionals you refer clients to are SAFE Act compliant. Do not refer clients to unlicensed loan officers. If referring clients to Novus Home Mortgage, loan officers must be listed in NMLS as licensed by appropriate state regulators.
Novus Loan Officers at Winslow Homes: All loan officers must maintain active state licenses. NMLS records are publicly accessible at www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org. Verify current licenses before loan recommendations.
10. Lead-Based Paint Disclosure Requirements
Federal law requires disclosure of known lead-based paint hazards in homes built before 1978.
Properties Affected: All residential properties built before January 1, 1978 are presumed to contain lead-based paint unless professionally inspected and certified lead-free.
Disclosure Timing: Sellers must disclose known lead-based paint hazards before buyer makes offer. Buyer has right to 10-day lead inspection period before becoming obligated to purchase.
Seller Disclosure Form: Use EPA-approved Lead-Based Paint Disclosure form. Seller must certify awareness or lack of awareness of lead hazards. List any previous lead inspections, test results, or remediation.
Agent Responsibility: Ensure all sellers of pre-1978 properties complete lead disclosure accurately. Provide buyers with EPA pamphlet "Protect Your Family from Lead in Your Home." Document buyer receipt of disclosure form and pamphlet. Include lead disclosure language in purchase agreement.
Lead Inspection Rights: Buyer has right to hire lead inspector during inspection period. Inspection costs are paid by buyer. Results determine buyer's decision to proceed, renegotiate, or withdraw.
Penalties: Failure to disclose lead hazards: civil penalties up to $16,000 per violation, actual damages, treble damages (3x damages) if knowing failure to disclose.
11. Flood Insurance Requirements (National Flood Insurance Program)
Lenders require flood insurance for properties in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs).
FEMA Flood Maps: FEMA designates flood zones based on historical flood data. Properties in high-risk zones (A and V zones) require flood insurance. Properties in moderate zones (X zone) may be recommended for flood insurance.
Lender Requirement: If property is in SFHA and financed by federally-regulated lender, borrower must purchase flood insurance. Lender may impose force-placed insurance if borrower fails to obtain policy. Force-placed insurance is expensive and covers only the lender's interests.
Disclosure: Sellers and agents must disclose flood zone status. Include flood zone determination with offer. Buyer has right to terminate offer if property is in high-risk flood zone.
Agent Action: Obtain flood zone determination from FEMA before showing property or presenting to clients. Disclose flood zone status to buyers in writing. Discuss flood insurance costs with buyers. Refer buyers to insurance agents for flood quotes.
Flood Zone Categories: Zone A (high risk, 1-percent annual chance), Zone AE (high risk, base flood elevation known), Zone X (moderate risk, 0.2 percent annual chance), Zone X shaded (0.2 percent annual chance, less stringent requirements).
12. Environmental Protection Regulations
Properties may contain hazardous substances that require disclosure and remediation.
Asbestos: Products containing asbestos were widely used in construction pre-1980s. Asbestos hazard arises when materials deteriorate and fibers become airborne. Health effects: mesothelioma, lung cancer, asbestosis. Disclosure required if known. Removal must be by EPA-certified contractor.
Mold: Mold grows in moist environments. Health effects vary but may include respiratory issues, allergies, asthma triggers. Disclose known mold issues. Buyers have right to inspect for mold. Remediation must address moisture source.
Radon: Radon is radioactive gas seeping from soil. Second leading cause of lung cancer after smoking. Buyers have right to test for radon. Mitigation systems reduce radon levels. Disclose if elevated radon levels known.
Underground Storage Tanks: Properties with prior commercial or industrial use may have buried fuel tanks. Tanks may leak and contaminate soil and groundwater. Phase I Environmental Site Assessment identifies tank presence. Removal and remediation required if tanks found.
Agent Action: Ask sellers about known environmental hazards. Disclose hazards to buyers in writing. Recommend Phase I ESA for older or previously commercial properties. Advise buyers to test for radon and have professional mold inspection if moisture observed.
13. Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA)
FIRPTA requires withholding of 15% of sale price when foreign person sells U.S. real property.
Foreign Person Definition: Non-U.S. citizen not admitted as lawful permanent resident. Includes foreign corporations, partnerships, trusts without U.S. beneficiaries.
Withholding Requirement: Buyer or title company must withhold 15% of gross sale price and remit to IRS. Failure to withhold results in buyer and agent liability for the withheld amount plus penalties and interest.
FIRPTA Certificate of Non-Foreign Status: Foreign seller provides affidavit stating non-foreign status. If signed under penalty of perjury, withholding is not required. Certificate must include seller's U.S. taxpayer ID or Social Security number.
Agent Action: Ask seller if foreign person. If foreign, ensure withholding agent (buyer or title company) withholds 15%. If seller signs FIRPTA certificate, verify signature and affidavit language. Include FIRPTA requirements in purchase agreement if applicable.
Penalties: Failure to withhold: 100% of withheld amount owed by buyer/agent, plus interest and penalties. Criminal penalties for willful withholding failure.
14. Bank Secrecy Act and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Laws
Banks and brokers must monitor for money laundering and terrorist financing. Real estate transactions are monitored for suspicious activity.
Currency Transaction Reports (CTRs): Lenders report cash transactions over $10,000 to Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). Structuring multiple transactions to avoid CTR reporting is illegal.
Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs): Lenders and title companies file SARs with FinCEN if suspicious activity detected. Examples: inconsistent buyer profile, undisclosed beneficial owners, rapid property flipping, source of funds unclear.
Red Flags in Real Estate: All-cash offers with no financing contingency from unknown buyers. Wire transfer delays or changes in wire instructions. Buyers requesting cash-back at closing. Quick purchase, quick sale transactions. Use of shell companies or trusts to hide buyer identity. Offers significantly above or below market value. Seller pressure to close quickly.
Agent Role: Know your clients. Understand source of down payment funds. If client is paying cash, understand where funds came from. Report suspicious activity to broker and lender. Do not participate in structuring to avoid reporting. Document client identity and source of funds.
Penalties: Civil penalties up to $100,000 per violation. Criminal penalties up to 10 years imprisonment and $250,000 fine. Forfeiture of proceeds.
15. USA PATRIOT Act
PATRIOT Act requires customer identification and verification to prevent terrorist financing.
Customer Identification Program (CIP): Lenders verify customer identity using government-issued ID. Verification includes name, address, date of birth, ID number.
Beneficial Ownership: For entity buyers (corporations, LLCs, trusts), beneficial owners must be identified. Ultimate owner of property must be known.
Terrorist Financing: Lenders screen customers against Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) list of sanctioned entities and known terrorists. Match occurs before loan approval.
Agent Role: Provide accurate client information to lenders. Inform corporate buyers that beneficial owners will be identified. Do not structure transactions to hide buyer identity. Report suspicious indicators of terrorism financing to authorities.
16. CFPB Rules and Regulations
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) enforces consumer protection laws in mortgage lending and real estate transactions.
CFPB Jurisdiction: CFPB has authority over lenders, mortgage brokers, appraisers, title companies, and third-party service providers in real estate transactions.
Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure: CFPB requires clear, standardized forms showing all loan costs. Loan Estimate provided within 3 days of application. Closing Disclosure provided 3 days before closing.
Complaint Handling: CFPB maintains complaint database on its website. Lenders must respond to complaints. CFPB investigates patterns of complaints.
Enforcement: CFPB examines lenders for compliance. Violations result in cease and desist orders, civil penalties, rescission of transactions, and restitution to harmed consumers.
Agent Role: Advise clients that lenders must provide standardized disclosures. Ensure clients understand loan terms before signing. Report predatory lending practices to CFPB at consumerfinance.gov.
17. Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act (ILSFDA)
ILSFDA regulates sale of unimproved land in interstate transactions.
Coverage: Applies to subdivisions with 25+ unimproved lots offered for sale across state lines. Does not apply to improved residential lots or commercial land.
Property Report: Developer must provide buyer with property report disclosing lot size, utilities, roads, restrictions, liens, environmental hazards, and legal disputes. Buyer has right to cancel within 7 days of receiving report.
Agent Role: If representing buyer in land purchase across state lines, ensure property report is provided. Advise buyer of cancellation rights. Do not pressure buyer to waive inspection period.
18. Homeowners Protection Act (PMI Cancellation)
Homeowners Protection Act requires lenders to disclose PMI costs and cancellation rights.
PMI Disclosure: If down payment less than 20%, lender must disclose that PMI is required and explain costs. Borrower pays PMI until equity reaches 20%.
Automatic Cancellation: PMI is automatically canceled when loan balance reaches 78% of original home value (based on original appraisal).
Borrower-Requested Cancellation: Borrower may request PMI cancellation when equity reaches 20%. Borrower must provide evidence (recent appraisal or tax assessment) showing equity position.
Agent Role: Explain PMI costs to buyers putting down less than 20%. Advise that PMI is temporary and will be removed when equity threshold is reached. Explain automatic cancellation and borrower cancellation options.
19. Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA)
TCPA restricts telemarketing calls, text messages, and fax advertising.
Do Not Call Registry: Numbers on National Do Not Call Registry (www.donotcall.gov) cannot be called for marketing purposes. Agents cannot call numbers on DNC list for property marketing. Exceptions: existing customers (within 18 months), recent inquiries, finance-related calls.
Text Messages: Sending marketing texts to cell phones without prior consent is illegal. Must obtain express written consent before texting prospects about properties.
Fax Advertising: Sending unsolicited fax advertisements is prohibited. Fax must contain opt-out notice and clear identification of sender.
Autodialers and Prerecorded Messages: Using autodialers or prerecorded calls without prior express consent is prohibited. Residential lines cannot receive autodialed calls except with consent.
Agent Compliance: Maintain do-not-call list. Screen prospect phone numbers before calling. Obtain written consent before texting properties. Do not use autodialers or prerecorded messages without consent. Train team on TCPA rules.
Penalties: Statutory damages $500 to $1,500 per violation. Actual damages if higher. Injunctive relief. Class action lawsuits common.
20. CAN-SPAM Act (Email Marketing)
CAN-SPAM Act regulates commercial email and text messages.
Compliance Requirements: Use accurate subject lines. Include clear identification as advertisement. Provide physical business address. Include toll-free number or email address for opt-out requests. Comply with opt-out requests within 10 business days. Do not use false sender identity.
Subject Lines: Cannot be deceptive. Must not mislead recipient about content. Example: Do not put "URGENT RESPONSE REQUIRED" if email is just a property listing.
Opt-Out: Provide easy way to unsubscribe from email list. Honor opt-out requests promptly. Do not sell email list to third parties without permission.
Agent Compliance: Use email marketing platforms that track compliance. Include office address and phone in emails. Include unsubscribe link. Monitor unsubscribe requests and remove addresses. Do not use purchased email lists without consent.
Penalties: FTC can impose civil penalties. Spam complaints accumulate. Email service providers may suspend or delete account for violations.
II. FLORIDA REAL ESTATE LAW
21. Florida Real Estate License Law (Chapter 475, Florida Statutes)
Chapter 475 governs all licensing, requirements, and discipline for Florida real estate professionals.
License Types: Broker (manages office and agents), Sales Associate (works under broker), Broker Associate (licensed broker who works under another broker), Manager (supervises agents in office).
License Requirements: Age 18+, legal resident status or visa holder, high school diploma/GED, 24 hours real estate classroom instruction pre-licensing (can be taken online), pass state exam with 75% score, background check, fingerprinting, active Florida driver license or ID.
Sales Associate Requirements: Same as above plus sponsorship by an active broker. Cannot hold license without broker sponsorship. Broker must issue sponsoring broker letter.
License Renewal: All licenses renew every 2 years on expiration date. Renewal requires 24 hours continuing education (16 core + 8 elective), payment of renewal fee ($205 plus any late fees).
Continuing Education: Core courses required: Professional Standards (2 hours), Trust Account Procedures (2 hours), Consumer Protection (2 hours), Fair Housing (2 hours), Florida Real Estate Law (4 hours), Practice (4 hours). Eight hours of electives from approved providers.
Disciplinary Actions: FREC can impose fines up to $10,000 per violation, restrict license, suspend license up to 10 years, revoke license, impose cost recovery. Common violations: failing to account for client funds, representing self as licensed when not, violating fair housing, dishonest dealing, failure to maintain trust account, unauthorized practice, misappropriation of funds.
Agent Responsibilities: Maintain active license. Complete CE on time. Display license in broker office. Follow all trust account procedures. Report disciplinary actions to broker. Do not misrepresent license status or brokerage. Disclose client representation clearly.
22. Florida Commission (FREC) Rules
Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC) enforces Chapter 475 and adopts administrative rules (Chapter 61J2, Florida Administrative Code).
Trust Account Rules: Broker must establish trust account (escrow) for client funds. All earnest money, deposits, and client monies held in trust. Account must be at Florida bank or credit union, clearly labeled trust account, separate from broker personal funds. Monthly reconciliation required. Trust account records audited annually.
Broker Responsibilities: Maintain trust account. Provide client with written receipt for deposits. Track deposits and disbursements. Report suspicious activity. Audit trust account. Maintain detailed records for 5 years.
Agent Responsibilities: Collect earnest money and deliver to broker within specified timeframe. Do not hold client funds personally. Ensure broker holds funds in trust account. Do not access broker's trust account directly. Cooperate with trust account audits.
Disclosure Requirements: Broker must disclose brokerage relationship in writing before or at first substantive discussion with client. Disclose whether broker represents buyer, seller, or both. Disclose non-traditional relationship if applicable. Provide disclosure in writing in clear language.
Record Keeping: Maintain file for each transaction. File includes all communications with parties, disclosures, contracts, earnest money receipt, photos (for listings). Records kept for minimum 5 years in accessible format.
23. Florida Contract Law for Real Estate
Florida contract law governs real estate purchase agreements.
FAR/BAR Forms: Florida Association of Realtors and Florida Bar created standardized contract form (FAR/BAR RESIDENTIAL CONTRACT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE). Form protects both buyer and seller. Use most current version.
Contract Elements: Identification of parties, property description, purchase price, earnest money amount and deposit deadline, closing date, title examination, property inspection, insurance, HOA disclosures, special assessments, seller disclosures, buyer financing contingency, title insurance, closing costs allocation, default provisions, dispute resolution.
AS-IS Contracts: Buyer can purchase property in AS-IS condition with no inspection or disclosure rights. AS-IS language must be clear. Buyer still has right to title examination and survey. Seller still must provide required disclosures (flood zone, environmental hazards, association documents).
Earnest Money Deposit: Buyer deposits earnest money (typically 5-10% of purchase price) as good faith showing buyer serious about purchase. Deposit held in broker's trust account. Earnest money applied to purchase price at closing. If buyer defaults without legal excuse, earnest money forfeited to seller. If seller defaults, earnest money returned to buyer.
Contingencies: Financing (buyer must be approved for mortgage), inspection (buyer has right to inspect property and renegotiate based on inspection findings), appraisal (property must appraise for purchase price or buyer has termination right), title (title must be marketable with no liens or defects), HOA documents (buyer has right to review HOA documents and assess).
Closing Date: Date of closing is scheduled in contract. Parties must be ready to close on scheduled date. Delays can result in default. Closing occurs at title company office with buyer, seller, agents, title officer, lenders, and attorneys (if required) present.
Agent Action: Use FAR/BAR form or other legally sufficient contract. Ensure all material terms included. Obtain signatures from all parties. Deliver copies to all parties, broker, and title company. Keep file copy. Do not modify contract without all parties signing modifications.
24. Florida Seller Disclosure Requirements
Florida law requires sellers to disclose known material defects (Johnson v Davis disclosure).
Seller Property Disclosure: Seller must provide written disclosure form listing all known material defects affecting property value. Defects must be reported accurately and completely. Seller cannot remain silent about known defects.
Johnson v Davis Rule: Established in landmark Florida Supreme Court case. Seller has duty to disclose known material facts that affect property value or desirability. Buyer has right to rely on seller disclosures. Seller liable for damages if non-disclosure or misrepresentation discovered after purchase.
Latent vs Patent Defects: Latent defects not visible to buyer (foundation damage, termites, bad plumbing behind walls). Patent defects obvious to buyer (broken window, missing roof shingles). Seller must disclose latent defects. Buyer responsible for observing patent defects.
Disclosable Items: Roof condition and leaks, foundation cracks or settling, water damage or moisture intrusion, pest damage (termites, wood destroying organisms), HVAC system condition, plumbing problems, electrical system issues, pool/spa condition, structural damage, previous fire damage, mold, radon, lead paint, flood zone, permits and code violations, homeowners association issues, special assessments, property history (prior short sale, foreclosure, stigmatized property).
Stigmatized Properties: Florida law does not require disclosure of stigmatized factors (prior murder, suicide, haunting, methamphetamine lab) for some categories (prior murder/suicide at property). However, if buyer specifically asks about stigma, seller must answer truthfully. Some buyers may waive right to be told about certain stigmas.
Disclosure Timing: Seller must provide disclosure before buyer makes written offer (if possible) or within 5 days of executing contract. If disclosure made after offer, buyer has right to terminate contract within 3 days of receiving disclosure.
Non-Disclosure Penalty: Seller liable to buyer for actual damages plus court costs and attorney fees if known defect not disclosed and discovered after purchase. Buyer can rescind sale if material misrepresentation.
Agent Responsibility: Obtain seller disclosure from seller before showing property. Review disclosure for accuracy. Provide copy to all buyer prospects. Ask buyers if they have questions. Disclose known defects even if seller omitted. If agent aware of defect not on disclosure, must disclose to buyers. Do not help seller hide defects.
25. Florida Landlord-Tenant Law (Chapter 83)
Florida law strictly regulates rental properties and landlord-tenant relationships.
Rental Agreement: All rental terms must be in writing. Lease must specify property address, tenants, rent amount, due date, late fee, term, security deposit, maintenance responsibilities, pet policy, prohibited conduct.
Security Deposit: Landlord may require security deposit not to exceed 2 months rent for unfurnished property, 3 months rent for furnished. Deposit must be held in interest-bearing account separate from landlord's funds. Landlord must return deposit within 30 days of lease end, less any deductions for unpaid rent or damage beyond normal wear. Landlord must provide itemized list of deductions.
Eviction Process: If tenant breaches lease (fails to pay rent or violates terms), landlord provides 3-day notice to cure or quit. If tenant doesn't cure, landlord files eviction in court. Court issues judgment. If tenant doesn't vacate within time allowed, law enforcement enforces eviction by removing tenant and belongings.
Tenant Rights: Quiet enjoyment (tenant has right to occupy property without unreasonable landlord interference). Habitability (landlord must maintain property in habitable condition, provide working utilities, maintain structure). Privacy (landlord cannot enter property without notice except emergency). Non-retaliation (landlord cannot evict tenant for filing complaint with code enforcement or organizing tenants).
Rent Control: Florida has no statewide rent control. Local jurisdictions may impose rent increase limits. Check local ordinances.
Agent Role in Rental Properties: For property owners with rental tenants, advise on security deposit requirements. Do not assist in retaliatory evictions. Ensure rental agreements comply with Florida law. Disclose tenant occupancy to buyer prospects. Buyer must accept property with existing tenants unless lease terminates before closing.
26. Florida HOA and Condo Law (Chapters 718, 719, 720)
Florida HOAs and condominiums are heavily regulated. Buyers have strong rights to examine documents before committing.
Homeowners Association (Chapter 720): HOA created by developer to manage common areas (roads, lakes, parks, pools). Residents must pay HOA fees (dues) for maintenance and management. HOA board elected by residents. HOA board enforces CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions) and bylaws.
Condominium (Chapter 718): Condo ownership includes unit plus percentage interest in common property. Condo association similar to HOA. Condo residents own interior of unit but not exterior. Exterior maintenance responsibility of condo association.
Required Disclosures: Seller must provide buyer with HOA/condo documents within specified timeframe. Documents include declaration, bylaws, rules, financial statements, meeting minutes, insurance, engineering reports, reserve study, assessment history, special assessments.
Buyer Review Period: Buyer has 3 days to review association documents and make decision. Buyer can terminate contract if dissatisfied with documents or assessments. Right to terminate cannot be waived.
HOA Fees and Assessments: Regular monthly HOA fees required. Special assessments may be imposed for unexpected major repairs. Seller must disclose all assessments to buyer. Agent must provide buyer with written estimate of current and anticipated HOA fees.
Liens: HOA has lien on property for unpaid dues and assessments. When property sells, HOA lien must be paid from proceeds. Title insurance does not cover HOA liens. Buyer assumes responsibility for future HOA payments if lien exists at sale.
Agent Responsibility: Obtain most recent HOA documents from seller. Provide documents to buyer within required timeframe. Calculate total HOA costs for buyer (monthly dues plus estimated special assessments). Advise buyer of HOA approval requirements if applicable. Ensure buyer understands HOA rules and restrictions before purchase. Include HOA estoppel letter with closing requirements (verifies unpaid dues and assessment amounts).
HOA Approval: Some HOAs require board approval of buyer before closing. Board review typically looks at buyer's ability to pay dues, background check, and financial stability. Buyers cannot be rejected based on protected status or discriminatory reasons. Agent must initiate HOA approval process early in transaction.
27. Florida Documentary Stamp Tax and Intangible Tax
Florida imposes documentary stamp tax on real property transfers.
Documentary Stamp Tax Rate: Tax imposed on deed transferring property. Rate is $0.70 per $100 of purchase price (rounded up to nearest $100). Example: $200,000 purchase price = $1,400 tax.
Tax Responsibility: Seller typically pays documentary stamp tax, though contract may specify buyer payment. Tax paid at closing when deed is recorded. Title company collects tax and pays to Department of Revenue.
Exemptions: No tax on transfers between spouses, transfers to trust if grantor is beneficiary, transfers to government agencies, tax-deferred 1031 exchanges, transfers of properties with no consideration.
Intangible Personal Property Tax: Prior tax on mortgage promissory notes. Tax eliminated for mortgages after July 1, 2007. Does not apply to current mortgages.
Agent Responsibility: Calculate documentary stamp tax in closing estimate. Show buyer and seller in transaction documents. Ensure title company pays correct tax at closing.
28. Florida Homestead Exemption and Property Tax
Florida homestead exemption provides property tax relief for primary residences.
Homestead Exemption: Owner-occupied property qualifies for exemption reducing assessed value. Exemption saves approximately $1,500 annually for typical home. Applies only to primary residence, not investment properties.
Application Process: Owner applies for exemption with county property appraiser in year of purchase. Form requires proof of ownership (deed) and residency (driver license, utility bill, voter registration). Exemption typically effective January 1 of following year.
Property Tax Calculation: County assesses property at market value. Homestead exemption reduces assessed value by exemption amount. Assessed value multiplied by tax rate (set by county and school district) equals property tax owed.
Save Our Homes Cap: Homestead exemption limits annual increase in assessed value to 3% or inflation, whichever is less. Cap remains until property sold. New owner gets new assessment at fair market value.
Agent Responsibility: Advise buyer to apply for homestead exemption after closing. Provide contact information for county property appraiser. Explain property tax savings and application deadline. Disclose current property taxes and estimated future taxes in transaction documents.
29. Florida Insurance Requirements (Citizens, Wind Mitigation, Flood)
Florida requires property and liability insurance for properties with mortgages. Coastal properties require additional coverages.
Homeowners Insurance: Lender requires coverage equal to replacement cost of dwelling. Insurance must include liability coverage (minimum $300,000). Homeowners policy covers dwelling, personal property, liability, additional living expenses.
Citizens Property Insurance: State-run insurer of last resort. Used when private insurers unavailable or rates excessive. Citizens rates higher than private insurers. Rates increasing annually. Private insurance preferable to Citizens.
Wind Mitigation: Coastal properties subject to mandatory wind mitigation inspections. Insurer provides discount (5-15% reduction) for wind mitigation features (reinforced roof, impact-resistant windows, reinforced roof connections, secondary water barriers).
Flood Insurance: If property in flood zone and financed by federally-regulated lender, flood insurance mandatory. Flood insurance separate from homeowners policy. Obtained through National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) or private insurer. Annual premium varies based on flood zone and coverage amount.
Agent Responsibility: Obtain insurance binder before closing showing coverage in place. Require lender to verify insurance naming lender as mortgagee. Advise buyer to shop insurance quotes. Provide flood zone determination and discuss flood insurance if required. Obtain wind mitigation inspection report for coastal property and discuss wind insurance discounts.
30. Florida Building Code and Inspection Requirements
Florida enforces statewide building code. Local jurisdictions may have more stringent codes.
Building Permits: Permits required for new construction, additions, renovations, and mechanical system replacements. Contractor obtains permit and pays permit fees. Work must be inspected at completion and certified as compliant with code.
Inspection Requirement: Property inspection conducted by licensed home inspector during due diligence period. Inspector evaluates condition of all systems (roof, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, foundation). Report provided to buyer detailing defects, maintenance needs, and recommended repairs.
Code Compliance: Seller represents property was constructed and maintained in compliance with applicable building codes. If permitted work was performed without permit, property may be code non-compliant. Buyer may require certification of code compliance before closing.
4-Point Inspection: Insurance companies may require 4-point inspection for older homes (roof, HVAC, plumbing, electrical). Inspection certifies systems are in acceptable condition for insurance underwriting.
Unpermitted Work: If work performed without permit, repair required to obtain retroactive approval or removal. Unpermitted work affects insurability and resale value. Disclose unpermitted work to buyer.
Agent Responsibility: Advise seller to disclose unpermitted work. Obtain inspection reports during due diligence. Disclose deficiencies to buyer. Require permitted work certifications. Ensure property is code-compliant before closing.
31. Florida Wire Fraud Prevention
Wire fraud is major problem in Florida real estate. Sophisticated scams target earnest money and closing funds.
Wire Fraud Tactics: Hacker accesses email account of agent, broker, or title company. Hacker sends email that appears to come from legitimate professional. Email requests wire transfer of earnest money or closing funds to specific account. Recipient wires funds to fraudulent account. Funds transferred internationally and lost.
Red Flags: Unexpected email requesting wire transfer. Wire instructions different from prior communications. Wire instructions sent late in process. Sender requests confidentiality or urgency. Wire instructions from new sender (different attorney, different title company). Misspelled email address (slight variation of legitimate address).
Verification Process: Before wiring funds, contact recipient directly (call phone number from contract or business card, not from email). Verify wire instructions verbally before sending. Request written confirmation on letterhead from recipient. Include verbal confirmation in file. Never wire funds based on email instruction alone.
Secure Wire Protocol: Establish secure communication channel with closing attorney or title company for wire instructions. Use phone call followed by encrypted email. Verify wire routing number and account number with recipient. Confirm wire amount matches contract.
Agent Responsibility: Train clients on wire fraud prevention. Advise clients to verify wire instructions before sending. Direct clients to contact title company directly. Do not send wire instructions via unsecured email. Educate buyers and sellers on wire fraud dangers. Report suspicious emails to authorities.
Recovery: If wire fraud occurs, report to FBI and local police immediately. Contact wire transfer bank (often too late to recover funds). Notify title insurance company (may provide coverage). Notify homeowners insurance (may provide coverage under theft protection). Document all communications for potential legal action.
32. Florida Radon Gas Disclosure
Radon is radioactive gas from soil. Florida has areas with elevated radon levels.
Radon Risk: Second leading cause of lung cancer (after smoking). Radon enters through cracks in foundation, basement, crawlspace. Gas concentrates in lower levels of home. Long-term exposure increases cancer risk.
Radon Zones: Florida mapped into radon potential zones (1, 2, 3). Zone 1: predicted average indoor radon level less than 2 pCi/L. Zone 2: predicted average 2-4 pCi/L. Zone 3: predicted average greater than 4 pCi/L. EPA recommends radon testing if potential zone 2 or higher.
Testing: Short-term test (2-7 days) measures current radon level. Long-term test (30+ days) measures average level. EPA action level is 4 pCi/L. If test exceeds 4 pCi/L, radon mitigation system recommended.
Mitigation: Radon mitigation system includes vent pipe from foundation/basement to roof, exhaust fan pulling gas outside, sealing cracks. System reduces radon levels 50-99%. Cost typically $1,000-2,500.
Disclosure Requirement: Seller must disclose if radon tested and results known. If elevated radon found, disclose to buyer. Buyer has right to test for radon during inspection period. Seller not required to test or mitigate unless buyer requires as contract contingency.
Agent Responsibility: Provide EPA radon information to buyer. Advise buyer to test for radon during inspection period if concerned. If radon test results elevated, discuss mitigation options and costs with buyer. Include radon mitigation estimates in repair negotiations.
33. Florida Real Estate Recovery Fund
Florida Real Estate Recovery Fund protects consumers from dishonest real estate licensees.
Fund Purpose: Pays customer claims resulting from dishonest conduct by licensed broker or sales associate. Fund limited. Provides protection when licensee unable to pay judgment.
Claim Requirements: Customer must obtain judgment against licensee. Judgment must be for dishonest conduct (misappropriation of funds, failure to account for funds, fraud). Customer must show reasonable efforts to collect judgment. Judgment must be against licensed person (not against unlicensed person or company).
Claim Limits: Maximum $5,000 per customer per transaction. Fund limits total annual payouts. Claims paid in order received.
Agent Responsibility: Maintain honesty and integrity in all transactions. Properly account for client funds. Avoid actions that might trigger recovery fund claims against brokerage. Understand that recovery fund claims damage company reputation and ability to maintain license.
34. Florida Community Development Districts (CDDs)
CDDs are special taxing districts established for new developments.
CDD Purpose: Finance infrastructure (roads, stormwater, utilities, parks, recreation). Developer creates CDD, residents automatically become members. CDD board controls district. District imposes assessments on property owners.
CDD Assessments: Annual assessments paid by property owners. Assessments finance principal and interest on bonds issued to build infrastructure. Assessments can increase over time as bonds age and refinancing occurs. Some districts have assessments exceeding property taxes.
Buyer Right to Terminate: Florida law allows buyer to terminate purchase contract if CDD assessments discovered before closing. Buyer has right to receive CDD disclosure and estimated assessment amount. If buyer not satisfied with assessments, contract can be terminated.
Disclosure Requirement: Seller must disclose CDD existence, location, and estimated annual assessment to buyer. Disclosure must be provided before or at time of offer. Buyer has 3 days to terminate after receipt of disclosure.
CDD Estoppel Letter: Title company requests CDD estoppel letter from district manager showing current assessment, principal balance, maturity date, and future assessment estimates. Letter provided at closing.
Agent Responsibility: Obtain CDD disclosure documents from seller. Provide to buyer as required. Calculate total assessment cost to buyer. Explain assessment impact on buyer's mortgage payment and property costs. Advise buyer of termination right. Obtain CDD estoppel letter before closing.
35. Florida Closing Process and Title Insurance
Florida closings are conducted by title insurance company or attorney.
Title Search: Title company searches public records to determine ownership history and identify any liens, mortgages, judgments, or defects affecting title. Search goes back to original property grant.
Title Insurance: Title insurance policy protects owner and lender from loss due to title defects. Policy covers unknown liens, previous liens not properly released, forged deeds, missing heirs, boundary disputes, easements, encroachments. Policy standard rate controlled by state. Cover amount equals purchase price for owner policy, mortgage balance for lender policy.
Title Examination: Buyer has right to examine title for defects. Title company provides preliminary title report showing search results. Buyer can request corrections to title before closing. Title must be clear and marketable for buyer to close.
Closing Meeting: Buyer, seller, title officer, lenders, agents, and attorneys (if required) meet to execute closing documents and transfer funds. Documents signed include deed, promissory note, mortgage, closing disclosure, title insurance policy, HOA documents. Funds transferred via wire. Deed recorded with county.
Closing Disclosure: CFPB-required form showing all costs and loan terms. Provided 3 days before closing. Must be reviewed and signed by buyer before closing.
Recording: Deed and mortgage recorded with county clerk after closing. Recording provides public notice of ownership transfer and creates lien for lender.
Title Insurance Policy: Policy issued after recording showing owner and lender are insured against title defects. Policy remains in effect as long as property owned or lender holds mortgage.
Agent Responsibility: Arrange closing meeting. Coordinate with lender, title company, and attorneys. Ensure all closing documents prepared and reviewed. Verify buyer and seller understand all documents before signing. Confirm funds available before closing. Ensure deed and mortgage recorded promptly after closing. Provide buyers with title insurance policy information.
III. MASSACHUSETTS REAL ESTATE LAW
36. Massachusetts License Law (Chapter 112, Sections 87PP-87DDD)
Massachusetts regulates real estate licensees through Department of Professional Licensure (DPL).
License Types: Broker (manages office, supervises agents), Salesperson (works under broker sponsorship), Mortgage Broker (arranges loans), Mortgage Lender (funds loans).
Broker Requirements: 3+ years real estate experience in prior 5 years, pre-licensing education (40 hours), pass state exam, maintain active license, sponsor all agents in office, maintain trust account for client funds.
Salesperson Requirements: 18+ years old, high school diploma/GED, pre-licensing education (16 hours), pass state exam, broker sponsorship.
License Renewal: Licenses renew every 2 years. Broker must complete 12 hours continuing education (6 hours core: consumer protection, fair housing, trust account, agency law; 6 hours elective). Salesperson must complete 6 hours continuing education (3 hours core, 3 hours elective).
Disciplinary Action: DPL can fine, restrict, suspend, or revoke license for violations. Common violations: unauthorized practice, misrepresentation, failure to maintain trust account, dishonest dealing, failure to account for client funds, fair housing violations, conflict of interest.
Agent Responsibility: Maintain active Massachusetts license. Complete continuing education timely. Follow all trust account procedures. Maintain client confidentiality. Disclose brokerage relationship clearly. Do not practice without license. Report disciplinary actions to broker.
37. Massachusetts Agency Disclosure Requirements
Massachusetts requires brokers to disclose agency relationship before substantive discussion with buyer or seller.
Agency Disclosure: Broker must provide written disclosure identifying broker's agent role: representing buyer, seller, or both. Disclosure must use statutory form or substantially similar language. Broker cannot represent both buyer and seller without written consent of both parties.
Single Agent vs Dual Agent: Single agent represents only buyer or only seller. Dual agent represents both (requires written consent). Dual agent has conflict of interest and heightened duty to both parties.
Confidentiality: Agent must keep confidential all information provided by client in confidence. Confidentiality continues even after transaction closes. Examples of confidential information: price willing to pay, motivation for purchase, personal/financial circumstances, timeline pressure.
Agent Duties: Honesty, competency, fiduciary duty (put client interest first, unless dual agent), disclosure of material facts, accounting for funds, avoiding conflicts of interest.
Disclosure Timing: Disclose agency before substantive discussion about property. Substantive discussion includes showing property, discussing property specifics, or discussing buyer/seller motivation.
Agent Responsibility: Provide written agency disclosure to all parties. Identify which party you represent. Keep disclosure in file. Do not misrepresent agency relationship. Honor client confidentiality. Do not disclose client information to third parties without consent.
38. Massachusetts Lead Paint Law (Chapter 111, Section 197A)
Massachusetts has strict lead paint disclosure and deleading requirements.
Deleading Process: If home has lead paint and children under 6 will occupy, property must be deleaded. Deleading performed by EPA-certified contractor. Includes encapsulation, removal, or interim controls. Property certified lead-safe after deleading.
Deleading Requirement Timeline: If child under 6 present or planned at time of tenancy, deleading must occur before child occupies. Seller responsible for deleading if child expected before closing. Buyer responsible if child moves in after closing.
Disclosure Requirement: Pre-1978 properties presumed to contain lead. Seller must disclose lead paint hazard. Buyer has right to 10-day lead inspection period. If lead found and child expected, deleading contingency required.
Lead Inspector Certification: Lead inspection must be performed by EPA/state-certified inspector. Test methods include XRF (x-ray fluorescence), lab analysis of paint samples, dust samples. Results identify lead hazard locations.
Penalties: Failure to deleade when required: owner fined $500-1,000 per day violation. Damages to child if lead poisoning occurs.
Agent Responsibility: Disclose lead paint requirements to seller. Advise seller of deleading obligations if child expected. Provide buyer with deleading information. Ensure lead inspection occurs during inspection period. Do not represent deleading complete without certification. Budget deleading costs in transaction analysis.
39. Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act (Chapter 131, Section 40)
Massachusetts protects wetlands and water bodies through strict permitting.
Protected Areas: Wetlands, marshes, meadows, swamps, bogs, isolated pools, banks of rivers and streams, areas within 100 feet of wetlands (buffer zone).
Permitted Activities: Limited activities allowed in protected areas without permit (walking, fishing, swimming). Most construction, dredging, filling, draining requires permit from local conservation commission.
Enforcement: Conservation commissions enforce wetlands law. Violations result in cease and desist orders, fines, required restoration. Developers cannot fill wetlands without permit.
Disclosure: Seller must disclose if property contains wetlands or is within buffer zone. Buyer has right to verify wetland boundaries with conservation commission. Buyer has right to terminate if wetlands restrict intended use.
Title Insurance Exclusion: Title insurance typically excludes coverage for wetlands violations and environmental compliance. Buyer responsible for environmental compliance.
Agent Responsibility: Determine if property contains wetlands using USGS wetlands map. Disclose wetlands to buyer. Recommend environmental review if wetlands present. Explain building restrictions in wetlands/buffer zone. Obtain wetlands determination from conservation commission if buyer concerned about use restrictions.
40. Massachusetts Title V Septic Inspections (Chapter 310 CMR 15.000)
Massachusetts requires septic system inspections before property transfer.
Applicability: Applies to properties with on-site septic systems (not connected to municipal sewer). Properties in homes with unknown system status must determine system type.
Inspection Requirement: Licensed septic system inspector (Title V Inspector) must inspect system before sale. Inspection evaluates septic tank, soil absorption system (leach field), and septic effluent quality. Report provided to buyer.
Report Categories: Pass (system functioning properly), Pass with Activity/Inspection Advisable (minor issues but functioning), Fail (system not functioning, immediate corrective action required).
Inspection Timing: Inspection typically occurs during due diligence period (30-45 days). Inspection results delivered to board of health and buyer. If Fail, property cannot transfer until corrected or alternative approved by board of health.
Correction Requirements: If Fail, system must be pumped, repaired, or replaced. Cost can be substantial ($5,000-20,000+ for system replacement). Seller responsible for all work unless buyer agrees otherwise.
Insurance: Septic system not typically covered by homeowners insurance. System failure is homeowner responsibility.
Agent Responsibility: Require septic inspection for all properties with septic systems. Provide inspection report to buyer. Explain inspection results and any required corrections. Budget repair costs in transaction. Ensure septic system passes or board of health approves before closing.
41. Massachusetts Smoke and CO Detector Requirements
Massachusetts law requires smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors in all residences.
Smoke Detectors: Required in every room used for sleeping, outside each sleeping area, on every level including basement. Detectors must be interconnected (when one sounds, all sound). Wired detectors preferred, battery backup required.
Carbon Monoxide (CO) Detectors: Required in all residences. Detectors installed on every level, within 10 feet of bedrooms, and in bedrooms with closed doors. Wired detectors preferred.
Testing and Maintenance: Occupant responsible for testing detectors monthly, replacing batteries annually, ensuring detectors functional. Non-functional detectors must be replaced immediately.
Landlord Responsibility: Landlord must install detectors and ensure functioning at beginning of tenancy. Tenant responsible for testing and maintenance during occupancy.
Penalties: Property without required detectors cannot be rented. Violations fined. Damages to persons injured if detectors not installed.
Agent Responsibility: Verify detectors present and functional during showings. Advise buyer to test detectors after moving in. Ensure detectors functioning before lease begins if renting property.
42. Massachusetts Transfer Tax (Deed Excise)
Massachusetts imposes deed excise tax on all property transfers.
Tax Rate: Tax based on purchase price: up to $100,000 = $0 tax (exempt), $100,000 to $400,000 = $2.00 per $1,000, over $400,000 = $3.00 per $1,000. Rate increases in certain circumstances.
Tax Responsibility: Seller responsible for deed excise tax unless contract specifies otherwise. Tax paid at time of recording deed.
Exemptions: Certain transfers exempt: transfers between spouses or family members, transfers to trusts if grantor is beneficiary, transfers to government entities, foreclosure and REO sales in some cases.
Calculation: Purchase price determined from deed. Consideration stated in deed document. Tax calculated based on stated consideration.
Agent Responsibility: Calculate deed excise tax in closing estimate. Show buyer and seller tax amount. Ensure tax paid at closing. Verify deed properly recorded with tax receipt.
43. Massachusetts Offer and Purchase & Sale Agreement Process
Massachusetts has formal contract process with attorney review requirement in many areas.
Offer to Purchase: Buyer submits written offer on property. Offer includes purchase price, earnest money, contingencies, closing date. Offer is binding if accepted by seller. Seller may accept, reject, or counter-offer.
Purchase and Sale Agreement: Once offer accepted, attorney-drafted P&S executed by buyer and seller. Agreement includes all transaction terms, contingencies, warranties, representations, and conditions.
Attorney Review: In some areas (particularly Boston and suburbs), both buyer and seller have right to attorney review period (typically 5-10 days). During period, attorney reviews agreement and may recommend changes. Attorney can require changes as condition of approval. If parties cannot agree on terms after attorney review, either party can terminate.
Contingencies: Agreement includes financing contingency (subject to mortgage approval), inspection contingency (right to inspect property and renegotiate based on findings), title contingency (title must be clear), survey contingency (if applicable), permit contingency (property must have required permits).
Earnest Money: Buyer deposits earnest money (typically 5% of purchase price) within specified timeframe. Held by attorney or title company in escrow. Applied to purchase price at closing. Forfeited if buyer defaults without legal excuse.
Agent Role: Present offer to seller. Negotiate terms with buyer and seller. Do not provide legal advice. Refer parties to attorneys for legal matters. Ensure P&S includes all agreed terms. Keep file copy of all documents.
44. Massachusetts Attorney Involvement in Closings
In Massachusetts, both buyer and seller may have attorneys review transaction before closing.
Attorney Roles: Review contract and ensure legal compliance. Conduct title examination. Arrange title insurance. Prepare closing documents. Conduct closing meeting. Ensure funds properly transferred. Coordinate recording of deed.
Closing Attendees: Buyer, seller, buyer's attorney, seller's attorney, lender's attorney, title officer, agents. Buyer and seller may choose to attend or allow attorney to sign on their behalf.
Document Preparation: Attorneys prepare all closing documents: deed, promissory note (if financed), mortgage, closing statement, affidavits, title insurance policy.
Deed Requirements: Deed must include grantor (seller), grantee (buyer), property description, consideration, signature (signed and sealed by seller). Deed recorded at land court or registry of deeds.
Recording: Deed and mortgage recorded after closing. Recording provides public notice of ownership change and creates lender security interest.
Agent Role: Coordinate with attorneys. Ensure timely preparation of closing documents. Confirm closing date and location with all parties. Verify buyer and seller ready to close. After closing, obtain recorded deed and title insurance policy information.
45. Massachusetts Zoning and Land Use
Massachusetts zoning ordinances control permitted land uses.
Zoning Districts: Property zoned residential, commercial, industrial, or mixed-use. Each district has permitted uses, dimensional requirements (lot size, setbacks, building height), density limits.
Permitted Uses: Use permitted as of right in zoning district. Examples: single-family home in residential district, retail store in commercial district. Prohibited uses violate zoning. Violating use can be required to cease.
Variances and Special Permits: If intended use not permitted, owner applies for variance (relief from dimensional requirements) or special permit (approval for use not normally permitted). Zoning board grants variance if hardship shown and no adverse impact. Zoning board grants special permit if use appropriate for area.
Non-Conforming Use: Existing use permitted to continue even if now prohibited by zoning. However, expansion of use limited and building destroyed/abandoned loses non-conforming status.
Agent Responsibility: Verify intended use permitted in zoning district. If use question, research zoning at town assessor or planning department. Disclose zoning restrictions to buyer. Obtain variance or special permit if required before closing.
46. Massachusetts Landlord-Tenant Law (Chapter 186)
Massachusetts strictly regulates landlord-tenant relationships.
Rental Agreement: All rental terms in writing. Agreement specifies rent amount, due date, term, security deposit limit, maintenance responsibilities, prohibited conduct, notice requirements.
Security Deposit: Limited to one month rent for unfurnished unit, 1.5 months for furnished. Deposited in interest-bearing account separate from landlord funds. Returned within 30 days of lease end minus itemized deductions for unpaid rent and damage beyond normal wear. Landlord provides itemized statement and interest earned.
First Month Rent: First month rent and last month rent not considered deposits. Held separately if last month rent deposited.
Eviction Process: If tenant breaches, landlord provides notice to quit (typically 14 days for non-payment, 30 days for lease violation). If tenant doesn't cure or vacate, landlord files eviction in housing court. Court holds hearing. If tenant doesn't appear, judgment for landlord. If tenant contests, evidence presented. Court issues judgment. If tenant doesn't vacate by deadline, sheriff removes tenant.
Tenant Rights: Quiet enjoyment (right to occupy without landlord interference). Habitability (landlord maintains property, provides heat, water, safe conditions). Privacy (landlord cannot enter without notice). Non-retaliation (cannot evict for filing complaint or asserting rights).
Agent Role with Rental Properties: Advise sellers with rental tenants about tenant rights. Do not assist in retaliatory evictions. Advise buyers that property may have tenants. Disclose tenant lease terms and expiration. Buyer assumes tenant obligations at closing.
47. Massachusetts Fair Housing (Chapter 151B)
Massachusetts fair housing law prohibits discrimination and includes additional protected classes beyond federal law.
Protected Classes: Federal classes (race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, familial status) plus state classes (sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, military status, military discharge status, source of income, receipt of benefits).
Source of Income Protection: Landlord cannot discriminate against tenant based on source of income (rental assistance, Section 8 vouchers, child support, disability benefits). Landlord must accept all income sources equally.
Prohibited Conduct: Refusal to rent or sell. Steering. Different terms based on protected status. Discriminatory advertising. Harassment. Associational discrimination.
Testing: Fair housing organizations conduct testing to detect discrimination. Testers pose as renters or buyers to evaluate whether they receive equal treatment.
Enforcement: Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD) investigates complaints. Investigation may result in finding of probable cause. If probable cause found, conciliation attempted or case referred to civil court. Damages awarded include actual damages, civil penalty, corrective action, attorney fees.
Agent Responsibility: Treat all prospects equally. Show all available properties. Do not make assumptions about preferences based on protected status. Do not steer. Do not use discriminatory language in advertising. Report fair housing violations to management and authorities.
48. Massachusetts Energy Disclosure and Building Codes
Massachusetts requires energy efficiency disclosure and building code compliance.
Energy Disclosure: Sellers provide energy audit or certification showing building energy performance. Energy audit identifies energy efficiency opportunities. Certification shows current energy use level. Buyer informed of property energy costs and efficiency.
Building Code: Properties constructed/renovated must comply with Massachusetts Building Code (adoption of International Building Code). Code covers structural safety, fire safety, accessibility, mechanical/electrical/plumbing systems, energy efficiency.
Building Permits: Construction and renovations require building permit. Work inspected by building inspector. Certificate of occupancy issued if compliant. Unpermitted work may require retroactive approval or correction.
Energy Audit Report: Report identifies building insulation, HVAC efficiency, water heating, appliances, windows, air sealing opportunities. Recommendations include cost estimates for improvements and energy savings.
Agent Responsibility: Obtain energy disclosure for buyer. Review report with buyer. Budget energy upgrades if buyer concerned. Advise buyer of energy efficiency features during showings.
IV. CONNECTICUT REAL ESTATE LAW
49. Connecticut License Law (CGS Chapter 20, Section 20-329 et seq.)
Connecticut regulates real estate brokers and salespersons through the Department of Consumer Protection.
License Types: Broker (operates brokerage, supervises agents, maintains trust account), Salesperson (lists and sells property under broker sponsorship), Broker-Salesperson (broker with active salesperson license).
Broker Requirements: 18+ years old, high school diploma, pass pre-license education (24 hours), pass state exam, maintain Connecticut office, submit trust account documentation, maintain fidelity bond ($10,000 minimum).
Salesperson Requirements: 18+ years old, pass pre-license education (24 hours), pass state exam, be sponsored by broker, not hold another real estate license in state.
License Renewal: Licenses expire every 2 years. Broker must complete 8 hours continuing education (4 hours core, 4 hours elective). Salesperson must complete 4 hours continuing education. Complete education before renewal deadline.
Disciplinary Violations: DCP investigates complaints for fraud, misrepresentation, commingling funds, failure to account for client money, unauthorized practice, dishonest conduct, conflicts of interest. Penalties: fines, license suspension, license revocation.
Agent Responsibility: Maintain active Connecticut license. Complete required education on schedule. Keep all funds in broker trust account. Follow all agency disclosure rules. Report any disciplinary actions to broker immediately.
50. Connecticut Agency Disclosure (CGS Section 20-329a)
Connecticut requires agency disclosure before substantive representation.
Agency Disclosure Form: Broker must provide statutory agency disclosure form to all parties before substantive negotiation. Form identifies broker role (buyer agent, seller agent, or dual agent). Both buyer and seller must receive and acknowledge disclosure.
Timing: Disclosure must occur before buyer visits property or receives property information. Acceptable via email or in-person. Parties sign acknowledgment confirming receipt.
Dual Agency: Broker may represent both buyer and seller if both parties consent in writing. Dual agent must remain impartial and maintain confidentiality for both parties. Conflict of interest exists inherently in dual agency.
Confidentiality Obligations: Agent keeps confidential all information from client: price willingness, motivation, financial status, timeline, special property issues, personal circumstances. Confidentiality continues after transaction close.
Conflict of Interest: Agent must disclose any conflict: previous relationship with buyer/seller, personal interest in property, family relationship to transaction parties.
Agent Responsibility: Provide agency disclosure to all parties. Confirm signatures on acknowledgment. Include copy in transaction file. Do not proceed with substantive discussions until disclosure given and acknowledged.
51. Connecticut Property Condition Disclosure (CGS Section 47a-21d)
Connecticut sellers must disclose known property defects to buyers.
Disclosure Requirement: Seller provides written property condition disclosure (statutory form) listing known material defects: structural issues, water damage, roof leaks, mold, electrical problems, plumbing issues, HVAC problems, pest damage, environmental hazards, title issues.
As-Is Clause Limitations: Seller cannot avoid disclosure obligation by selling property "as-is". Buyer still entitled to known defect information. As-is applies to inspection contingency waiver, not disclosure requirement.
Timing: Disclosure provided before buyer visits property or within 5 days of offer acceptance (whichever earlier). If late, buyer may terminate contract without penalty.
Broker Responsibility: Provide disclosure form to seller. Confirm seller completes all sections truthfully. Forward disclosure to buyer. Do not misrepresent property condition. If seller refuses disclosure, do not assist in sale.
Lead Paint Disclosure: Sellers of pre-1978 homes must disclose lead paint hazard in writing. Buyer has 10-day right to inspect for lead. Failure to disclose: fine $400-1,200, damages to buyer.
Agent Responsibility: Verify disclosure provided timely. Review disclosure for completeness. Ensure buyer receives copy. Budget inspection/repair costs based on disclosed defects.
52. Connecticut Radon Testing and Lead Mitigation
Connecticut requires radon and lead disclosure and mitigation.
Radon: Connecticut ranks high for radon. Buyer has right to test for radon during inspection contingency. If radon above EPA level (4.0 pCi/L), mitigation required. Mitigation typically costs $800-2,500. Seller or buyer pays (negotiated in contract).
Lead Mitigation: Pre-1978 homes presumed to contain lead. If child under 6 present or planned, property must be lead-safe before child occupies. Lead mitigation includes encapsulation, abatement, or interim controls. Certified lead abator performs work. Costs range $5,000-15,000.
Lead Inspection: Licensed lead inspector tests property. XRF (x-ray fluorescence) device used. Dust samples analyzed. Paint tested for lead. Report identifies lead hazards.
Certification: Property certified lead-safe after mitigation complete. Certificate must be in file at closing. Without certificate, financing cannot close.
Agent Responsibility: Explain radon and lead testing rights to buyer. Coordinate testing during inspection period. Budget mitigation costs. Ensure lead certification complete before closing if child expected. Do not allow closing without lead certification if required.
53. Connecticut Transfer Tax (Conveyance Tax, CGS Section 12-494)
Connecticut imposes conveyance tax on all property transfers.
Tax Rate: Current rate is $2.00 per $1,000 of consideration (0.2%). Example: $300,000 purchase = $600 tax.
Tax Responsibility: Seller responsible for tax unless contract specifies buyer pays. Tax collected at recording. If not paid, deed not recorded.
Exemptions: Certain transfers exempt: transfers between spouses, transfers to trust if grantor is beneficiary, transfers from bank foreclosure, transfers to government agencies.
Calculation: Tax based on purchase price or value stated in deed. Professional appraisal not required. Fair market value used if consideration not stated.
Payment: Tax paid by certified check or wire at closing. Collected by attorney or title company. Recording office verifies payment before recording.
Agent Responsibility: Calculate conveyance tax in closing estimate. Verify tax amount with attorney. Ensure tax paid at closing. Budget tax for seller in net proceeds calculation.
54. Connecticut Wetlands and Environmental Protection (CGS Section 22a-36 et seq.)
Connecticut protects inland wetlands and coastal areas through regulatory programs.
Inland Wetlands: Protected areas include marshes, swamps, bogs, and areas within 125 feet of wetlands (conservation zone). Wetland activities require permit from local wetlands agency (usually planning/zoning board).
Permitted Activities: Limited exempted activities (normal farming, forestry, minimal impact). Most construction, dredging, filling requires permit and environmental assessment.
Coastal Properties: Coastal areas regulated under Coastal Area Management Act. Properties in coastal zone subject to DEEP (Department of Energy and Environmental Protection) permit requirements. Modifications and construction require DEEP approval.
Enforcement: Violations result in cease-and-desist order, fines ($25-1,000 per day violation), required restoration. Environmental liens may attach to property for unpaid remediation.
Disclosure: Seller discloses if property contains wetlands or is in coastal zone. Buyer has right to environmental review. Buyer has right to terminate if environmental restrictions impact intended use.
Agent Responsibility: Determine if property in wetlands or coastal zone using state GIS mapping. Disclose restrictions to buyer. Recommend environmental review if applicable. Explain building limitations in protected areas.
55. Connecticut Attorney Closing Requirement
Connecticut does not require attorney involvement in real estate transactions, unlike some other states.
Closing Role Options: Buyer and seller may choose to have attorneys, or closing may proceed without attorney if parties agree. Many commercial transactions require attorney. Residential transactions often close without attorney.
Attorney Duties (if used): Review contract and documents. Conduct title examination. Arrange title insurance. Prepare closing statements. Conduct closing meeting. Verify funds properly transferred. Ensure proper recording.
Non-Attorney Closing: Real estate agent or title company officer may conduct closing. Must be competent and knowledgeable. Must verify funds properly transferred. Deed properly prepared and signed. Recording accomplished timely.
Deed Preparation: Deed includes grantor (seller), grantee (buyer), property description, consideration, signature (signed and sealed by seller). Recorded at town clerk's office.
Agent Responsibility: If closing without attorney, coordinate with title company. Verify all documents prepared correctly. Confirm parties understand closing process. Ensure funds and documents properly exchanged. Verify deed recorded timely.
56. Connecticut Zoning and Land Use Regulations
Connecticut municipal zoning controls permitted property uses.
Zoning Districts: Properties zoned by municipality: residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, mixed-use. Each district specifies permitted uses, dimensional requirements (lot size, setbacks, height), density standards.
Permitted Uses: Use permitted as of right in zone. Non-permitted uses prohibited unless variance or special permit granted. Violating use subject to stop-work order and fines.
Variances: Property owner applies for variance if dimensional requirements (lot size, setbacks, height, coverage) cannot be met. Zoning board grants variance if hardship shown and use does not adversely impact neighbors.
Special Permits: If intended use not normally permitted in zone, owner applies for special permit (also called conditional use permit). Board grants permit if use appropriate for area and public benefit shown.
Non-Conforming Uses: Existing use that violates current zoning permitted to continue (legal non-conforming use). Expansion limited. Loss of use if building destroyed or use abandoned for extended period.
Agent Responsibility: Verify intended use permitted in zoning district. Research zoning at town assessor or planning office. Disclose zoning restrictions to buyer. Recommend variance/permit application if required. Do not represent use permitted unless officially approved.
57. Connecticut Fair Housing (CGS Chapter 46a, Section 46a-64)
Connecticut fair housing law prohibits discrimination beyond federal Fair Housing Act.
Protected Classes: Federal classes (race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, familial status) plus state classes (marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity, past mental/physical disability status).
Prohibited Conduct: Refusal to rent or sell. Steering. Different terms/conditions. Discriminatory advertising. Harassment. Housing segregation. Associations discrimination.
Source of Income: Cannot discriminate based on source of income (Section 8, rental assistance, disability benefits). Landlords must accept all income sources equally.
Enforcement: Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities (CHRO) investigates complaints. Investigation may result in probable cause finding. Settlement or hearing held. Damages awarded: actual damages, civil penalty, corrective action, attorney fees.
Testing: Fair housing organizations test for discrimination. Testers pose as buyers/renters. Compare treatment offered. Testing evidence used in investigations and litigation.
Agent Responsibility: Treat all prospects equally. Show all available properties. Do not steer based on protected status. Use non-discriminatory language in advertising. Report violations to management and authorities immediately.
58. Connecticut Landlord-Tenant Law (CGS Chapter 47a)
Connecticut strictly regulates landlord-tenant relationships.
Rental Agreement: All material terms in writing. Agreement specifies rent, due date, term, security deposit limit, prohibited conduct, notice requirements, maintenance responsibilities.
Security Deposit: Limited to two months rent (or one month plus one month interest-bearing if furnished). Deposited in interest-bearing account. Returned within 30 days of lease end minus itemized deductions for unpaid rent and damage beyond normal wear. Interest earned paid to tenant.
Rent Increases: If lease expires and month-to-month tenancy begins, landlord must provide 45-90 days notice before raising rent. Notice must state new rent amount.
Eviction Process: If tenant breaches, landlord provides written notice to cure or quit (typically 15 days). If tenant doesn't cure, landlord files eviction in housing court. Court holds hearing. Judgment for eviction if tenant defaults. If tenant contests, evidence presented. Court issues judgment. Sheriff executes eviction.
Tenant Rights: Quiet enjoyment. Habitability (landlord maintains safe, functioning property). Privacy (landlord cannot enter without notice except emergency). Non-retaliation (cannot evict for asserting rights or filing complaint).
Agent Role with Rental Properties: If seller has tenants, buyer assumes lease obligations. Disclose tenant lease terms and expiration to buyer. Do not assist in retaliatory or discriminatory evictions. Advise seller of tenant rights.
V. RHODE ISLAND REAL ESTATE LAW
59. Rhode Island License Law (RIGL Chapter 5-20.1)
Rhode Island regulates real estate brokers and salespersons through the Department of Business Regulation.
License Types: Broker (supervises agents, operates brokerage, maintains trust account), Salesperson (lists/sells under broker supervision), Corporation/Partnership licenses required for business entities.
Broker Requirements: 18+ years old, two years broker or salesperson experience within prior five years, pass broker exam, maintain Rhode Island office, submit trust account plan, complete pre-license education.
Salesperson Requirements: 18+ years old, pass salesperson exam, pre-license education (18 hours), broker sponsorship, not hold license in another state simultaneously.
License Renewal: Licenses expire every two years. Broker: 12 hours continuing education (6 core, 6 elective). Salesperson: 6 hours continuing education. Renewal deadline strictly enforced.
Disciplinary Violations: DBR investigates fraud, misrepresentation, commingling funds, failure to maintain trust account, unauthorized practice, dishonest dealing. Penalties: fines, license suspension, license revocation.
Agent Responsibility: Maintain active Rhode Island license. Complete continuing education on schedule. Report all trust account activities to broker. Disclose all material facts about transaction and property.
60. Rhode Island Agency Disclosure (RIGL Chapter 5-20.1-7)
Rhode Island requires agency disclosure before substantive representation begins.
Agency Disclosure Form: Broker provides statutory agency disclosure form identifying broker role: buyer agent, seller agent, or dual agent. Form must be in writing. Both parties receive copy.
Timing: Disclosure before substantive discussion (showing property, discussing price/terms, identifying buyer/seller). Acceptable via mail, email, or in-person. Parties must acknowledge receipt.
Dual Agency: Broker may represent buyer and seller if both consent in writing. Dual agent maintains impartiality but discloses conflict. Dual agent keeps each party's information confidential.
Confidentiality: Agent keeps confidential all information from client: price willing to pay, motivation, financial circumstances, timeline, personal issues affecting transaction. Duty survives transaction close.
Conflict of Interest Disclosure: Agent discloses any conflict: family relationship, business relationship, personal interest in property, prior representation.
Agent Responsibility: Provide written disclosure to all parties. Confirm signatures on acknowledgment. Document receipt in file. Do not proceed with substantive negotiations until disclosure given and acknowledged by all parties.
61. Rhode Island Property Disclosure (RIGL Chapter 34-37-3)
Rhode Island sellers must disclose known property defects to buyers.
Disclosure Form: Seller provides written property condition disclosure form. Form covers known material defects: structural issues, roof leaks, water damage, mold, electrical/plumbing issues, HVAC problems, pest damage, environmental hazards, title problems.
As-Is Sale Limitations: Buyer still entitled to disclosure even if property sold "as-is". As-is applies to inspection contingency waiver, not disclosure requirement.
Timing: Disclosure provided before buyer visits property or within 5 days of purchase agreement execution. If late disclosure, buyer may terminate without penalty.
Lead Paint: Pre-1978 homes must include federal lead paint disclosure. Buyer has 10-day right to inspect for lead. Disclosure includes pamphlet about lead hazards. Failure to disclose: penalty $500-1,000, damages to buyer.
Broker Responsibility: Provide disclosure form to seller. Ensure seller completes truthfully. Forward disclosure to buyer timely. If seller refuses disclosure, document refusal.
Agent Responsibility: Verify disclosure provided. Confirm completeness. Ensure buyer receives copy. Budget for repairs based on disclosed defects. Do not misrepresent property condition.
62. Rhode Island Transfer Tax (Deed Recording Tax, RIGL Chapter 44-3-1 et seq.)
Rhode Island imposes deed recording tax on property transfers.
Tax Rate: Tax is $2.20 per $1,000 of consideration (0.22%). Example: $300,000 purchase = $660 tax.
Tax Responsibility: Seller responsible for tax unless contract specifies otherwise. Tax paid at time of deed recording.
Exemptions: Certain transfers exempt: transfers between spouses, transfers to trust if grantor is beneficiary, transfers to government agencies, transfer for nominal consideration between family members.
Calculation: Based on stated consideration in deed or fair market value if consideration not stated.
Payment: Tax paid by check or wire transfer. Verified by recorder's office before deed recorded. If not paid, deed not recorded.
Agent Responsibility: Calculate transfer tax in closing estimate. Verify calculation with title company. Ensure tax paid at closing. Budget tax in seller's net proceeds.
63. Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) Regulations
Rhode Island strictly regulates coastal areas and waterfront properties.
CRMC Jurisdiction: CRMC regulates all coastal properties within 200 feet of water. Includes ocean, bays, salt ponds, navigable rivers. Regulations protect water quality, wildlife, natural resources.
CRMC Permit Requirement: Most construction, modification, or activity in coastal zone requires CRMC permit. Permitted projects include construction, dredging, filling, bulkheading, dock installation, vegetation removal.
Permit Application: Owner submits application with plans and environmental documentation. CRMC reviews for compliance with coastal resource standards. Approval or denial issued. Appeals available.
Enforcement: CRMC staff conduct site inspections. Violations result in cease-and-desist order, fines, required restoration, environmental cleanup liens.
Disclosure: Seller discloses if property in CRMC jurisdiction. Buyer informed of permit requirements and potential restrictions on use/improvement.
Agent Responsibility: Determine if property in coastal zone using CRMC maps. Disclose regulatory requirements to buyer. Recommend environmental review for waterfront properties. Explain building/modification restrictions.
64. Rhode Island Lead Paint Disclosure and Hazard Mitigation
Rhode Island requires lead disclosure and hazard mitigation for pre-1978 homes.
Lead Paint Disclosure: Seller discloses in writing that property may contain lead paint. Buyer provided federal lead paint disclosure pamphlet. Disclosure completed before buyer obligated to purchase.
Inspection Right: Buyer has 10-day right to inspect property for lead hazards. Inspection performed by EPA/state-certified lead inspector. Lead inspector qualified to identify lead hazards.
Lead Hazard Mitigation: If child under 6 present or planned, property must be lead-safe. Mitigation includes encapsulation, deleading, interim controls. Certified lead abator performs work. Costs $5,000-15,000 for deleading.
Certification: Property certified lead-safe after mitigation. Certificate required in file at closing if child expected.
Penalties: Failure to disclose: civil penalty $200-500, damages to buyer. Failure to mitigate when required: damages to resident if lead poisoning occurs.
Agent Responsibility: Explain lead testing rights to buyer. Coordinate testing during inspection period. Budget mitigation costs. Ensure certification complete if child expected. Do not close without lead certification if required.
65. Rhode Island Fair Housing (RIGL Chapter 34-37)
Rhode Island fair housing law prohibits discrimination based on protected classes.
Protected Classes: Race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, familial status, sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, receipt of public assistance, source of income.
Prohibited Conduct: Refusal to rent/sell. Steering. Different terms/conditions. Discriminatory advertising. Harassment. Housing segregation. Associational discrimination.
Source of Income Protection: Landlord cannot discriminate based on income source (Section 8, rental assistance, disability benefits, child support). Income source treated equally.
Enforcement: Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights investigates complaints. Investigation may result in probable cause finding. Conciliation attempted or case scheduled for hearing. Damages awarded: actual damages, civil penalty, corrective action, attorney fees.
Testing: Fair housing organizations conduct testing to detect discrimination. Testers pose as renters/buyers. Evidence used in investigations.
Agent Responsibility: Treat all prospects equally. Show all available properties. Do not steer. Use non-discriminatory language. Do not make assumptions based on protected status. Report violations to management and authorities.
66. Rhode Island Landlord-Tenant Law (RIGL Chapter 34-18)
Rhode Island protects tenant rights and regulates landlord conduct.
Rental Agreement: All material terms in writing. Specifies rent, due date, term, security deposit limit, prohibited conduct, maintenance responsibilities, notice requirements.
Security Deposit: Limited to one month rent for unfurnished, 1.5 months for furnished. Deposited in interest-bearing account. Returned within 20 days of lease end minus itemized deductions for unpaid rent and damage beyond normal wear. Interest earned paid to tenant.
Rent Increase: Landlord provides 30 days notice before increasing rent. Notice must state new rent amount and effective date. Increase cannot be retaliatory.
Eviction Process: If tenant breaches, landlord provides 3-day notice to cure or quit. If tenant doesn't cure, landlord files action for ejectment in district court. Court holds hearing. If judgment for landlord, tenant has 3 days to vacate. Sheriff executes eviction.
Tenant Rights: Quiet enjoyment. Habitability (property maintained safe and functioning). Privacy (landlord cannot enter without notice except emergency). Non-retaliation (cannot evict for asserting rights).
Agent Role with Rental Properties: Disclose tenant lease to buyer. Buyer assumes lease obligations at closing. Do not assist in retaliatory evictions. Advise seller of tenant protections.
VI. NAR CODE OF ETHICS
67. Article 1: Fiduciary Duty and Client Protection
REALTOR members prioritize client interests and maintain fiduciary relationships.
Article 1 Requirements: Represent clients with honesty and loyalty. Place client interests above own interests. Disclose all conflicts of interest. Maintain client confidentiality. Account for all client funds and property. Do not commingle client funds with own funds.
Fiduciary Duty: Fiduciary duty applies to represented clients. Fiduciary obligated to: advise in client interest, disclose material facts, keep confidences, avoid conflicts, account for funds, perform duties with competence and care.
Client Interest Priority: Client interest supersedes personal gain. If conflict exists between client interest and agent gain, agent advances client interest. Example: recommend property buyer wants vs property generating higher commission.
Disclosure Obligation: Agent discloses all material facts affecting transaction. Material facts include property condition, known defects, neighborhood issues, market conditions, transaction complications.
Agent Responsibility: Document all client instructions and preferences. Keep client informed throughout transaction. Recommend professional advisors (attorney, inspector, appraiser) as needed. Do not allow personal benefit to override client interest.
68. Article 2: Misrepresentation and Fraudulent Practice
REALTOR members prohibited from making misstatements or omitting material facts.
Prohibition on Misrepresentation: Members shall not knowingly misrepresent facts about property, transaction, market, or other parties. Misrepresentation includes false statements and omission of material facts.
Material Facts: Facts affecting property value, desirability, or use. Examples: known defects, title issues, environmental hazards, neighborhood problems, pending litigation, assessed value changes, school district changes.
Innocent Misrepresentation: Even if member not aware statement is false, if member made statement and statement is material fact, NAR may issue complaint. Member responsible for accuracy of statements regardless of intent.
Omission of Facts: Failure to disclose material fact same as stating opposite is true. Silence when material fact exists violates Code if member knew fact and failed to disclose.
Fraud: Intentional misstatement or omission with intent to deceive. Fraud complaint investigated by NAR. Fraud investigation conducted by local association and NAR Membership Services. Violations result in fine, suspension, or revocation of REALTOR membership.
Agent Responsibility: Verify all facts in listing and marketing. Disclose known property defects. Provide honest market analysis. Do not overstate market conditions or buyer demand. Document basis for pricing recommendations.
69. Article 3: Cooperation and Competition
REALTOR members cooperate with competitors and follow MLS cooperation rules.
Cooperation Requirement: REALTOR members must cooperate with other REALTOR members. Cooperation includes sharing information, providing access to property, honoring commissions, participating in MLS.
Clear Cooperation Policy (Post-NAR Settlement): Brokers set clear cooperation policy in MLS. Policy defines whether broker cooperates with buyer agents and what compensation offered. Policy must be disclosed to seller.
Fair Competition: Members compete fairly. Unfair competition prohibited: disparaging competitors, unauthorized representation, unfair contractual terms.
Offered Compensation: Broker discloses compensation offered to cooperating brokers. Standard practice: offer cooperative commission (split between listing broker and buyer broker). Cooperation and compensation transparent in MLS.
Exclusion from Compensation: Broker may limit cooperation or compensation if permitted by MLS rules. MLS rules define cooperation policies. After NAR Settlement, cooperation policies more flexible but still require disclosure.
Agent Responsibility: Understand broker's cooperation policy. Disclose cooperation details to sellers. Honor commissions and cooperation agreements. Participate fairly in MLS system. Do not disparage competitors or their agents.
70. Articles 4-8: Duties to Buyer and Seller
REALTOR members maintain specific duties to buyers and sellers represented.
Article 4: Loyalty and Interest Advancement: Agent represents client with loyalty. Agent advises client about market conditions, property values, transaction terms. Agent negotiates on client's behalf. Agent promotes client's interests in transaction.
Article 5: Confidentiality and Privacy: Agent keeps confidential all information from client. Examples: price willingness, motivation, financial circumstances, timeline, family issues, personal preferences. Confidentiality continues after transaction close.
Article 6: Disclosure and Accounting: Agent discloses all material facts. Agent accounts for all money and property belonging to client or transaction. Agent maintains trust account. Agent reconciles accounts regularly. Agent provides transaction accounting to client.
Article 7: Competency and Care: Agent provides competent service. Agent maintains knowledge of real estate law, market conditions, transaction procedures. Agent exercises reasonable care in performing duties. Agent advises client when professional expertise needed (attorney, appraiser, inspector).
Article 8: Responsibility and Avoidance of Misrepresentation: Agent responsible for all representations made. Agent does not knowingly misrepresent property or transaction. Agent corrects misrepresentations if discovered. Agent honest in all communications.
Agent Responsibility: Understand duties owed to represented clients. Perform all duties with competence and care. Keep client informed. Maintain client confidentiality. Account for all funds. Disclose material facts.
71. Article 9: Written Contracts and Commission Agreements
REALTOR members use written contracts for client representation and transactions.
Written Listing Agreement: Agent and seller execute written listing agreement specifying agency relationship, property description, listing price, commission rate, term of listing, marketing obligations, exclusivity, additional terms.
Buyer Broker Agreement: Agent and buyer execute written buyer broker agreement (post-NAR Settlement requirement). Agreement specifies: buyer broker represents buyer, commission terms, exclusivity period, services provided, termination clause.
Commission Disclosure: Commissions fully disclosed in writing. Listing agreement shows listing broker commission. Buyer broker agreement shows buyer broker commission or compensation method. MLS shows offered compensation to cooperating brokers.
Clarity Required: All material terms clearly stated in writing. No ambiguous or misleading terms. Both parties understand terms before signing. Copy provided to all signatories.
NAR Settlement Impact: Post-settlement, buyer broker agreement required before showing properties. Broker initiates buyer broker agreement before substantive negotiations with buyer. Agreement specifies compensation terms and buyer obligations.
Agent Responsibility: Use NAR standard forms or attorney-approved forms. Complete all blanks accurately. Ensure all parties understand terms. Obtain signatures from all parties. Keep file copy of all agreements. Update commission disclosures as agreed.
72. Article 10: Non-Discrimination and Fair Housing
REALTOR members prohibit discrimination and follow fair housing laws.
Fair Housing Compliance: Members comply with federal Fair Housing Act and state fair housing laws. Discrimination prohibited based on protected classes: race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, familial status.
NAR Fair Housing Responsibilities: REALTOR members expand fair housing protection beyond federal law. Protected additional classes per state law (sexual orientation, gender identity, source of income). NAR Code Article 10 requires compliance with broadest fair housing protection available.
Prohibited Conduct: Refusal to rent/sell. Steering. Different terms/conditions. Discriminatory advertising. Harassment. Housing segregation. Associational discrimination.
Testing and Enforcement: Fair housing organizations test for discrimination. Testing evidence used in complaints. NAR investigates discrimination complaints. Violations result in fine, suspension, or membership revocation.
Training and Education: REALTOR members complete fair housing training. Training covers protected classes, prohibited conduct, examples of discrimination. Training required for licensing renewal in many states.
Agent Responsibility: Treat all prospects equally. Show all available properties without steering. Use non-discriminatory language. Do not make assumptions based on protected status. Report discrimination to management and authorities.
73. Article 11: Professional Competency
REALTOR members maintain professional competence and continue learning.
Knowledge Requirement: Members maintain knowledge of real estate law, market conditions, transaction procedures, professional standards. Knowledge obtained through education, training, experience, professional development.
Continuing Education: Members participate in continuing education. Continuing education covers legal updates, ethical standards, market trends, technology. Education relevant to members' practice areas (residential, commercial, property management).
Professional Development: Members pursue certifications and designations (GRI, CRS, ABR, CIPS, etc.). Designations demonstrate specialized knowledge and commitment to excellence.
Ethical Standards: Members aware of NAR Code of Ethics. Members understand ethical duties and obligations. Members apply ethical standards in daily practice. Members report ethical violations to authorities.
Service Limitations: Members recognize limits of knowledge. Members refer to specialists when needed: attorneys (contracts, title, legal compliance), appraisers (valuation), inspectors (property condition), accountants (tax implications).
Agent Responsibility: Complete state-required continuing education on schedule. Pursue professional designations relevant to practice. Stay current with legal changes. Refer to specialists when outside area of competence. Maintain professional standards.
74. Article 12: Honesty and Truthfulness
REALTOR members maintain honesty and truthfulness in all communications.
Truth in Advertising: Advertising contains truthful statements. Advertising not misleading or deceptive. All property features, market claims, business claims verified and accurate.
Testimonials and Reviews: Member endorsements truthful. Testimonials from actual clients. Reviews represent member opinion or experience, not fabricated. No paid reviews without disclosure that review is paid/incentivized.
Social Media Standards: Social media posts contain truthful information. No false claims about properties, market, or services. Social media identifies member as real estate agent. Social media follows NAR standards and state advertising rules.
Communication with Public: All communications with public honest and accurate. Business claims about experience, services, results truthful. No exaggeration or false promises. Marketing materials accurate.
Corrections: If agent becomes aware communication contained false or misleading information, agent promptly corrects information. Correction disseminated to those who saw original communication if reasonably feasible.
Agent Responsibility: Review all marketing materials before publication. Verify claims are truthful and supported. Remove false statements immediately if discovered. Correct testimonials that prove inaccurate. Ensure social media posts honest and compliant.
75. Articles 13-15: Relations with REALTOR Members and Arbitration
REALTOR members maintain professional relations with other members and resolve disputes through arbitration.
Article 13: Professional Relationships: Members respect other REALTOR members. Members honor agreements with other members. Members cooperate fairly in transactions. Members do not disparage other members. Members report ethical violations through proper channels.
Article 14: Representation Authority and Lawful Conduct: Members represent only clients they authorized to represent. Members not engage in unlawful conduct. Members comply with all applicable laws and regulations. Members responsible for conduct of staff and agents they supervise.
Article 15: NAR Arbitration: Member disputes with other REALTOR members submitted to NAR arbitration. Arbitration resolves commission disputes, contract interpretation, professional conduct disagreements. Arbitration mandatory for member-to-member disputes. Arbitration decision binding on all parties. Appeal available to NAR if procedural error.
Arbitration Process: Disputing member files arbitration request with local NAR association. Panel of REALTOR members serves as arbitrator. Parties present evidence and arguments. Panel makes decision and awards compensation if appropriate. Decision binding unless appealed.
Agent Responsibility: Honor agreements with other agents. Pay commissions as agreed. Resolve disputes through NAR arbitration, not litigation if possible. Understand arbitration requirements and participation obligations. Abide by arbitration decisions.
76. Articles 16-17: Professional Standards Enforcement and Dispute Resolution
REALTOR members subject to ethics enforcement and discipline.
Article 16: Professional Standards: NAR Professional Standards Committee enforces Code of Ethics. Committee investigates ethics complaints. Investigation includes examination of facts, review of Code provisions, opportunity for accused member to respond.
Complaint Investigation: Complaint filed with local NAR association. Association reviews complaint and determines if ethics violation alleged. If violation alleged, investigation conducted. Member provided opportunity to respond to charges. Evidence gathered from complainant, respondent, witnesses.
Sanctions: If violation found, sanctions imposed. Sanctions range: warning, fine, suspension of membership, revocation of membership, requirement to take ethics training. Sanctions proportionate to violation severity and member history.
Article 17: Dispute Resolution: Members commit to ethical dispute resolution. Members work toward amicable resolution when possible. Members participate in mediation before litigation if applicable. Members respect arbitration decisions.
Appeal Rights: Member sanctions may be appealed to NAR. Appeal reviewed by NAR Appeals Board. Appeal limited to procedural errors or new evidence. Decision of Appeals Board final.
Agent Responsibility: Understand Code of Ethics and professional standards. Comply with all Code provisions. Cooperate with ethics investigations. Accept sanctions if violation found. Appeal if procedural error or new evidence available. Participate in ethics training if required.
VII. MLS RULES AND COMPLIANCE
77. MLS Listing Input Requirements and Accuracy Standards
MLS listings require accurate and complete property information.
Required Fields: Property address, legal description, property type (single-family, condo, commercial), number of bedrooms/bathrooms, square footage, lot size, year built, property features (fireplace, pool, garage, deck), utilities (water, electric, gas, sewer), tax information.
Accuracy Standards: All information accurate and verified. Square footage from reliable source (appraisal, tax record, seller statement). Bedroom/bathroom count accurate. Property features match property condition. No false or misleading information. If information uncertain, disclose uncertainty in remarks.
Photo Standards: Professional photos showing property exterior and interior. Photos properly lit and focused. Photos show property in good condition, not cluttered or staged unrealistically. Photos include all rooms, exterior views, yard. Minimum number of photos per MLS rule (typically 15-25 photos).
Description and Remarks: Listing description highlights property strengths and features. Description accurate and not exaggerated. Description includes property condition, updates, special features. Description uses keywords for searchability. Remarks highlight benefits to buyers.
Inspection Period and Contingencies: MLS listing includes inspection contingency availability. Listing shows required inspections (lead, radon, septic). Listing discloses material defects requiring inspection.
Agent Responsibility: Verify all listing information before MLS submission. Use accurate measurements and count. Update listing if information changes. Monitor listing for accuracy. Correct errors immediately. Add photos and description that accurately represent property.
78. Clear Cooperation Policy and MLS Participation Rules
MLS rules define cooperation and participation standards.
Clear Cooperation Policy: MLS requires brokers define cooperation policy. Policy specifies: whether broker cooperates with buyer agents, what commission offered to cooperating brokers, whether buyer agent required to be member of MLS.
Cooperation Levels: Full cooperation: offers compensation to all cooperating brokers. Limited cooperation: offers compensation to selected brokers or none. Policy must be disclosed to sellers and in MLS.
Compensation Transparency: Offered compensation clearly stated in MLS. Listing shows buyer broker compensation or commission split. Cooperating brokers see offered compensation. No hidden commission terms.
Post-NAR Settlement Changes: NAR settlement requires brokers offer buyer broker compensation (commission or flat fee). Compensation offered to all buyer brokers cooperating through MLS. Brokers still have flexibility in cooperation policy but must be transparent.
MLS Access Requirements: Brokers maintain MLS membership and access. Agents within brokerage have access to MLS data. MLS data used only for authorized purposes (client representation, market analysis). No data poaching or unauthorized use.
Agent Responsibility: Understand broker's cooperation policy. Disclose cooperation and compensation terms to clients. Honor compensation agreements. Access MLS only for authorized purposes. Participate in MLS system honestly.
79. MLS Status Changes and Listing Management
MLS rules control listing status updates and property management.
Active Listing Status: Listing shows as "active" when available for sale. Marketing must actively promote property. Broker must respond to inquiries timely. Showings permitted unless restricted in listing.
Status Changes: Status updated as transaction progresses. Status changes to "pending" when offer accepted. Status changes to "under contract" or "contingent" if contingencies not satisfied. Status changes to "sold" after closing. Status changes to "withdrawn" or "expired" if listing terminates.
Timing of Status Changes: Status changed within required timeframe (typically 24 hours). MLS rules specify timeframe for status updates. Late updates penalized by fine or compliance warning.
Multiple Offers: When multiple offers received, listing status may show "multiple offers" alerting market to competition. Showings continue if permitted. Additional offers considered if buyer agent requests.
Withdrawn and Expired: If property withdrawn from sale, status changes to "withdrawn". Listing no longer marketed. If listing term expires, status changes to "expired". Property no longer listed for sale.
Agent Responsibility: Update listing status promptly when changes occur. Document reason for status change. Keep listing active if property still for sale. Withdraw listing if no longer marketing. Comply with MLS deadlines for status updates.
80. Virtual Tour and Technology Standards in MLS
MLS rules govern virtual tours, photos, and technology use in listings.
Virtual Tours: Virtual tours permitted in MLS listings. Virtual tours must show property accurately. Tours cannot be misleading or edited to misrepresent property. Tours filmed with proper lighting and angles. Tours include all rooms and exterior.
Video Walkthroughs: Video walkthroughs permitted. Videos accurate representation of property. Videos cannot contain commentary that misleads or exaggerates. Videos posted on MLS or linked from listing page.
Photos Standards: Photos clear, properly focused, professionally taken. Photos show property in good condition. Photos not edited to misrepresent property color, size, or condition. No people or branded items visible in photos. Consistent quality across all photos.
Drone Photography: Drone photos permitted if comply with local regulations. Drone photos show aerial property views. Photos cannot compromise neighbor privacy. Photos high quality and properly focused.
Prohibited Technology Use: Automatic "sign-up" prompts for buyer email prohibited. Geo-fencing or pop-ups that track buyer behavior prohibited. Deceptive click-bait headlines prohibited. Data harvesting beyond what buyer agreed prohibited.
Agent Responsibility: Use professional photography. Ensure virtual tours accurate. Do not edit photos or videos to misrepresent property. Use technology transparently. Respect buyer privacy. Comply with MLS technology standards.
81. MLS Data Accuracy and Compliance Audits
MLS maintains data accuracy standards and conducts compliance audits.
Data Accuracy Standard: All MLS data accurate and complete. Information verified from reliable sources. MLS conducts random audits of listed properties. Auditors verify property information matches MLS data.
Compliance Audit Process: MLS staff or independent auditors visit properties. Auditors verify bedrooms, bathrooms, square footage, property features. Auditors take photos for comparison with listing photos. Reports completed and results provided to brokers.
Accuracy Violations: If inaccuracy found, listing agent notified. Agent must correct inaccuracy or face fine. Repeated inaccuracies result in compliance warning. Serious inaccuracies result in suspension or account review.
False Advertising Penalties: Knowingly providing false information in MLS fined. Fine amounts range $250-2,500 per violation. Repeated violations result in account suspension or termination.
Agent Responsibility: Enter accurate property information in MLS. Verify all details before listing. Update listing if information changes. Correct any inaccuracies discovered. Cooperate with MLS audits.
82. VOW and IDX Rules: Public Data Display
MLS rules govern display of property data on public websites.
VOW (Virtual Office Website): Brokers operate VOW to display MLS listings to public. VOW requires MLS permission and compliance with MLS rules. VOW must display listings accurately. VOW cannot collect data from buyers without consent.
IDX (Internet Data Exchange): Third-party websites display MLS data through IDX feeds. IDX requires permission from MLS and broker. IDX partners comply with display rules. IDX partners cannot modify listing data or misrepresent properties.
Display Rules: Listings displayed with accurate information. Photos match listing. Listings show current status. Withdrawn listings removed from public sites within 24 hours. Sold listings archived or marked as sold.
Lead Capture and Data Use: Brokers may capture buyer information through VOW/IDX if comply with privacy rules. Buyer information used only for permitted purposes. Brokers provide opt-out for buyers who don't want follow-up. Email follow-up complies with CAN-SPAM rules.
Restrictions on Data: IDX partners cannot download entire MLS database for competing uses. Partners cannot use data to market competing brokers. Partners cannot share data with third parties without permission. Data use limited to authorized purposes.
Agent Responsibility: Ensure VOW listings accurate. Monitor IDX displays for accuracy. Ensure listings removed from public sites when status changes. Comply with data privacy rules. Respect buyer opt-out requests.
83. MLS Fines and Compliance Penalties
MLS enforces rules through fines and compliance penalties.
Fine Categories: Data accuracy violations ($250-1,000). Photo/description violations ($250-1,000). Status update delays ($250-500 per occurrence). Cooperation violations ($500-2,500). Fraud or serious violations ($1,000-5,000+).
Compliance Warnings: First offense typically results in warning. Written warning provided. Required corrective action specified. Timeline given to correct violation.
Repeated Violations: If agent commits same violation twice, fine assessed. Fine amount depends on violation frequency and severity. Account review possible if violations continue.
Account Suspension: Serious violations result in account suspension. Suspension prevents broker from accessing MLS. Suspension typically 30-60 days. During suspension, no new listings entered. Existing listings in suspension status.
Account Termination: Repeated serious violations may result in account termination. Termination means broker loses MLS membership. Broker must reapply and may be denied. Termination ends all MLS access.
Agent Responsibility: Know MLS rules. Comply with all requirements. Correct violations quickly. Maintain accurate records. Appeal if believe fine unjustified.
84. MLS Record Retention and Dispute Resolution
MLS maintains records and provides dispute resolution processes.
Record Retention: MLS maintains all listing records for minimum 7 years. Records include listing data, photos, status history, transaction information. Records accessible to members for market analysis and research.
Dispute Resolution: If member disputes fine or compliance decision, appeal process available. Appeal filed with MLS within specified timeframe (typically 30 days). Appeal reviewed by MLS dispute committee. Committee decision final unless procedural error apparent.
Arbitration: Member-to-member disputes may proceed to NAR arbitration if both members REALTOR members. Arbitration resolves commission disputes, data disputes, cooperation disagreements. NAR arbitrator makes binding decision.
MLS Regulatory Changes: MLS updates rules as needed. Members notified of rule changes. New rules effective on specified date. Brokers responsible for communicating rule changes to agents.
Agent Responsibility: Understand MLS rules and updates. Maintain accurate records. Appeal fines if believe unjustified. Cooperate with MLS investigations. Keep file organized for 7 years.
VIII. ADVERTISING AND MARKETING COMPLIANCE
85. REALTOR Trademark Use and Brand Protection
REALTOR is federally registered trademark owned by NAR.
REALTOR Trademark: Trademark protected by federal law. Only NAR members may use REALTOR designation. Non-members cannot use REALTOR in name or advertising.
Proper Use: REALTOR used as adjective only: "REALTOR agent," "REALTOR member," "REALTOR firm." Never used as verb ("I REALTOR homes"). Never used as noun ("He is a REALTOR" incorrect, "He is a REALTOR member" correct). Always capitalized.
Company Names: REALTOR trademark cannot be used in company name unless member of NAR in good standing. Company name "ABC REALTOR Company" requires NAR membership. Non-member company cannot use REALTOR in name.
Logo and Symbol: Registered REALTOR logo (R symbol) owned by NAR. Members licensed to use logo. Logo use governed by NAR guidelines. Logo must appear with proper designation and membership status.
Violations: Non-members using REALTOR trademark subject to NAR enforcement. NAR sends cease-and-desist letter. Continued use results in litigation. NAR recovers damages and attorney fees.
Agent Responsibility: Use REALTOR trademark correctly. Verify company name compliance. Use official NAR logo if entitled. Do not allow company to use REALTOR if not NAR member. Report trademark misuse to NAR.
86. Team Name and Brokerage Name Requirements
Real estate teams and brokerages must identify accurately in advertising.
Team Name Disclosure: If agent part of team with distinct name, team name used consistently. Team name includes broker affiliation: "ABC Team at XYZ Realty." Both team name and broker name appear in advertising.
Broker Affiliation: Broker name appears prominently in all advertising. Broker name size comparable to agent name. Broker name location clear and obvious. Broker phone number and address included (typically in small print).
Fictitious Team Names: If team name fictitious (not actual business entity), disclosure required. Advertising states team member names and broker affiliation. No misrepresentation about team status or credentials.
Brokerage Advertising: Brokerage advertising includes brokerage name, address, phone number. Office website includes brokerage information. Business cards include brokerage affiliation.
Consistency: Team name and broker name used consistently across all platforms. Business cards match website matches signage matches MLS. No variations in naming.
Agent Responsibility: Use correct team name and broker affiliation. Ensure consistency across all advertising. Include broker information prominently. Update all materials if broker changes. Avoid fictitious names that mislead.
87. Social Media Marketing Rules and Compliance
Real estate agents must follow specific rules for social media marketing.
Transparency Requirements: Agent identifies self as real estate agent in social media profiles. Bio or profile section states license status and brokerage affiliation. Broker name and license number included (where platform permits).
Advertising Disclosures: Paid social media posts clearly marked "Sponsored" or "Ad." Post uses platform's disclosure tools (sponsored label). Disclosure visible before reader clicks for more information. No sponsored content disguised as organic post.
Truth in Advertising: All social media posts contain truthful statements. Property features accurately described. Market claims verified. Testimonials truthful and from actual clients. No exaggeration or false claims.
Privacy and Data Collection: Agent complies with platform privacy rules. No unauthorized collection of user data. Links to broker website compliant with privacy policies. Forms collect only necessary information. Privacy policy visible on website.
Testimonials and Reviews: Testimonials from real clients. No paid endorsements without disclosure. Reviews submitted by actual customers. Negative reviews not deleted without reason. Agent responds to reviews professionally.
Client Confidentiality: Agent does not post client photos without permission. Client testimonials not shared without authorization. Client names not used in marketing without approval. No disclosure of client information in social media.
Agent Responsibility: Identify self as agent on all social media profiles. Mark sponsored content clearly. Use truthful statements only. Respect client privacy. Obtain permission before sharing client info. Comply with platform policies.
88. Truth in Advertising and Prohibited Claims
Real estate advertising must be truthful and not deceptive.
Truthful Statements: All advertising statements factual and verifiable. Claims about property features must be accurate. Market claims must be supported by data. Pricing claims must be honest.
Prohibited Exaggerations: Cannot claim "best neighborhood" without data. Cannot claim "best value" unless supported by market analysis. Cannot claim "hottest market" without statistical support. Cannot make unsubstantiated promises about seller net proceeds.
Prohibited Misleading Terms: "Waterfront" only if water visible from property. "Ocean view" only if ocean actually visible. "Updated kitchen" must reflect recent updates, not cosmetic touch-ups. "Luxury home" only if property meets luxury standards in market.
Price Representations: Price must reflect actual asking/sold prices. Cannot show old prices to suggest market appreciation. Cannot compare to dissimilar properties. Cannot claim price "below market value" without support.
Market Claims: Claims about market conditions (appreciation, inventory, demand) must be accurate and current. Use MLS data to support claims. Disclose data source. Update claims if market changes.
Corrections: If advertising contains false or misleading statement, correct immediately. Remove false advertising from all platforms. Correct any claims that prove inaccurate. Document correction made.
Agent Responsibility: Review all advertising before publication. Verify all claims are truthful. Remove false statements. Correct inaccuracies immediately. Use reliable data for market claims. Keep claims honest and professional.
89. Testimonials, Reviews, and Success Stories in Marketing
Testimonials and reviews must be authentic and truthful.
Client Testimonials: Testimonials from actual clients. Testimonial reflects genuine client experience. Client authorized testimonial use. Client agrees to name and photo use (if included). Testimonial truthful.
Paid Endorsements: If client paid or offered incentive for testimonial, disclose clearly. Disclosure: "Client provided compensation for testimonial" or similar. Disclosure visible and prominent. FTC rules require disclosure of material connections.
Online Reviews: Agent cannot delete negative reviews for retaliatory reasons. Agent may respond professionally to negative reviews. Agent may request removal of false statements. Agent reviews own practices if receive consistent negative feedback.
Rating Manipulation: Agent cannot ask clients to post 5-star reviews. Agent cannot ask clients to delete negative reviews. Agent cannot offer incentive for positive reviews. Agent cannot fake reviews with false identities.
Success Stories: Success stories truthful and verifiable. Include specific dates and property details (if permission obtained). Disclose if extraordinary results or specialized situation. Do not suggest all clients achieve similar results.
Comparative Claims: Cannot claim "top agent" without supporting data. Cannot claim "best in market" without statistical proof. Cannot compare to competitors without factual basis. Cannot misrepresent market position.
Agent Responsibility: Use only authentic testimonials. Obtain client permission before using. Disclose any incentives for testimonials. Respond professionally to reviews. Monitor online reputation. Correct false information. Maintain integrity of marketing claims.
90. CAN-SPAM Compliance and Email Marketing Rules
Email marketing must comply with CAN-SPAM Act (15 U.S.C. Section 7701).
CAN-SPAM Requirements: All marketing emails must include: accurate header information (from, to, date), clear subject line, physical postal address (office or home address), clear opt-out mechanism (unsubscribe link).
Subject Line: Subject line must not be deceptive. Subject must reflect email content. Cannot use misleading language to increase open rates. Cannot misrepresent sender or urgency.
Sender Identity: Email clearly identifies sender. "From:" line includes actual email address or name. Reply-to address monitored and responses answered. No spoofing sender identity.
Physical Address: Email includes valid physical address. Address can be office address or home address. Address must be operational and monitored. Address cannot be fake or abandoned.
Opt-Out Mechanism: Every email includes unsubscribe link or mechanism. Unsubscribe link clearly visible and functional. Opt-out honored within 10 business days. Unsubscribe list maintained and honored for future emails.
Commercial vs Non-Commercial: CAN-SPAM applies to commercial email. Transactional email (confirmations, receipts) exempt from subject line and header rules. Educational emails about real estate topics may be non-commercial if not soliciting sales.
Violations: CAN-SPAM violations result in FTC enforcement. Fine up to $43,280 per violation. Multiple violations in single campaign. FTC can sue for damages. State attorneys general can sue for damages.
Agent Responsibility: Include required information in all marketing emails. Honor opt-out requests. Maintain opt-out list. Do not purchase bulk email lists without permission. Keep email address list clean. Monitor compliance and correct violations.
91. Do Not Call (DNC) and Do Not Track (DNT) Compliance
Real estate agents must respect National Do Not Call Registry.
Do Not Call Registry: National DNC registry maintained by FTC. Consumers place phone numbers on registry to prevent marketing calls. Agents cannot call numbers on registry unless exception applies.
Exceptions to DNC: Can call previous customer (within 18 months). Can call person who inquired about property (within 3 months). Can call person who gave prior written permission. Can call attorney or CPA for business purposes. Can call about existing transaction or legal obligation.
Business-to-Business Calls: DNC applies to consumer phone lines. Business phone lines exempt from DNC. Agent can call business number without DNC check. Must verify business vs consumer line.
Company DNC List: Brokerages maintain internal DNC list. Broker adds consumers who request not to be called. Broker DNC list honor even if consumer didn't register with FTC. All agents comply with broker DNC list.
Calling Script Identification: When call made, identify self: name, brokerage, phone number. Provide brief purpose of call. Allow recipient to end call immediately. Do not pressure or coerce.
Violations: Each violating call is separate violation. FTC enforces DNC violations. FTC can award damages to consumer. Calls to numbers on registry result in $500-$1,500 fine per call (potential $43,280+ damages).
Agent Responsibility: Check DNC registry before calling consumers. Maintain broker DNC list. Document exceptions to DNC. Identify self on all calls. Honor consumer DNC requests immediately. Train all staff on DNC rules.
92. Fair Housing in Advertising: Prohibited Words and Phrases
Real estate advertising must comply with Fair Housing Act.
Prohibited Descriptors: Cannot use words that indicate protected status. "Christian neighborhood" violates fair housing (religion). "Golf course community" may indicate age preference. "Great for families" may indicate familial status preference. "Near schools" may indicate families preference. "Young professionals" indicates age preference. "Empty nesters" indicates age preference.
Race and Ethnicity: Cannot advertise to specific racial or ethnic group. Cannot describe neighborhood as "diverse" or "homogeneous." Cannot mention neighborhood demographics that suggest racial preferences. Cannot use names that indicate ethnicity as advertising benefit.
Disability Restrictions: Cannot advertise "stairs required" or similar language discouraging disabled persons. Cannot state property "only for able-bodied." Cannot advertise accessibility features as deterrent. Must advertise accessibility features accurately if present.
Familial Status: Cannot state "no children" or "child-free." Cannot advertise as "great for singles." Cannot mention proximity to schools to attract families. Cannot indicate children not welcome.
Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity: Cannot exclude LGBTQ+ persons from marketing. Cannot use discriminatory language. Cannot advertise couple-only units. Cannot exclude unmarried couples. Cannot discriminate against single-parent families.
Source of Income: Cannot exclude recipients of government assistance. Cannot state "no Section 8" or "no vouchers." Cannot indicate source of income restrictions in advertising. Must accept all income sources equally.
Inclusive Advertising: Use inclusive language: "quiet neighborhood" instead of specific demographic. "Updated home" instead of "perfect for families." "Close to amenities" instead of "near schools." Show diverse people in marketing photos. Include accessibility information when applicable.
Agent Responsibility: Review all advertising for fair housing compliance. Remove prohibited language. Use inclusive terminology. Ensure photos show diversity. Train staff on fair housing advertising rules. Report violations to management.
IX. ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING (AML)
93. Real Estate Red Flags and Suspicious Transaction Indicators
Real estate agents must identify suspicious transactions that may indicate money laundering.
Cash Transactions: Large cash down payments or closing payments. Buyer unwilling to use financing. Multiple small cash payments to avoid reporting. Payment source unclear or from unrelated party.
Unusual Transaction Patterns: Quick purchase followed by quick resale at higher price (flipping pattern). Property purchased and immediately leased. Buyer has no apparent use for property. Transaction does not match market conditions (overpaid significantly).
Buyer and Seller Relationship Red Flags: Buyer and seller appear related despite different surnames. Buyer immediately transfers title to third party. Purchase made by corporate entity with no apparent business purpose. Buyer reluctant to provide identification.
Financial Red Flags: Buyer claims financing denied then suddenly pays cash. Buyer wire transfer source unclear. Buyer brings large amounts of cash to closing. Buyer disputes appraisal that supports legitimate value.
Documentation Red Flags: Buyer provides false or altered identification. Buyer provides inconsistent personal information. Buyer refuses to provide proof of funds. Buyer declines title insurance. Buyer uses attorney of unknown origin.
Property Red Flags: Property purchased is high-value luxury property. Property purchased is vacant or abandoned. Property in economically distressed area without apparent purpose. Property used as collateral repeatedly.
Agent Responsibility: Be alert to suspicious transactions. Document red flags observed. Report suspicious activity to broker. Comply with broker's AML procedures. Do not ignore warning signs. Report confirmed money laundering to authorities.
94. Cash Transaction Reporting and Threshold Requirements
Federal law requires reporting of large cash transactions.
Reporting Requirement: Transactions involving more than $10,000 in cash must be reported (31 U.S.C. Section 5324). Cash defined as coins and currency. Cash includes negotiable instruments like cashier's checks and money orders. Wire transfers generally not treated as cash for AML purposes.
Structuring Prohibition: Prohibited to break large transaction into smaller transactions to avoid reporting threshold (smurfing). Structuring multiple transactions under $10,000 to avoid reporting illegal. Pattern of structuring reported to federal authorities. Structuring prosecuted as federal crime.
Reporting Form: Use IRS Form 8300 to report cash transaction over $10,000. Form completed by broker or closing attorney. Form filed with IRS within 15 days of transaction. Form includes buyer information, property description, transaction amount.
Broker Responsibility: Ensure cash transactions reported properly. Maintain procedures for identifying cash transactions. Do not assist in structuring. Train staff on reporting requirements. Keep Form 8300 records for 5 years.
Real Estate Closing Documents: Closing statement documents source of funds. Buyer provides proof of funds (bank statements, certified checks). Wire transfer documentation retained. Unexplained cash sources questioned and documented.
Agent Responsibility: Inform buyer of cash reporting requirements. Assist buyer in providing proper documentation. Encourage legitimate financing if appropriate. Report cash transactions to broker. Ensure closing attorney files proper forms.
95. Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) Filing Requirement
Financial institutions and real estate professionals must file SARs for suspected money laundering.
SAR Requirement: SAR filed by financial institutions (banks, title companies) when suspicious transaction detected. FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) receives SARs. SAR filed within 30 days of detection. Report includes transaction details and reason for suspicion.
Who Must File: Title companies that hold client funds required to file SARs. Real estate brokers holding client funds required to report to title company or FinCEN. Attorney handling transaction required to report. Real estate agents report suspicious transactions to broker or title company.
Content of SAR: Transaction amount, date, parties involved, property description, source of funds, reason for suspicion, entity filing report. SAR kept confidential. Recipients instructed not to disclose SAR to subjects of report.
Consequences of Not Filing: Failure to file SAR when required federal violation. Penalties: fine $25,000 per violation, up to $100,000. Criminal penalties if willful failure. Civil liability for damages if failure causes harm.
Safe Harbor: Persons making good faith reports of suspicious activity protected from liability. Cannot be sued for breach of contract or confidentiality for reporting. Cannot be terminated from employment for reporting. Protected from retaliation.
Agent Responsibility: Identify suspicious transactions. Report to broker immediately. Provide all relevant details. Cooperate with investigation. Maintain confidentiality of report. Do not disclose report to transaction parties.
96. Geographic Targeting Orders (GTOs) and Enhanced Due Diligence
FinCEN may issue Geographic Targeting Orders requiring enhanced verification.
GTO Scope: GTO applies to specified geographic area. GTO requires title companies to identify beneficial owners of property purchases. GTO applies to purchases above threshold (typically $300,000+). GTO effective for specified period (typically 180 days renewable).
Beneficial Owner Identification: GTO requires title company obtain identity of all beneficial owners. Beneficial owner defined as person who owns at least 25% of legal entity buyer. Information includes name, address, date of birth, identification number.
Enhanced Due Diligence: When GTO in effect, title company required to verify beneficial owner identity. Company confirms individual identity with government-issued ID. Company may require additional documentation. Company cannot close transaction without verified beneficial owner information.
Title Company Procedures: Title company implements GTO procedures. Staff trained on identification requirements. Procedures documented. Records maintained of compliance. Non-compliant transactions reported to authorities.
Real Estate Transactions: Agents assist in GTO compliance. Inform buyers of beneficial owner identification requirements. Provide buyer documents needed for identification. Ensure closing attorney obtains proper identification. Do not pressure buyer to hide identity.
Agent Responsibility: Know when GTO in effect in transaction area. Inform buyer of GTO requirements. Assist buyer in providing required information. Cooperate with title company verification process. Report uncooperative buyers to broker or authorities if appropriate.
X. DATA PRIVACY AND SECURITY
97. GLBA Compliance: Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (15 U.S.C. Section 6801)
Real estate professionals handling consumer financial information must comply with GLBA.
GLBA Requirements: If handle consumer financial information, must establish privacy practices. Must provide privacy notice to consumers. Must limit sharing of nonpublic information. Must safeguard consumer data. Must notify consumers of data breaches.
Privacy Notice: Consumer provided written privacy notice at beginning of relationship. Notice explains what information collected, how information used, who information shared with. Notice provided in clear language. Consumer acknowledges receipt.
Nonpublic Information: Information protected includes name, address, phone number, social security number, financial information, transaction history. Information protected only if related to consumer financial transaction. Public information (business name, address, published phone) not protected.
Information Sharing Restrictions: Can share information with service providers (lender, attorney, appraiser, inspector) who assist in transaction. Cannot share with third parties for marketing purposes without consent. Cannot disclose to unaffiliated businesses for sale or use.
Information Security: Implement physical, technical, and administrative safeguards. Limit access to information. Encrypt data in transit and at rest. Maintain secure facilities. Train staff on data security. Monitor for unauthorized access.
Data Breach Notification: If unauthorized access to consumer data, notify affected consumers without unreasonable delay. Notification includes nature of breach, information compromised, steps taken to respond. Notify major credit reporting agencies if large breach. Notify regulators as required.
Agent Responsibility: Understand GLBA requirements. Collect only necessary information. Store information securely. Share information only with authorized parties. Report data breaches to broker immediately. Comply with privacy notice requirements.
98. State Data Breach Notification Laws (FL, MA, CT, RI)
State laws require notification of data breaches involving personal information.
Florida Information Protection Act (FIPA): Florida law requires notification of unauthorized access to personal information (social security, financial account, driver license). Notification provided without unreasonable delay. Notification includes nature of breach, information compromised, steps to respond. Notification to Florida Attorney General if large breach.
Massachusetts Standards for Safeguarding Personal Information (201 CMR 17.00): Massachusetts requires safeguards for personal information. Safeguards include encryption, access controls, network monitoring. Notification required of breaches. Notice provided without unreasonable delay. Notification to Massachusetts Attorney General required.
Connecticut Data Privacy Act (Public Act 05-172): Connecticut requires notification of unauthorized access to personal information. Notification without unreasonable delay. Notice includes information compromised and steps to respond. Notification to Connecticut Attorney General if large breach.
Rhode Island Data Transparency and Security Act (RIGL Chapter 6-52): Rhode Island requires notification of unauthorized access. Notification without unreasonable delay. Notice describes breach and response. Notification to Rhode Island Attorney General if large breach.
Credit Monitoring Services: If breach affects large number of consumers, offer credit monitoring service (free for 12-24 months). Notify consumers how to enroll. Provide clear instructions for activation. Cover cost of service.
Agent Responsibility: Know state breach notification requirements. Implement data safeguards. Report breaches to broker immediately. Cooperate with notification process. Assist in providing breach notifications. Document all breach response actions.
99. Client Data Protection and Cybersecurity Best Practices
Real estate professionals must protect client data from unauthorized access and breaches.
Encryption: Encrypt all sensitive data in transit (use HTTPS websites, encrypted email). Encrypt data at rest (databases, files, backups). Use strong encryption standards (AES-256 or similar). Maintain encryption keys securely.
Access Controls: Limit access to data based on role. Employees access only information needed to perform job. Use strong passwords (12+ characters, complexity requirements). Implement multi-factor authentication. Disable access immediately when employee terminates.
Physical Security: Store paper documents in locked office. Restrict access to locked file cabinets. Shred sensitive documents when destroyed. Do not leave documents unattended. Use locked safe for valuables.
Digital Security: Use firewalls and intrusion detection systems. Maintain antivirus and anti-malware software. Update software and operating systems promptly. Monitor network for unauthorized access. Use VPN for remote access.
Password Management: Require strong passwords changed regularly (every 60-90 days). Do not reuse passwords. Do not share passwords. Do not write passwords on paper. Use password managers for secure storage.
Email Security: Warn employees of phishing emails. Do not click links in unsolicited emails. Verify email sender before clicking links. Report suspicious emails to IT. Use encryption for email containing sensitive information.
Data Minimization: Collect only information necessary. Delete information when no longer needed. Limit retention of sensitive data. Archive old files securely. Do not maintain more data than necessary.
Agent Responsibility: Use strong passwords. Protect devices from theft. Lock computers when unattended. Do not save passwords in browsers. Do not use public WiFi for sensitive transactions. Report security concerns to broker.
100. Wire Fraud Prevention and Closing Protection
Real estate closings targeted by wire fraud schemes. Preventive measures protect transaction.
Wire Fraud Scheme: Criminals compromise email accounts (buyer, agent, attorney). Criminals send fraudulent wire instructions to buyer before closing. Instructions direct buyer to wire down payment and closing costs to criminal's account. Buyer wires funds to wrong account. Funds stolen before fraud detected.
Prevention: Email Verification: Before requesting wire transfer, verify requesting party identity. Call buyer at known phone number (not number in email). Confirm buyer authorized wire transfer. Confirm wire instructions match expected account. Use separate communication channel to verify instructions.
Prevention: Attorney Role: Attorney should issue wire instructions directly to buyer, not through email if possible. Attorney provide verbal confirmation of instructions. Attorney use official letterhead. Attorney include contact information buyer can verify independently.
Prevention: Buyer Education: Inform buyer of wire fraud risks before closing. Instruct buyer to verify wire instructions by phone with attorney. Instruct buyer to use only official attorney communications. Instruct buyer not to wire funds based on email instructions alone.
Prevention: Transaction Verification: Agent confirms all transaction details with buyer and attorney before closing. Confirm down payment amount, closing costs, wire recipient account. Confirm wire deadline. Confirm attorney contact information.
Insurance: Title company provides fraud protection through title insurance policy. Homeowners insurance may cover wire fraud losses (verify coverage). Broker E&O insurance may provide coverage. Coverage limits typically $50,000-100,000.
If Fraud Occurs: Contact FBI immediately. Contact local law enforcement. Notify attorney and title company. Contact bank where wire sent. Attempt to recover funds (banks may reverse if fraud detected quickly). Document all communications and transaction details.
Agent Responsibility: Educate buyer on wire fraud risks. Encourage buyer to verify wire instructions by phone. Monitor for suspicious email communications. Report suspicious activities immediately. Maintain secure email practices. Do not bypass verification procedures.
XI. RECENT LEGAL CHANGES
101. NAR Settlement Agreement 2024: Overview and Broker Obligations
November 2024 NAR settlement agreement fundamentally changed real estate industry practices.
Settlement Background: NAR paid $418 million settlement to resolve antitrust lawsuit alleging unfair compensation practices. Settlement changed MLS rules, cooperation standards, and buyer broker compensation. Settlement effective November 2024.
Elimination of Buyer Broker Compensation from MLS: Buyer broker compensation no longer shown in MLS. Compensation negotiated between buyer and buyer broker outside MLS. Brokers set own compensation policies. Transparency reduced but flexibility increased.
Buyer Broker Agreement Requirement: Buyers must sign buyer broker agreement with buyer broker before showing properties. Agreement specifies compensation terms. Agreement binds buyer to compensate broker if purchase occurs. Compensation may be flat fee or percentage commission.
Abolition of Clear Cooperation Policy Mandate: MLS no longer mandate cooperation. Brokers have flexibility in cooperation decisions. Brokers define own cooperation policies. Some brokers limit cooperation to lower-cost alternatives. Policies must be transparent but flexible.
IDX and VOW Changes: IDX rules relaxed slightly post-settlement. Third-party websites display listings more freely. Rules still restrict mass download of data. Rules still require accurate display. Data use still limited to authorized purposes.
Commission Negotiation: Sellers and buyer brokers negotiate buyer broker compensation outside MLS. Negotiation occurs after offer accepted or before. Compensation not disclosed in MLS. Compensation written in buyer broker agreement or addendum to contract.
Broker Responsibility: Establish clear compensation policy. Require buyer broker agreements before showing properties. Disclose compensation policies to buyers and sellers. Implement new procedures for compensation negotiation. Train agents on new practices. Update all forms and procedures.
Agent Responsibility: Understand new compensation structures. Execute buyer broker agreements with all buyers. Negotiate compensation separately. Disclose compensation clearly. Understand impact on brokerage and personal income. Adapt to new practice standards.
102. New Buyer Representation Requirements and Buyer Broker Agreements
Post-NAR settlement, buyer broker agreements are critical to buyer representation.
Agreement Timing: Buyer broker agreement signed before broker shows properties to buyer. Brokers cannot show properties without signed agreement. Agreement establishes fiduciary relationship between buyer and broker. Agreement specifies compensation terms and buyer obligations.
Agreement Content: Agreement identifies buyer and buyer broker. Agreement specifies broker agency duties (honesty, disclosure, confidentiality). Agreement specifies compensation method (percentage, flat fee, transaction-based, hourly). Agreement specifies exclusive period (how long buyer bound to broker). Agreement includes termination clause (how buyer can end relationship).
Compensation Structure Options: Percentage commission (e.g., 2.5% of purchase price). Flat fee (e.g., $5,000-15,000 per transaction). Hourly fee (e.g., $150-400 per hour). Retainer (e.g., $1,000/month plus hourly). Transaction-based fee (fee upon closing regardless of sale price).
Exclusive vs Non-Exclusive: Exclusive agreements bind buyer to broker for specified period. Non-exclusive agreements allow buyer to work with multiple brokers. Most brokers require exclusive agreements (14-30 day period). Non-exclusive agreements less common.
Buyer Obligations: Pay agreed compensation if buyer purchases during agreement term. Work in good faith with broker. Disclose relevant information to broker. Respond to broker communications. Comply with agreement terms.
Agreement Termination: Agreement ends on specified date or when purchase completed. Buyer may terminate early if broker not performing. Broker may terminate if buyer not cooperating. Termination in writing with reason stated. Compensation obligation may continue for specified period after termination.
Agent Responsibility: Use standardized buyer broker agreement form. Complete all blanks accurately. Explain agreement to buyer. Obtain buyer signature before showing properties. Keep copy in transaction file. Ensure compensation terms clear and agreed.
103. Updated Commission Disclosure Rules and Transparency Requirements
Post-settlement, commission disclosure practices changed significantly.
Elimination of MLS Commission Display: Buyer broker compensation no longer shown in MLS. Sellers and listing brokers cannot advertise buyer broker commission to attract buyers. Buyers must negotiate compensation directly with buyer brokers.
Listing Side Commission: Listing broker compensation typically shown in MLS (standard practice continues). Listing side commission negotiated in listing agreement. Listing side commission typically 4-6% of sale price. Listing side commission split between listing agent and broker.
Buyer Side Commission Negotiation: After offer accepted, buyer broker commission negotiated between buyer and listing broker. Commission paid by buyer or splitting between buyer and seller (negotiated). Commission no longer standard amount (previously typically 2.5-3%). Compensation highly negotiable post-settlement.
Buyer Broker Agreement Disclosure: Buyer broker agreement clearly discloses compensation terms. Compensation method explained: percentage, flat fee, hourly, or other. Buyer understands who pays compensation. Buyer understands compensation amount if known.
Contract Disclosure: Purchase agreement may include buyer broker compensation terms. If buyer agrees to pay buyer broker, contract reflects that. If seller paying buyer broker, contract reflects that. Compensation must be disclosed in contract if agreed by buyer and seller.
Transparency Practice: Best practice disclose all compensation in writing. Both buying and selling sides transparent about compensation. Compensation disclosed to all parties. Disputes over compensation resolved in writing.
Agent Responsibility: Disclose compensation clearly in buyer broker agreement. Explain compensation to buyers. Negotiate compensation in good faith with listing brokers. Document all compensation agreements in writing. Ensure all parties understand compensation terms.
104. State Implementation of NAR Settlement Requirements
States implement NAR settlement requirements through state laws and MLS rule changes.
Florida Implementation: Florida MLS rules updated to comply with settlement. MLS removed buyer broker compensation. Buyer broker agreements required. MLS cooperation policies defined. DBPR monitors compliance. Violations reported to disciplinary board.
Massachusetts Implementation: Massachusetts MLS rules updated. Buyer broker compensation removed from MLS display. Buyer broker agreements required before showing. MLS cooperation policies defined by brokers. DPL monitors compliance with regulations.
Connecticut Implementation: Connecticut MLS rules revised. Buyer broker compensation no longer in MLS. Buyer broker agreements mandatory. DCP enforces new requirements. Violations reported to licensing board.
Rhode Island Implementation: Rhode Island MLS rules updated. Buyer broker compensation removed. Buyer broker agreements required. DBR monitors compliance. Violations reported to commission.
Broker Responsibilities: Update all MLS procedures. Communicate changes to agents. Implement buyer broker agreement requirements. Train agents on new procedures. Monitor compliance with state requirements. Report compliance to state if requested.
Agent Responsibility: Learn state-specific implementation requirements. Follow new MLS rules. Obtain buyer broker agreements timely. Comply with state regulations. Report violations to broker. Participate in compliance training.
105. Impact on Listing Practices and MLS Listings
NAR settlement significantly impacted how listings are marketed and managed.
Buyer Interest Changes: Without MLS compensation posted, some buyer brokers avoid working with certain properties. Buyers shop for brokers based on negotiated fees rather than property commission. Less buyer broker interest in lower-priced properties (lower potential fee). More buyer broker focus on higher-priced properties.
Listing Marketing: Listing brokers market properties to buyer brokers to attract showing interest. Listing brokers highlight property features and benefits (compensation not posted). Listing brokers may offer buyer broker compensation to attract interest. Compensation negotiated property-by-property rather than standardized.
Showing Activity: Some properties receive fewer showings post-settlement. Properties with offered buyer broker compensation see more showings. Properties without compensation offers attract less buyer broker interest. Listing brokers adjust strategy to offer compensation when competing for showings.
Open Houses and Public Marketing: Open houses more important post-settlement to reach buyers directly. Public marketing (online, social media, advertising) emphasized to attract buyer attention. Listing brokers invest more in direct buyer marketing. Word-of-mouth and referrals become more valuable.
Pricing Impact: Some sellers report lower offers or fewer showings post-settlement. Sellers may need to offer buyer broker compensation to attract interest. Buyer broker compensation negotiated between buyer and listing broker. Some jurisdictions more affected than others by these changes.
Agent Responsibility: Counsel sellers on compensation strategy. Explain buyer broker agreement importance. Negotiate buyer broker compensation when appropriate. Market listings to attract both buyers and brokers. Monitor showing activity. Adapt strategy based on market response.
106. Impact on Buyer Consultations and Representation Strategy
NAR settlement changed buyer representation and consultation practices.
Buyer Broker Agreement Discussion: Buyer broker agreements discussed before showing properties. Brokers explain terms, compensation, and buyer obligations. Buyers understand commitment required. Buyers have opportunity to ask questions. Brokers obtain signed agreement before proceeding.
Compensation Transparency: Buyers informed upfront of how buyer broker compensation works. Buyers understand compensation paid (percentage, flat fee, or other). Buyers understand who pays compensation. Buyers understand compensation obligation if purchase completed. Buyers compare costs between brokers.
Buyer Broker Selection: Buyers more actively shop for buyer brokers based on fees. Buyers compare services offered by different brokers. Buyers negotiate compensation terms. Buyers less bound to brokers without compelling reason. Buyer broker retention more challenging post-settlement.
Buyer Education: Brokers educate buyers on real estate process. Buyers taught about inspection, appraisal, financing, closing. Buyers informed of legal rights and responsibilities. Buyers educated on market conditions. Education becomes more critical to retain buyers.
Compensation Negotiation: After buyer finds property, buyer negotiates compensation with listing broker. Buyer may offer compensation to listing broker. Compensation negotiated per transaction. Compensation terms become deal points. Offers less attractive if buyer compensation not included.
Agent Responsibility: Have compensation discussion early with buyers. Explain buyer representation value. Negotiate fees competitively. Provide superior service to justify fees. Educate buyers on real estate process. Maintain buyer relationships despite fee negotiations.
XII. COMPLIANCE CHECKLISTS
107. New Listing Checklist
Complete this checklist when accepting new listing.
Listing Agreement: ☐ Discuss listing terms with seller. ☐ Complete listing agreement (price, term, commission, marketing obligations, exclusions). ☐ Obtain seller signatures. ☐ Provide seller copy of agreement. ☐ Broker approve and sign. ☐ File signed agreement.
Property Information: ☐ Walk property thoroughly. ☐ Document bedrooms, bathrooms, square footage. ☐ Note all features (fireplace, pool, deck, garage, HVAC, roof condition). ☐ Identify any property defects or needed repairs. ☐ Photograph property exterior and interior. ☐ Obtain property tax information from assessor.
Property Disclosures: ☐ Provide property condition disclosure form to seller. ☐ Discuss seller's obligation to disclose known defects. ☐ Explain disclosure requirements by state. ☐ Obtain completed disclosure form from seller. ☐ Verify seller signature and date. ☐ File disclosure in transaction folder.
Title and Ownership: ☐ Obtain property deed. ☐ Verify seller is legal owner. ☐ Verify title issues (if any) disclosed. ☐ Recommend title insurance commitment review (if required). ☐ Address any title defects.
Environmental Issues: ☐ Determine if property in flood zone (check FEMA maps). ☐ Determine if property in wetlands or environmental area. ☐ Check for lead paint (if pre-1978). ☐ Identify any environmental concerns. ☐ Disclose environmental issues to buyer.
MLS Listing: ☐ Create MLS listing. ☐ Enter accurate property information. ☐ Upload professional photos. ☐ Write compelling property description. ☐ Set showing instructions. ☐ Set any showing restrictions. ☐ Submit listing for approval. ☐ Follow up to confirm listing active.
Marketing Plan: ☐ Discuss marketing strategy with seller. ☐ Schedule open house (if appropriate). ☐ Create listing marketing materials. ☐ Post on company website and social media. ☐ Distribute to buyers and agents. ☐ Plan yard signs and directional signs. ☐ Create listing email and flyer.
Legal Compliance: ☐ Verify property license requirements met. ☐ Verify broker licensed and active. ☐ Verify agent licensed and active. ☐ Comply with fair housing rules. ☐ Disclose agency relationship. ☐ Maintain transaction file with all documents.
108. Buyer Representation Checklist
Complete this checklist when representing buyer.
Buyer Broker Agreement: ☐ Discuss buyer broker agreement terms. ☐ Explain compensation method and amount. ☐ Explain buyer obligations. ☐ Explain broker agency duties. ☐ Obtain buyer signatures. ☐ Provide buyer copy. ☐ File signed agreement in transaction folder.
Buyer Qualification: ☐ Discuss buyer financial situation. ☐ Recommend pre-qualification with lender. ☐ Obtain pre-qualification letter. ☐ Verify buyer financing available. ☐ Discuss down payment and closing costs. ☐ Identify any financing contingencies.
Buyer Needs Assessment: ☐ Identify property type buyer wants (single-family, condo, townhome, commercial). ☐ Identify location preferences. ☐ Discuss property features desired. ☐ Establish price range. ☐ Identify special requirements (school district, commute, accessibility).
Property Search and Showing: ☐ Search MLS for properties matching buyer criteria. ☐ Provide buyer property list. ☐ Discuss property details with buyer. ☐ Schedule property showings. ☐ Attend showings with buyer. ☐ Document buyer preferences. ☐ Narrow search to promising properties.
Market Analysis: ☐ Provide comparable sales analysis. ☐ Discuss market conditions. ☐ Analyze property values. ☐ Educate buyer on pricing trends. ☐ Recommend offer strategy based on market. ☐ Discuss contingencies appropriate for market.
Due Diligence Coordination: ☐ Recommend home inspection. ☐ Arrange inspection if buyer agrees. ☐ Review inspection report with buyer. ☐ Discuss repair issues identified. ☐ Recommend additional specialists (radon, lead, structural) if needed. ☐ Coordinate appraisal. ☐ Coordinate lender requirements.
Legal Compliance: ☐ Ensure buyer understands state property laws. ☐ Recommend attorney consultation if appropriate. ☐ Disclose agency relationship. ☐ Maintain confidentiality of buyer information. ☐ Avoid conflicts of interest. ☐ Maintain transaction file.
109. Advertising and Marketing Compliance Checklist
Review all advertising before publishing to ensure compliance.
Content Accuracy: ☐ Verify all property features listed are accurate. ☐ Verify square footage from reliable source. ☐ Verify bedroom and bathroom count. ☐ Verify property updates and renovations. ☐ Remove any exaggerations or false claims. ☐ Disclose material defects or issues. ☐ Use only accurate property photos.
Fair Housing Compliance: ☐ Review all language for discriminatory terms. ☐ Remove any age descriptors (empty nesters, young professionals, etc.). ☐ Remove any family status terms (great for families, etc.). ☐ Remove ethnic or nationality references. ☐ Remove disability-related language. ☐ Review photos for diversity and inclusivity. ☐ Use non-discriminatory terminology.
REALTOR Trademark: ☐ Use REALTOR trademark correctly. ☐ Use REALTOR as adjective only. ☐ Capitalize REALTOR. ☐ Identify as NAR member. ☐ Use official REALTOR logo if authorized. ☐ Do not use REALTOR in company name if not NAR member.
Brokerage Identification: ☐ Include broker name in all advertising. ☐ Include broker phone number. ☐ Include broker office address (or website). ☐ Include agent name and license number (if required by state). ☐ Use consistent broker branding across all materials.
Contact Information: ☐ Provide accurate phone number. ☐ Provide valid email address. ☐ Provide office address and hours. ☐ Monitor contact methods for responses. ☐ Respond to inquiries timely.
Social Media: ☐ Identify self as agent in profile. ☐ Include license and brokerage information. ☐ Mark sponsored content clearly. ☐ Use truthful statements. ☐ Obtain client permission before using testimonials or photos. ☐ Disclose any incentives for endorsements.
110. Transaction File Checklist and Document Organization
Maintain organized transaction file with all required documents.
Transaction File Structure: ☐ Create folder for each transaction (digital or physical). ☐ Label folder with property address and transaction date. ☐ Organize documents by category. ☐ Maintain chronological order within categories. ☐ Use index or table of contents. ☐ Archive files for 7 years minimum.
Listing Documents: ☐ Signed listing agreement. ☐ Property condition disclosure (if applicable). ☐ Lead paint disclosure (if applicable). ☐ Photos and property description. ☐ MLS listing copy. ☐ Comparative market analysis.
Purchase Agreement and Negotiation: ☐ Signed purchase agreement. ☐ All offers (rejected and accepted). ☐ Counteroffers and amendments. ☐ Contingency documents (inspection, appraisal, financing). ☐ Disclosure acknowledgments. ☐ Addenda or special terms.
Inspection and Environmental Documents: ☐ Home inspection report. ☐ Lead inspection report (if applicable). ☐ Radon inspection report (if applicable). ☐ Pest inspection report (if applicable). ☐ Environmental assessment (if applicable). ☐ Repair estimates or final reports.
Financing Documents: ☐ Loan pre-qualification letter. ☐ Loan approval letter. ☐ Clear to close letter. ☐ Appraisal report (if available). ☐ Underwriting conditions met. ☐ Loan commitment.
Closing Documents: ☐ Closing statement. ☐ Deed. ☐ Promissory note and mortgage (if applicable). ☐ Title insurance policy. ☐ Settlement statement (HUD-1 or Closing Disclosure). ☐ Recorded deed copy. ☐ Correspondence from closing attorney.
Compliance Documents: ☐ Agency disclosure acknowledgments. ☐ Fair housing compliance documentation. ☐ Trust account documentation (if brokerage holds funds). ☐ Cooperation and compensation agreements. ☐ Commission documentation. ☐ Dispute resolution documents (if applicable).
111. Annual Renewal and Continuing Education Checklist
Complete these tasks annually to maintain licenses and compliance.
License Renewal: ☐ Verify license expiration date. ☐ Complete required continuing education. ☐ Pay license renewal fee. ☐ Renew licenses before expiration. ☐ Maintain proof of renewal. ☐ Update broker on license status.
Continuing Education Requirements: ☐ Identify state education requirements by license type. ☐ Identify core hours required (typically 3-6 hours). ☐ Identify elective hours required (typically 3-6 hours). ☐ Complete education from approved providers. ☐ Obtain certificate of completion. ☐ File proof of education with state.
Professional Development: ☐ Pursue professional designations (GRI, CRS, ABR, CIPS, etc.). ☐ Maintain designation requirements. ☐ Complete designation continuing education. ☐ Maintain REALTOR membership (NAR dues). ☐ Maintain local association membership. ☐ Attend professional development seminars or webinars.
Compliance Training: ☐ Complete fair housing training (if required). ☐ Complete ethics training (if required). ☐ Complete NAR Code of Ethics training. ☐ Complete broker compliance training. ☐ Review compliance policies annually. ☐ Acknowledge understanding of policies.
Industry Updates: ☐ Stay current with legal changes (federal, state, local). ☐ Review NAR settlement implementation updates. ☐ Review MLS rule changes. ☐ Review state licensing law changes. ☐ Attend industry conferences or webinars. ☐ Subscribe to compliance newsletters.
Practice Maintenance: ☐ Review transaction file organization. ☐ Review document management systems. ☐ Verify data security procedures. ☐ Verify trust account compliance (if applicable). ☐ Verify conflict of interest policies. ☐ Maintain professional liability insurance.
112. Annual Compliance Audit Self-Assessment
Conduct annual self-audit to verify compliance with all requirements.
Legal and Regulatory Compliance: ☐ Verify all licenses current and active. ☐ Verify continuing education completed and current. ☐ Verify broker licensing and affiliation current. ☐ Verify NAR membership current (if applicable). ☐ Verify trust account procedures compliant. ☐ Verify trust account reconciled monthly. ☐ Verify no disciplinary actions pending.
Fair Housing Compliance: ☐ Review advertising for discriminatory language. ☐ Verify no steering conduct. ☐ Verify equal treatment of all prospects. ☐ Document fair housing training completion. ☐ Review and remedy any fair housing complaints. ☐ Verify inclusive marketing practices.
Transaction File Compliance: ☐ Verify transaction files organized properly. ☐ Verify all required documents in file. ☐ Verify documents signed and dated. ☐ Verify disclosures provided timely. ☐ Verify no missing documents. ☐ Verify files retained for 7 years.
Data Security and Privacy: ☐ Verify client data protected from unauthorized access. ☐ Verify passwords strong and confidential. ☐ Verify encryption used for sensitive data. ☐ Verify no data breaches occurred. ☐ Verify GLBA and state privacy laws complied. ☐ Verify client information not shared inappropriately.
Advertising Compliance: ☐ Review all current advertising for accuracy. ☐ Verify REALTOR trademark used correctly. ☐ Verify broker identification in all ads. ☐ Verify social media compliant. ☐ Verify no false claims or exaggerations. ☐ Verify testimonials authentic.
MLS Compliance: ☐ Verify all listings accurate and current. ☐ Verify listing status updated timely. ☐ Verify cooperation policies communicated. ☐ Verify no MLS violations or fines. ☐ Verify data accuracy maintained. ☐ Verify photos and descriptions accurate.
Ethical and Professional Standards: ☐ Verify NAR Code of Ethics compliance. ☐ Verify no unresolved conflicts of interest. ☐ Verify confidentiality maintained. ☐ Verify honest dealings with clients and prospects. ☐ Verify professional conduct standards met. ☐ Verify no ethical complaints filed.
Correction Plan: ☐ Document any deficiencies found. ☐ Create plan to remedy deficiencies. ☐ Assign responsibility and timeline. ☐ Follow up to verify corrections. ☐ Document corrections completed. ☐ Adjust practices to prevent recurrence.
XIII. CONTACT AND RESOURCES
113. Winslow Homes LLC Contact Information
Broker Contact:
Broker: Broker@WinslowHomesLLC.com
Phone: 386-690-5858
Office: Winslow Homes LLC
Mortgage Services (Novus Home Mortgage):
Mortgage Phone: 386-690-5858
Loan Application: www.winslowloan.com
Mortgage Lending Services available across all 50 states (NMLS Licensed)
For compliance questions: Contact broker directly for clarification on policy or legal requirements. Broker provides guidance on implementing compliance procedures.
114. State Real Estate Regulatory Agencies
Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR)
Website: www.dbpr.state.fl.us
License Verification: myfloridalicense.com
Complaints: File complaint at DBPR website
Phone: 850-488-3236
Massachusetts Department of Professional Licensure (DPL)
Website: www.mass.gov/dpl
License Verification: lic.sec.state.ma.us
Complaints: File complaint at DPL website
Phone: 617-701-3800
Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection (DCP)
Website: portal.ct.gov/DCP
License Verification: elicense.ct.gov
Complaints: File complaint at DCP website
Phone: 860-713-6050
Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation (DBR)
Website: dbr.ri.gov
License Verification: lara.ri.gov
Complaints: File complaint at DBR website
Phone: 401-222-1272
115. National Association of REALTORS (NAR) and Legal Resources
NAR Headquarters and Resources
Website: www.nar.realtor
NAR Code of Ethics: www.nar.realtor/code-of-ethics
Professional Standards: www.nar.realtor/professional-standards
Forms and Contracts: www.nar.realtor/forms-and-contracts
Legal Hotline: Available to REALTOR members (contact local NAR association)
Local Association of REALTORS:
Contact local board for meetings, training, arbitration, and grievance procedures.
Legal Counsel:
Consult with real estate attorney for legal questions not covered by broker guidance. Attorney reviews contracts, advises on regulatory compliance, represents in disputes.
Compliance and Ethics Training:
NAR and local associations provide ethics training. Training covers Code of Ethics, fair housing, disclosure requirements, trust account procedures. Completion required for renewal in some states.
116. Additional Compliance References and Industry Standards
Fair Housing Information:
HUD Fair Housing Hotline: 1-800-669-9777
Fair Housing Website: www.hud.gov/fairhousing
Fair Housing Act: 42 U.S.C. Section 3601 et seq.
State fair housing agencies available (see Section 114)
Anti-Money Laundering and Financial Crime:
FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network): www.fincen.gov
SAR Reporting: www.fincen.gov/suspicious-activity-reports
Real Estate AML Guidance: www.fincen.gov/real-estate-guidance
FBI Fraud and Financial Crime: www.fbi.gov/investigate/financial-crime
Data Privacy and Security:
FTC Safeguards Rule: www.ftc.gov/safeguards
CAN-SPAM Act: www.ftc.gov/canspam
Do Not Call Registry: www.donotcall.gov
State Data Breach Laws: Check state attorney general website
Form and Document Resources:
NAR Standard Forms: www.nar.realtor/forms-and-contracts
State-Specific Forms: Check state licensing board website
MLS-Specific Forms: Check local MLS website
Broker-Approved Forms: Maintain by brokerage
Professional Development:
NAR Education: www.nar.realtor/education
Professional Designations: GRI, CRS, ABR, CIPS (www.nar.realtor)
State Continuing Education: Providers listed by state licensing boards
Real Estate Specific Courses: Brokerages and professional companies offer training
Industry News and Updates:
NAR News: www.nar.realtor/newsroom
REALTOR Magazine: www.realtormag.realtor
State Real Estate Commission Updates: Check state licensing board website
MLS Rule Updates: Check local MLS website
Industry Legal Updates: Subscriptions available from real estate law firms
For questions about legal compliance, contact Winslow Homes LLC. Broker: Broker@WinslowHomesLLC.com or 386-690-5858
This guide provides general information. Consult with attorney or compliance professional for specific legal questions.
Massachusetts MLS Property Info Network (MLSPIN) - The property listing data and information set forth herein were provided to MLS Property Information Network, Inc. from third party sources, including sellers, lessors and public records, and were compiled by MLS Property Information Network, Inc. The property listing data and information are for the personal, non commercial use of consumers having a good faith interest in purchasing or leasing listed properties of the type displayed to them and
Copyright © MFRMLS.com All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither listing broker(s) or information provider(s) shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, misprints and shall be held totally harmless. Listing(s) information is provided for consumers personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing. Information on this site was last updated Last updated on April 12, 2026 10:18 AM UTC The listing information on this page last changed on Last updated on April 12, 2026 10:18 AM UTCd. The data relating to real estate for sale on this website comes in part from the Internet Data Exchange program of MFR MLS.
All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither listing broker(s) or information provider(s) shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, misprints and shall be held totally harmless. Listing(s) information is provided for consumers personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing.
Updated on April 12, 2026 10:18 AM UTC
Information is deemed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed. © 2026 MLS. Last Updated April 12, 2026 9:14 AM UTC The information on this sheet has been made available by the MLS and may not be the listing of the provider. Listing data provided by the Daytona Beach Area Association of REALTORS® Internet Data Exchange (IDX) program. Data is believed to be accurate but not warranted.
New Smyrna Beach Board of REALTORS® All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither listing broker(s) or information provider(s) shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, misprints and shall be held totally harmless. Listing(s) information is provided for consumer's personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested









