More than 1 in 4 agents say their brokerage has changed its policy on buyer agency agreements, and fallout from commission suits has already taken a toll, according to Inman Intel Index results.
Source: Inman News
Tomorrow’s problem? Not for these Sitzer-spooked brokerages: Triple-I
More from AgentMore posts in Agent »
- 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 broker-ownerMore posts in broker-owner »
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 Brokerage leaderMore posts in Brokerage leader »
More from buyer agency agreementMore posts in buyer agency agreement »
- 3 under-the-radar trends from October’s Intel Index survey
- Commissions held up in Year 1. Would a seller’s shift upend them?
- How the ‘bro climate’ is failing new real estate agents and their clients
- 7 lessons every real estate agent needs to be a lifelong learner
- How to turn these 7 buyer objections into trust indicators
More from Commission LawsuitMore posts in Commission Lawsuit »
- Real estate still adapting to new normal a year after new NAR rules
- Berkshire Hathaway, Crye-Leike attempts to transfer case denied
- Hanna Holdings agrees to settle commission suit after court battle
- Holly Parker sues Douglas Elliman over $1.5M clawback dispute
- Stephen Bough, commission lawsuit judge, refuses to step aside
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 Inman IntelMore posts in Inman Intel »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- 3 under-the-radar trends from October’s Intel Index survey
- Will Anywhere merger launch M&A arms race? It’s not yet clear: Intel
- Despite unease, Compass poised to retain most Anywhere agents
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
More from Inman Intel IndexMore posts in Inman Intel Index »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- The fallout from NAR’s big reversal: Take the Intel Index survey today
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- The path for Compass-Anywhere: Take the Intel Index survey today
- Inside the stiff opposition to Compass’ private-listing crusade
More from lawsuitMore posts in lawsuit »
- Commissions held up in Year 1. Would a seller’s shift upend them?
- Zillow bashes CoStar in request to transfer lawsuit
- Keller Williams released from telemarketing lawsuit after plaintiff withdraws case
- 6 tips for avoiding lawsuits, legal fees and court in real estate
- NAR downplays former employee’s amended retaliation complaint
More from real estate agentMore posts in real estate agent »
- Can agents use AI to help with contracts and disclosures?
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- Why I’m still grateful to be a real estate professional
- The right calendar is an easy button for your listing process
- NAR’s new consumer profile shows agents how to thrive in 2026
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 surveyMore posts in survey »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- The fallout from NAR’s big reversal: Take the Intel Index survey today
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- The path for Compass-Anywhere: Take the Intel Index survey today
- Hopeful but wary, agents report slippage in listing pipelines: Intel
More from Triple-IMore posts in Triple-I »
Be First to Comment