Zillow’s New Listing Ban Sparks Federal Lawsuit, and Raises Big Questions for Sellers, Buyers, and Agents

A new lawsuit filed this week by Compass against Zillow has stirred up serious debate in the real estate industry, and while it may sound like a clash of two corporate giants, the real impact hits much closer to home, literally, for consumers, sellers, and real estate agents across the country, including right here in St. Louis.

In the 60-page complaint filed in federal court, Compass accuses Zillow of using its massive power and reach in the home search world to enforce what it calls an “anti-competitive ban” that hurts competition and restricts how agents can market listings for their seller clients. At the heart of this lawsuit is Zillow’s newly adopted “Listing Access Standards” policy (referred to in the complaint as the “Zillow Ban”), which goes into full enforcement this month. Under the policy, any property that is marketed publicly off Zillow’s platform for more than one day. like in a broker’s private network or pre-listing phase, will be banned from appearing on Zillow entirely.

Compass claims this policy is designed to crush its “3-Phased Marketing Strategy,” which includes pre-listing exposure through private Compass channels before going public on the MLS. According to Compass, 94% of homes that used this strategy in 2024 still ended up on Zillow during the final phase of marketing. So, Compass says, this isn’t about hiding listings from buyers, it’s about giving sellers the option to test price points, build interest, and protect their privacy and time before going live.

But here’s where this lawsuit goes from being a legal fight between billion-dollar companies to something every homeowner and agent should be thinking about. Because in the end, what’s really at stake is whether real estate continues to be personal and local…or becomes just another impersonal, number-driven corporate transaction.

As someone who’s been in this business since 1979…back when local, independent brokerages and personal relationships drove nearly every home sale. I’ve watched the industry shift dramatically. What’s happening now, though, is more than just a shift. It’s a push by massive, venture-backed tech companies to control where listings go, how buyers find them, and who gets paid. And they’re all claiming it’s “in the best interest of the consumer.”

But let’s be honest. These approaches can’t both be right. One company wants every home listed on their national platform as fast as possible. The other believes in giving sellers the chance to test and refine before going public. These are completely opposite approaches, and both can’t be in the consumer’s best interest. But they can definitely be in the best interest of the companies pushing them.

There’s nothing wrong with a business acting in its own interest. We do that, too. But in real estate, we have something else layered on top: a fiduciary obligation. Our duty is to put the interests of our clients first. And that’s what we do in our company, along with many other brokers and agents across St. Louis and beyond. Whether an agent is listing a home for a seller or working with a buyer to find the right property, it should always come down to what’s best for the client—not what’s best for a platform or a profit-sharing model.

I’m not writing this as an “anti-Zillow” or “anti-Compass” piece. I’m writing it as someone who’s passionate about keeping real estate human. We’re not just dealing with assets, we’re helping people with what is often the biggest, most emotional decision of their lives. The beauty of this business has always been in the personal connection, the deep understanding of local markets, and the relationship between client and agent. That’s what corporate models, no matter how sophisticated the technology, can’t replace.

If this lawsuit accomplishes anything, I hope it at least reignites a conversation around what real estate should be. It should be client-first. Agent-supported. And driven by value, not volume.

Time will tell how this plays out in court. But regardless of the outcome, I know where we stand. And if you’re a homeowner, buyer, or agent who still believes in local knowledge, personal service, and fiduciary duty above all else, then you’re not alone.


Compass vs. Zillow Lawsuit

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