HomeServices previously agreed to pay $250 million to settle various commission suits. A final approval hearing is set for November.
Source: Inman News
HomeServices commission settlement gets prelim approval
More from BrokerageMore posts in Brokerage »
- Redfin on 2026: Affordability improves, sales rise only slightly
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
- Listing leverage: How to win the game of securing sellers
More from commission lawsuitsMore posts in commission lawsuits »
More from commissionsMore posts in commissions »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- The anti-lawsuit way of presenting your fee: Now Streaming
- Why the NAR settlement has become a blessing, not a curse
- Commissions held up in Year 1. Would a seller’s shift upend them?
More from homeservicesMore posts in homeservices »
More from HomeServices of AmericaMore posts in HomeServices of America »
- Head of Instagram: You’re missing reach if you don’t do these 5 things
- Everything you need to know about social media in under 1,100 words
- 5 copy-and-paste direct-mail campaigns that will fuel your best year ever in 2026
- 5 magic phrases that help real estate agents close more deals
- Want AI to recommend you in online search? Do these 7 things
More from keller williamsMore posts in keller williams »
More from MLS & AssociationsMore posts in MLS & Associations »
- California Association of Realtors leans into referral fee transparency
- Ex-CEO charged with grand theft; local Realtor association left ‘all but broke’
- NAR’s new consumer profile shows agents how to thrive in 2026
- NAR NXT: The Download on last week’s trends, tensions, takeaways
- Dispatches from NAR NXT as real estate grapples with AI
More from moehrlMore posts in moehrl »
- Supreme Court just might give REX another shot at NAR, Zillow
- Lead counsel for Moehrl targets ‘deceptive practices’ in new real estate industry investigation
- NAR’s new law firm for antitrust suits charges up to $3K an hour
- Court grants final approval to NAR’s landmark settlement deal
- NAR’s settlement is up for final approval. Here’s why that matters
More from NARMore posts in NAR »
More from News BriefMore posts in News Brief »
More from re/maxMore posts in re/max »
- Through the bathroom door: What 3D tours reveal about buyers today
- Will Anywhere merger launch M&A arms race? It’s not yet clear: Intel
- 3 opportunities agents miss without a top global brand
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
- New LGBTQ+ Alliance president talks about ‘opportunity in the chaos’
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- This team is jumping on the private listing platform trend (EXCLUSIVE)
- Redfin on 2026: Affordability improves, sales rise only slightly
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
More from sitzerMore posts in sitzer »
- NAR’s Kevin Sears: We need to ‘show everybody that we as Realtors are pro-consumer’
- Real estate still adapting to new normal a year after new NAR rules
- More than 2.5M people have made commission settlement claims
- Real estate agent commissions are not falling off a cliff
- Howard Hanna demands judge’s recusal over political donations
More from sitzer/burnettMore posts in sitzer/burnett »
- Industry shocked as Realtors say no to referral-fee transparency
- With an eye on future lawsuits, Compass formally repudiates CCP in letter to NAR and MLSs
- This June, Inman is celebrating Today’s Buyer Agent
- NAR considers Code of Ethics changes regarding speech
- NAR’s new law firm for antitrust suits charges up to $3K an hour
More from stephen r. boughMore posts in stephen r. bough »
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
- Court gives 15 commission deals final approval in minutes-long hearings
- Berkshire Hathaway, Crye-Leike attempts to transfer case denied
- Hanna Holdings lawyers dispute judge’s recollection in recusal spat
- Crye-Leike wants Gibson antitrust suit transferred to its home turf
Be First to Comment