Real Estate Services Directory: Purpose and Scope

The National Real Estate Services Authority directory catalogs licensed professionals, regulated firms, and qualified service providers operating across the United States real estate sector. This page describes the organizational logic behind the directory, the geographic boundaries of its coverage, the criteria governing entry inclusion, and how professionals and researchers can navigate the Real Estate Services Listings effectively. The real estate services sector spans more than a dozen distinct professional categories — from brokerage and property management to title services and appraisal — each governed by separate licensing frameworks that vary across all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

How entries are determined

Entry selection follows a structured review process grounded in publicly verifiable criteria. The directory does not accept self-nomination as a standalone qualifying factor. Determination proceeds through 4 primary evaluative dimensions:

  1. License or registration status — The entity or professional must hold an active license, certification, or registration with a recognized state real estate commission, a federal agency, or an accredited industry body. State real estate commissions operate under authority granted by individual state licensing statutes; in most jurisdictions these statutes require licensure for brokerage, property management, and appraisal activities. Unlicensed practitioners are excluded from all regulated-category listings.

  2. Sector classification — Entries are assigned to a primary service category using North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes. Real estate services fall primarily within NAICS Sector 53 (Real Estate and Rental and Leasing), with subsectors covering lessors of real estate (NAICS 5311), offices of real estate agents and brokers (NAICS 5312), and activities related to real estate including appraisal and property management (NAICS 5313). This standardized taxonomy enables consistent cross-sector comparison across all 50 states.

  3. Geographic service area — Coverage boundaries are documented at the state, multi-state regional, or national level. Entries that cannot demonstrate a defined and verifiable service territory are excluded.

  4. Source verifiability — All professional credentials, entity names, and jurisdictional qualifications cited within an entry must trace to a named public record — a state licensing database, the HUD approved housing counselor search, a federal registry, or an accredited body roster such as those maintained by the Appraisal Qualifications Board (AQB) under the Appraiser Qualifications Criteria.

The distinction between a listed entry and an excluded entry is not editorial preference. It is determined entirely by whether the 4 dimensions above can be satisfied through named public documentation.

Geographic coverage

The directory covers real estate service providers operating within all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Coverage is organized at 3 geographic tiers:

Real estate licensing is not federalized — there is no single national real estate license. This means a provider's geographic eligibility for directory listing depends on verifying active licensure in each state where services are rendered. The Association of Real Estate License Law Officials (ARELLO) maintains a database of active licensees that serves as one primary verification source for state-level entries.

Providers operating exclusively in tribal land jurisdictions or U.S. territories (Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands) are assessed separately under applicable territorial regulatory frameworks.

How to use this resource

The How to Use This Real Estate Services Resource page provides structured navigation guidance. At the directory level, the organizational logic follows two primary axes: service category and geographic jurisdiction.

Service categories reflect the functional role of the provider:

Researchers cross-referencing multiple categories — for example, distinguishing a licensed appraiser from a licensed broker — should note that these are separate credentialing tracks with separate regulatory bodies. A broker license does not authorize appraisal services in any U.S. jurisdiction.

Standards for inclusion

Inclusion in the Real Estate Services Directory is not based on search ranking, paid placement, review volume, or editorial recommendation. The standards are regulatory in character.

An entry meets the threshold for inclusion when all of the following are satisfied:

Entries are subject to periodic reverification. A provider that held valid credentials at initial listing may be removed if subsequent review identifies a lapsed license, an active disciplinary proceeding, or a change in service territory that places the provider outside the directory's documented scope.

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