Real Estate Listings
Real estate listings form the foundational data layer of residential and commercial property markets across the United States, connecting buyers, sellers, tenants, and licensed professionals through structured, standardized records. This page explains how property listings are organized, what information each entry typically contains, how listings are distributed geographically, and how to interpret the data fields found in a standard entry. Understanding listing structure is essential for anyone navigating transactions governed by state licensing boards, the Multiple Listing Service, and federal disclosure frameworks.
How listings are organized
Property listings in the United States are organized through a hierarchical system anchored by the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) network. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) recognizes more than 500 regional MLS organizations, each operating under rules established by NAR's MLS Policy and, where applicable, state real estate commission regulations. Each MLS maintains a database of active, pending, and closed listings that participating brokers contribute to and draw from under cooperative compensation and data-sharing agreements. The framework governing this exchange is detailed under MLS rules and compliance.
Within the MLS framework, listings fall into distinct status categories:
- Active — The property is available and actively marketed.
- Active Under Contract (Contingent) — An offer has been accepted but contingencies remain unresolved.
- Pending — All contingencies are satisfied; closing is imminent.
- Closed — The transaction has completed and recorded.
- Withdrawn — The seller removed the listing before expiration.
- Expired — The listing agreement term ended without a sale.
These status designations are not uniform across all MLS systems. The Real Estate Standards Organization (RESO), which publishes the RESO Data Dictionary, works to standardize field names and status definitions across MLS platforms nationwide, with the RESO Data Dictionary 2.0 adopted as the baseline standard by NAR-affiliated MLSs.
Beyond MLS databases, listings also appear on public-facing aggregator platforms such as Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin, which pull data via data feeds licensed from regional MLS organizations. These syndicated listings may carry a time lag of 15 minutes to 24 hours relative to the originating MLS record.
What each listing covers
A standard MLS listing entry contains structured data fields governed by the RESO Data Dictionary, which defines over 2,000 discrete property data elements. Core fields present in nearly every residential listing include:
- Property address and geocoordinates — Standardized to USPS addressing formats.
- Legal description — Parcel identifier (APN or tax ID) tied to county recorder records.
- Listing price — Set under the terms of the listing agreement type executed between the seller and the listing broker.
- Property type and subtype — Residential single-family, condominium, multi-family, land, or commercial classifications.
- Square footage — Measured gross living area, sometimes verified by appraisal standards published by the Appraisal Institute or ANSI Z765-2021, the American National Standard for measuring floor area in detached residential structures.
- Bedroom and bathroom counts — Defined by local MLS rules, with distinctions between full baths (toilet, sink, tub or shower) and half baths (toilet and sink only).
- Days on Market (DOM) — Calculated from the original list date to the current date or contract date.
- Seller disclosures — References to mandatory disclosure documents required under state law; see real estate disclosure requirements for a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction breakdown.
- Commission structure — Historically displayed as a buyer-agent compensation offer; post-NAR settlement rule changes effective August 2024 altered how this field is displayed in MLS systems per the NAR settlement agreement.
Commercial listings carry additional fields including cap rate, net operating income (NOI), lease terms, and zoning classification, covered in greater depth under commercial real estate services overview.
Geographic distribution
Listing data in the United States is not maintained in a single national database. Instead, it is distributed across the 500-plus regional MLS organizations, each covering a defined geographic footprint that may span a single county, a metropolitan statistical area (MSA), or, in some cases, an entire state. States such as Maine, Montana, and Wyoming operate statewide MLS systems, while major metro areas like Los Angeles, Chicago, and the New York tri-state region contain multiple overlapping MLS jurisdictions.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) have each published guidance on data accuracy and consumer access to listing information, particularly as it intersects with RESPA requirements governing referral arrangements between listing services and affiliated settlement providers.
Rural areas outside MLS coverage zones may rely on broker-to-broker co-op networks, auction platforms — detailed under real estate auction services — or for-sale-by-owner channels where no MLS record is created. Approximately 10% of US home sales annually occur outside MLS systems, based on NAR research published in the 2023 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers.
How to read an entry
Reading a listing entry accurately requires distinguishing between agent-facing MLS data and consumer-facing syndicated displays, which may omit fields such as showing instructions, lockbox codes, and commission terms.
Key interpretation points:
- List price versus assessed value — List price is a market decision by the seller and agent; assessed value is a government figure used for property tax calculation and bears no fixed relationship to market price.
- DOM versus CDOM — Days on Market resets if a listing is withdrawn and relisted; Cumulative Days on Market (CDOM) tracks total exposure across all listing periods for a given property.
- Listing agent versus selling agent — In MLS terminology, the "listing agent" represents the seller under an exclusive right to sell agreement or other listing contract; the "selling agent" (also called buyer's agent) represents the purchaser, typically under a buyer representation agreement.
- Photo and virtual tour data — Images are governed by MLS copyright and agent branding rules; standards for professional photography and virtual presentations are addressed under real estate photography and virtual tour services.
- Zoning and use codes — Always cross-referenced against the applicable municipal or county zoning ordinance, not solely the listing field, since MLS zoning entries are agent-entered and not verified by the MLS itself.