Now that the long-awaited practice changes are in place, Your Illinois REALTORS® is here to provide you updates and answer new questions that you have about the required written buyer broker agreements with your clients and the removal of offers of compensation from the MLS went into effect Aug. 17. Visit this page regularly and check our social media pages for the latest guidance to help you navigate regulatory changes and master negotiation tactics.
Illinois REALTORS® New and Revised Forms
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Illinois REALTORS® Resources
To help provide consumers accurate information about the practice changes, your Illinois REALTORS® published an open letter in newspapers throughout the state explaining the new rules. If you would like to share or personalize this advertisement, the following instructions outline the process to download and share in your company newsletter, on your social media channels and to send to your clients.
NAR Consumer Guides
What’s Changing
1. Written Buyer Brokerage Agreements to be Mandatory
Many of our members have already been using written buyer brokerage agreements and it is a practice that Illinois REALTORS® has long recommended. Buyer brokerage agreements lay out exactly what you, as a broker, will provide to your buyer clients including services provided and how compensation will be determined and paid.
Beginning Aug. 17, the NAR settlement will require MLS participants who are working with a buyer to enter into a written buyer brokerage agreement.
Illinois REALTORS® was even more proactive during the spring legislative session and, working with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, successfully pushed for the Illinois Real Estate License Act to be amended to require written brokerage agreements with all buyers and sellers. Governor J.B. Pritzker is expected to sign the legislation that would go into effect Jan. 1, 2025.
2. Offers of Compensation Will Be Outside the MLS
A key element of the NAR settlement changes how buyer brokers are paid and eliminates and prohibits any offers of compensation in the MLS between listing brokers or sellers to buyer brokers or other buyer representatives. MLSs will eliminate broker compensation fields and broker compensation information within the MLS, according to NAR.
Compensation conversations and negotiations will still be able to occur off the MLS. Buyers could pay buyer brokers directly. Other options include the seller still choosing to pay the buyer’s agent or agreeing to pay concessions to cover some of the buyer’s costs in the transaction. Note: If the buyer broker has negotiated a compensation rate with their client in the buyer brokerage agreement, the NAR settlement prohibits the buyer broker from receiving more than was initially agreed to.
Additional Updates from Your Illinois REALTORS® Legal Team
NAR Settlement Details
The National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) on March 15 announced an agreement that would end litigation of claims brought on behalf of home sellers related to broker commissions. Initially, the agreement would have resolved claims against NAR, over one million NAR members, all state/territorial and local REALTOR® associations, all association-owned MLSs, and all brokerages with an NAR member as principal that had a residential transaction volume in 2022 of $2 billion or below. Since then, most of the entities who would have been excluded from the settlement have also made proposed agreements with the plaintiffs’ side and will now be part of the settlement that is still subject to final approval by the court later in 2024.
What are the key terms of the agreement?
Release of liability
The agreement would release NAR, over one million NAR members, all state/territorial and local REALTOR® associations, all association- owned MLSs, and all brokerages with an NAR member as principal whose residential transaction volume in 2022 was $2 billion or below from liability for the types of claims brought in these cases on behalf of home sellers related to broker commissions.
- NAR fought to include all members in the release and was able to ensure more than one million members are included.
- Despite NAR’s efforts, agents affiliated with HomeServices of America and its related companies—the last corporate defendant still litigating the Sitzer-Burnett case—are not released under the settlement, nor are employees of the remaining corporate defendants named in the cases covered by this settlement.
The agreement provides a mechanism for nearly all brokerage entities that had a residential transaction volume in 2022 that exceeded $2 billion and MLSs not wholly owned by REALTOR® associations to obtain releases efficiently if they choose to use it.
Compensation offers moved off the MLS
NAR has agreed to put in place a new rule prohibiting offers of compensation on the MLS. Offers of compensation could continue to be an option consumers can pursue off-MLS through negotiation and consultation with real estate professionals. And sellers can offer buyer concessions on an MLS (for example—concessions for buyer closing costs). This change will go into effect in mid-July 2024.
Written agreements for MLS participants acting for buyers
While NAR has been advocating for the use of written agreements for years, in this settlement we have agreed to require MLS participants working with buyers to enter into written representation agreements with their buyers. This change will go into effect in mid-July 2024.
Settlement payment
NAR would pay $418 million over approximately four years. This is a substantial sum, and it will be incumbent on NAR to use our remaining resources in the most effective way possible to continue delivering on our core mission. NAR’s membership dues for 2024 will not change because of this payment.
NAR continues to deny any wrongdoing
NAR has long maintained — and we continue to believe — that cooperative compensation and NAR’s current policies are good things that benefit buyers and sellers. They promote access to property ownership, particularly for lower- and middle-income buyers who can have a difficult-enough time saving for a down payment. With this settlement, NAR is confident it and its members can still achieve all those goals.