Your real estate website operates under three overlapping compliance frameworks, and understanding which rules come from where prevents costly mistakes.
National Association of Realtors (NAR) sets baseline IDX policy through its Internet Data Exchange rules. These require that you display accurate listing data, provide proper attribution to the listing broker, and include required disclaimers. NAR policy applies to all Realtor members regardless of local board.
Your local MLS board interprets NAR policy and adds specific requirements. This is where most compliance complexity lives. One board might require 12-hour data refresh cycles while another allows 24 hours. Some boards mandate specific disclaimer language. Others prohibit certain display formats like property slideshows or virtual tours from non-approved vendors.
Google's indexing policies create the SEO dimension. Google doesn't care about your MLS compliance—but it absolutely cares about duplicate content, thin pages, and user experience signals that IDX implementations often trigger.
The challenge: optimizing for Google while staying within NAR and MLS boundaries. Many agents unknowingly violate MLS rules trying to improve SEO, or tank their rankings trying to stay compliant. Neither outcome is necessary.
Note: This content provides general guidance on IDX compliance. Rules vary significantly by MLS board and state. Always verify current requirements with your specific MLS and broker.