Broker and attorney Greg Hague writes that the Compass vs. Zillow lawsuit will end as the catalyst that democratizes real estate technology, empowers innovation and ultimately puts consumers back in control of how they buy and sell homes.

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Zillow’s 24-hour policy ignited the most consequential real estate lawsuit of our generation. It will have a bigger impact than Sitzer on how we do business. And be assured that the tech giants are circling like vultures.

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In my five decades as a real estate broker and attorney specializing in real estate, I’ve witnessed shifts that reshaped our industry in various ways. I cut my teeth in the 1970s representing my father and other prominent Cincinnati brokers, forging a settlement in a landmark civil rights case involving buyer steering, a case that fundamentally and positively changed how we approach fair housing. It was a wake-up call that the industry needed at that time.

But I’ve never seen anything quite like what unfolded with Compass filing an antitrust lawsuit against Zillow in a New York federal court. What we’re witnessing isn’t just a corporate dispute; it’s the opening shot in a war that will determine the future of how Americans buy and sell homes. Having analyzed real estate litigation for half a century, I can tell you this: Compass fired a legal missile that could blow Zillow’s monopoly to smithereens.

The shot heard ’round the real estate world

Compass, America’s largest residential brokerage by market share, pulled the trigger on what is legally considered the “nuclear option.” In a 67-page federal complaint filed in the Southern District of New York, Compass alleged that Zillow Group violated federal antitrust laws through “anticompetitive tactics” designed to protect its monopoly over online home listings.

But here’s what makes this case different from every other real estate lawsuit I’ve analyzed: It’s not about commissions, fair housing or traditional brokerage practices. This is about who controls the digital gateway through which nearly every American searches for their next home.

What triggered this legal earthquake? A policy change Zillow quietly implemented in April 2025, a policy positioned to be about equal access to all publicly marketed listings and fairness to buyers.

A 24-hour ultimatum broke the camel’s back

Picture this scenario: You’re working with sellers who want to test the waters before fully committing to putting their home on the market. Maybe they want to see if there’s buyer interest at their dream price, or perhaps they value their privacy and don’t want the entire neighborhood knowing their business immediately. For decades, this was not only possible but was common practice in real estate.

Then, the Clear Cooperation Policy (CCP) was implemented by our trade organization. The Clear Cooperation Policy requires MLS participants to submit listings to their MLS within one business day of marketing a property to the public. Since it was “our” trade organization, we accepted it.

But Zillow is a vendor. When NAR modified CCP to permit agents to delay sending their listings to MLS feeds that go to Zillow and other portals, and Compass’s Private Exclusives program gained attention and traction, Zillow dropped its 24-hour bombshell.

Zillow’s 24-hour policy is deceptively simple yet devastatingly effective: Any home that is publicly marketed for more than 24 hours before being posted to both Zillow and the local multiple listing service (MLS) will be permanently banned from ever appearing on Zillow’s platform. Not temporarily restricted. Not subject to review. Permanently banned.

To understand the magnitude of this move, you need to grasp Zillow’s stranglehold on home search. With an average of 227 million unique monthly users (reported by Zillow in Q1 2025), Zillow isn’t just a place buyers search for homes; it is the place. It has become the Google of real estate, the digital town square for homebuyers and sellers to first meet each other.

Compass CEO Robert Reffkin didn’t mince words: “No one company should have the power to ban agents or listings simply because they don’t follow that company’s business model.” But this lawsuit isn’t just about corporate philosophy; it’s about profits. Serious profits that could reshape how everyone in our industry conducts business.

This case could rewrite real estate law forever

Compass has weaponized the most powerful legal machinery available to take down monopolies. The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, the same law that broke up Standard Oil and AT&T, contains two nuclear weapons that Compass is now deploying against Zillow.

Section 1: The conspiracy charge

Section 1 of the Sherman Act outlaws “every contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade.” This isn’t just legal jargon; it’s the same provision that has toppled corporate giants for over a century. Compass alleges that Zillow’s policy isn’t just a unilateral business decision; it’s part of a coordinated effort with industry players to stifle competition. The lawsuit specifically names Redfin as a co-conspirator, claiming these platforms are working together to eliminate private listing networks.

Section 2: The monopolization bomb

Section 2 prohibits monopolization and attempts at monopolizing any aspect of interstate commerce. Compass argues that Zillow’s 24-hour rule represents textbook “exclusionary conduct,” effectively using market dominance not to compete on merit, but to eliminate competitors entirely.

The evidence appears compelling. Zillow’s policy specifically targets what Compass calls its competitive advantage: the ability to offer sellers “Private Exclusives” and extended “Coming Soon” periods. These services allow sellers to test pricing, gauge interest and maintain privacy.

Treble damages and the nuclear option

Here’s where this case transforms into a potential industry earthquake. Under federal antitrust law, and I’ve seen this play out in countless cases, successful plaintiffs don’t just recover their losses. They receive treble damages, meaning three times their actual harm, plus attorneys’ fees and costs.

So, what could Compass potentially recover? Consider its inability to deliver the three-phase marketing process promised to thousands of current sellers, future loss of listings by having to revamp its core listing program while training thousands of agents on a new presentation, and diminished ability to recruit agents because of a perceived black-eye to its industry image, and you’re likely looking at provable damages reaching $50-75 million.

Apply the treble damages multiplier, and suddenly Zillow faces a $150-$225 million judgment.

Zillow has the resources to defend itself and the money to pay a big judgment if it’s assessed. Courts have historically been generous in antitrust damages calculations, recognizing that monopolistic behavior often causes harm that’s difficult to quantify precisely.

But the damage to Zillow’s reputation could make a monetary damages award look tiny. This lawsuit will receive widespread consumer-focused press coverage. When America’s homebuyers learn that Zillow’s model is to sell them as leads, and homesellers learn that they are used as the bait, I don’t see a positive PR outcome for Zillow. And if this case isn’t settled and goes to trial, a jury will decide who wins. In my view, Compass’s moral positioning to a jury significantly outweighs Zillow’s.

Reading the legal tea leaves: Probability of victory

Compass has assembled a strong case. But the path to victory is fraught with legal landmines that could explode at any moment.

Compass’s winning arguments

  • Clear exclusionary conduct: Zillow’s policy explicitly punishes competitors for offering differentiated services
  • Undisputed market dominance: With an average of 227 million monthly users, Zillow’s monopoly position is virtually unassailable
  • Demonstrable consumer harm: The policy reduces seller choice and limits the growth of innovative marketing options
  • Smoking gun timing: The policy’s implementation coincided directly with the growth of Compass’s Private Exclusives program

Zillow’s likely defense strategy

  • Pro-competitive justification: Zillow will argue that the policy promotes market transparency and equal access for buyers
  • Industry alignment: The policy aligns with the National Association of Realtors’ Clear Cooperation Policy
  • No duty to deal: Companies generally aren’t required to provide platforms for competitors
  • Legitimate business rationale: Preventing market fragmentation serves broader consumer interests

My settlement prediction

This case will ultimately hinge on one crucial question: Is Zillow’s policy primarily designed to improve market transparency (pro-competitive) or to eliminate competitive threats (anti-competitive)? 

I predict Compass has the upper hand and Zillow will settle before trial, paying between $85-$140 million in damages, with Zillow agreeing to discontinue its 24-hour policy. I also see the public attention and scrutiny of industry practices stemming from this lawsuit resulting in the end of NAR’s Clear Cooperation Policy.

3 scenarios that could define our industry

Having watched our industry evolve through multiple disruption cycles, I see three distinct paths forward, each with profound implications for how you’ll practice real estate in the coming decade:

Scenario 1: Compass wins at trial (20% probability)

If Zillow doesn’t settle (it should) and Compass secures a decisive victory with a massive damages award, this will signal open season on dominant platforms. Expect a flood of new entrants offering innovative listing services, private networks and alternative search experiences. The MLS system could fracture into specialized platforms serving different market segments, similar to how the airline industry deregulated in the 1980s.

Scenario 2: Negotiated settlement (70% probability)

A negotiated settlement that eliminates Zillow’s policy will create significant opportunities for new players in the real estate marketing space. These platforms will leverage AI and novel approaches to offer yet unimagined choices. This will enable savvy agents to differentiate themselves and compete by recommending various platforms to their clients. This innovation will be propelled by the elimination of NAR’s Clear Cooperation Policy, which I predict to be a certainty.

Scenario 3: Zillow’s fortress holds (10% probability)

If Zillow successfully defends its policy, it will cement the platform’s dominance but also attract intense regulatory scrutiny. This scenario makes government intervention more likely and could trigger broader antitrust investigations into real estate technology, something I’ve witnessed happen repeatedly when monopolies become too brazen.

The revolution will be digitized

What we’re witnessing isn’t just a lawsuit; it’s the first domino falling in a restructuring of how Americans interact with real estate. The old model of a few dominant platforms controlling access to listings is already cracking under the pressure of innovation, consumer demands, and it will now topple in the wake of this lawsuit.

Having been a broker, real estate trainer and attorney since the 70s, and having advised agents and real estate firms through fair housing lawsuits, commission battles and technology disruptions, I can tell you this: change will be your only constant in the next few years. The question isn’t whether this transformation is coming; it’s whether you’ll capitalize on the wave or be swept away by it.

The Compass vs. Zillow lawsuit may have started as a dispute over a 24-hour policy, but it will end as the catalyst that democratizes real estate technology, empowers innovation, and ultimately puts consumers back in control of how they buy and sell homes.

Choose your side carefully because in my experience, those who resist, or even hesitate, during industry inflection points get left behind.

Greg Hague is the CEO of 72SOLD and has been a real estate broker and attorney specializing in real estate law since the 1970s. Connect with him on Instagram or LinkedIn.

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