Tennessee-based MLS Realtracs has replaced its traditional MLS participation agreement with a new Brokerage Services Agreement that explicitly affirms brokers own their listings and the associated data, according to an April 14, 2026 company blog post by president and CEO Stuart White.
In the post, White said years of evolving rules, licensing structures and layered agreements left the industry in a “gray area” over who owns listing data, with some MLSs effectively treating listing content as an MLS asset or relying on vague language such as “for MLS purposes” to justify broad use of broker-created content.
Under the new agreement, Realtracs states that the listing broker owns the listing content and the data that comes with it, positioning the MLS as a steward and activator of data rather than an owner. The MLS said the agreement is intended to give brokers and agents a clearer foundation to enforce rights around copyright infringement and unauthorized use, according to the announcement.
Realtracs also said it is tightening rules around redistribution. Listing data can only be moved in ways that serve the brokerage’s economic interests or operational efficiency.
“If it doesn’t serve the broker, it doesn’t happen,” White wrote in the blog post.
White framed the change as a structural shift rather than a cosmetic rewording of contracts. The move follows a broader internal restructuring at Realtracs designed to align the organization around “serving brokers first” and to accelerate decision-making on policy and product issues.
Realtracs said its Brokerage Services Agreement is ultimately about rebuilding trust with brokers, who it describes as being “squeezed on all sides” and in need of greater control over how their listing assets are used in the marketplace.
This article was generated using HousingWire Automation and reviewed by a HousingWire editor before publication. The system helps convert company announcements and industry data into HousingWire-style news coverage.

