Compliance 12 min read

AI Disclosure Rules for Real Estate: What Every Agent Must Know

RW
Ryan Wanner

AI Systems Instructor • Real Estate Technologist

California made it a criminal offense to use AI-altered listing photos without disclosure. NAR says using AI to draft contracts is unauthorized practice of law. HUD confirms Fair Housing applies to every AI tool you use. This is the state-by-state guide to not losing your license.

Using AI Without Disclosure Can Cost You Your License

Three separate authorities have drawn lines in the sand. Cross any one of them and you're facing discipline, fines, or criminal charges.

California AB 723 made it a criminal misdemeanor to use digitally altered images in property advertising without disclosure. Effective January 1, 2026. Not a suggestion. Not a best practice. A criminal offense under the California Real Estate Law.

NAR's AI guidelines explicitly warn against using AI to draft contracts, modify legal documents, or generate content that constitutes unauthorized practice of law. Agents aren't lawyers. AI doesn't change that.

HUD's 2024 guidance confirms the Fair Housing Act applies fully to AI systems. If your AI ad targeting tool excludes protected classes, you're liable. If your AI tenant screening tool produces disparate impact, you're liable. Even if the AI made the decision, not you. Even if a third-party vendor built the tool.

This isn't theoretical risk. The National Fair Housing Alliance reported 32,321 complaints in 2024, with 54.6% involving disability discrimination. AI tools that screen tenants, target ads, or generate listing descriptions are now under the same microscope as every other business practice in real estate.

The OODA Loop applies here: Observe the legal landscape. Orient around the specific rules that affect your practice. Decide on a disclosure protocol. Act before enforcement catches up with you. Because enforcement is coming.

California AB 723 — The Landmark Law

AB 723 is the first state law specifically targeting AI-altered images in real estate. Every other state is watching it. If you list anywhere, understand this law. Your state is likely next.

What It Requires

Any real estate broker, salesperson, or person acting on their behalf who uses a digitally altered image in property advertising must:

1. Include a clear disclosure that the image has been digitally altered.
2. Provide access to the original, unaltered image(s) — either included directly in the listing or accessible via a publicly available link, URL, or QR code.

That's it. Two requirements. Disclose and show the original. Not complicated. But the penalty for ignoring them is severe.

Who It Applies To

Licensed real estate brokers and salespersons. Developers. Marketing staff acting on behalf of licensees. Third-party photographers and staging companies working under contract with a licensee. If you're in the chain of creating or posting altered listing photos, this law applies to you.

What Counts as "Digitally Altered"

Bornstein Law's analysis breaks this down clearly:

Requires disclosure: Adding or removing furniture, fixtures, appliances, or flooring. Changing paint colors, landscaping, or building exteriors. Altering views, neighboring structures, or street features visible from the property. Virtual staging. AI-generated items that don't physically exist in the property. Decluttering tools that remove real objects. Renovation preview tools that show hypothetical remodels.

Exempt (no disclosure needed): Lighting or exposure corrections. Color or white-balance adjustments. Image sharpening or straightening. Cropping and resizing. HDR blending of bracketed exposures. Basically: making the photo look better without changing what's in the room.

The Penalty

AB 723 adds Section 10140.8 to the California Business and Professions Code. It sits inside the California Real Estate Law, where willful violations are prosecutable as a misdemeanor. Beyond criminal exposure, violations create grounds for license discipline by the Department of Real Estate (DRE). That means suspension or revocation.

Put differently: a $5 virtual staging image without a disclosure line could trigger criminal charges and a license review. The risk-reward math doesn't work in any scenario.

What CRMLS and MLSs Are Doing

California Regional MLS (CRMLS) and other MLSs are updating listing input forms to include disclosure fields for digitally altered images. Expect a checkbox or text field on your listing input form asking whether photos have been digitally altered. Some MLSs are adding automated flags for images detected as AI-generated. If your MLS hasn't updated yet, don't wait. Add the disclosure manually.

State-by-State AI Disclosure Requirements

StateLaw / RegulationEffectiveRE-Specific?Key Requirement
CaliforniaAB 723 (digitally altered images)Jan 1, 2026YesDisclose altered listing images + provide originals. Misdemeanor for willful violation.
CaliforniaAB 2655 (AI watermarking)Jan 1, 2026No (general)Large AI platforms must watermark synthetic content. Affects image generation tools agents use.
New YorkAI avatar disclosure bills2025-2026PartialDisclose AI-generated human figures in advertising. Affects listing videos using AI avatars.
ColoradoSB 24-205 (AI Consumer Protection)Jun 30, 2026No (general)High-risk AI systems must disclose AI use to consumers. Covers AI used in housing decisions.
UtahSB 0226 (AI Amendments)May 7, 2025PartialRegulated occupations must prominently disclose AI use. RE agents are regulated occupations.
TexasTRAIGA (Responsible AI Governance)Jan 1, 2026No (general)Prohibits certain AI uses with biometric data. Impacts AI tenant screening and facial recognition.
IllinoisAI content labeling bills2025-2026No (general)AI-generated content in advertising must be clearly labeled. Applies to listing marketing.
All States (Federal)Fair Housing Act + HUD AI GuidanceActive nowYesAI in tenant screening, ad targeting, and housing decisions must comply with FHA. Providers liable for third-party AI.

Tracked via Orrick's U.S. AI Law Tracker. Laws evolving rapidly — verify current status before relying on this table.

NAR Guidelines — The 3 Traps to Avoid

NAR's official AI guidance identifies three specific traps that agents fall into. Each one can end your career.

Trap 1: AI-Generated Contracts

Do NOT use ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool to draft, modify, or customize real estate contracts. Period.

NAR's guidance is explicit: generating or substantially modifying contract language constitutes unauthorized practice of law unless you are a licensed attorney. It doesn't matter how good the AI output looks. It doesn't matter if you "just used it for the first draft." If a dispute arises and opposing counsel discovers the contract was AI-generated by an unlicensed person, you're facing UPL charges on top of whatever the dispute is about.

Use AI for everything around the contract: listing descriptions, marketing emails, client communication, market analysis. But the contract itself? That's your attorney's job. Or use the state-approved forms your association provides. Don't get creative.

Trap 2: AI Ad Targeting That Excludes Protected Classes

Facebook's AI ad targeting settled a $115 million lawsuit with HUD for excluding protected classes from housing ads. Meta changed its system. But the liability didn't disappear. It shifted to you.

If you use any AI-powered advertising platform to target housing ads, you are responsible for ensuring that targeting does not exclude people based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, familial status, or disability. That includes lookalike audiences. That includes AI-optimized targeting that "learns" to exclude demographics based on engagement patterns.

HUD's guidance is clear: housing providers are liable for Fair Housing violations even when using third-party AI tools. The vendor built the tool. But you chose to use it. HUD's 2024 statement leaves zero ambiguity.

Practical safeguard: use broad geographic targeting for housing ads. Avoid interest-based or demographic-based exclusions. Review your ad platform's AI targeting settings quarterly. Document your compliance process.

Trap 3: Not Disclosing AI-Generated Content

WAV Group published disclosure templates that have become the industry standard. Their recommended language: "This content was generated with the help of AI and reviewed for accuracy."

The disclosure applies to more than just images. If AI wrote your listing description, disclose it. If AI generated your market report, disclose it. If an AI chatbot is responding to buyer inquiries on your website, make sure visitors know they're talking to a bot, not a person.

Utah's SB 0226 already requires this for regulated occupations — and real estate agents are regulated occupations. Colorado's law (effective June 2026) will require it for high-risk AI interactions, which includes housing decisions.

Don't wait for your state to mandate it. Add disclosure now. It costs nothing, builds trust, and eliminates future compliance risk. That's the 5 Essentials principle: systematize the simple stuff so you never have to think about it again.

Your AI Disclosure Checklist

Use this checklist for every listing. Print it. Tape it to your monitor. Make it part of your listing launch workflow.

Virtual Staging Disclosure

Every virtually staged image includes a "Virtually Staged" watermark. Original, unaltered photos are included in the listing or accessible via link/QR code. Listing description states which photos are staged.

Listing Description Disclosure

If AI wrote or assisted with the listing description, add: "This description was prepared with the assistance of AI and reviewed for accuracy by [Your Name]." Review every AI-generated description for factual accuracy before publishing.

Email and Marketing Disclosure

AI-generated emails, newsletters, and marketing materials include: "This content was generated with the help of AI." WAV Group's template language works. Put it in your email footer and forget about it.

Contract Protection

NEVER use AI to draft, modify, or customize contracts. Use state-approved forms only. AI can help you understand a clause. AI cannot write the clause. Document this policy in your team handbook.

Ad Targeting Compliance

Housing ads use broad geographic targeting only. No demographic or interest-based exclusions. Review AI-optimized targeting settings quarterly. Document your targeting parameters for every campaign. If your platform uses "smart" audience optimization, verify it doesn't exclude protected classes.

Chatbot and AI Assistant Disclosure

Website chatbots clearly identify themselves as AI, not human agents. Lead capture forms powered by AI include disclosure. Any automated response system that could be mistaken for a human conversation is labeled.

Photo and Media Audit

Review all listing photos for AI alterations before publishing. Maintain an archive of original photos for every listing. Consider tools like FairSentry (99.97% accuracy) for automated Fair Housing compliance monitoring across your listings and marketing materials.

Sources

  1. California AB 723 — Digitally altered images disclosure law
  2. NAR — Artificial intelligence in real estate guidelines
  3. HUD — Fair Housing Act applies to AI in housing decisions
  4. WAV Group — AI labeling laws and disclosure templates
  5. Bornstein Law — AB 723 practical analysis for RE professionals
  6. FairSentry — 99.97% accuracy Fair Housing compliance monitoring
  7. Orrick — U.S. state-by-state AI law tracker
  8. National Fair Housing Alliance — 32,321 complaints in 2024
  9. Lewis Brisbois — California AI disclosure law analysis for real estate
  10. Drata — State and federal AI laws 2026 overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to disclose AI-generated listing descriptions?
In California (AB 723), the law specifically targets digitally altered images, not text. However, NAR recommends disclosing all AI-generated content, and Utah's SB 0226 requires regulated professionals (including RE agents) to disclose AI use in consumer interactions. Best practice: add a brief disclosure to any AI-assisted content. It costs nothing and prevents future liability as more states pass disclosure laws.
Can I use AI for tenant screening without violating Fair Housing?
Yes, but with strict guardrails. HUD's 2024 guidance confirms the Fair Housing Act applies to AI-driven tenant screening. The tool cannot use protected class data (race, religion, familial status, disability, etc.) as screening criteria, even indirectly. You are liable for discriminatory outcomes even if you didn't build the AI. Vet your screening vendor's methodology, ask for a Fair Housing compliance audit, and document everything.
What happens if I violate California AB 723?
AB 723 is part of the California Real Estate Law (Business and Professions Code Section 10140.8). Willful violations are prosecutable as a misdemeanor, which means criminal charges. Separately, the Department of Real Estate can pursue license discipline including suspension or revocation. The fix is simple: disclose and provide originals. The risk of not doing it is your career.
Are other states likely to pass laws like AB 723?
Yes. Orrick's AI law tracker shows 15+ states with pending AI disclosure legislation as of early 2026. Colorado's AI consumer protection law takes effect June 2026. Utah already requires AI disclosure for regulated occupations. Illinois and New York have active AI labeling bills. The direction is clear: more disclosure requirements, not fewer. Agents who adopt disclosure practices now won't have to scramble when their state catches up.
Does the Fair Housing Act apply to AI chatbots on my website?
Yes. If your chatbot interacts with potential buyers or renters, it must comply with Fair Housing. That means: no discriminatory language in responses, no steering based on protected classes, and no screening questions that create disparate impact. HUD's guidance covers all AI systems used in housing transactions. Train your chatbot with Fair Housing guardrails and audit its responses regularly.

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