summary
Introduced
10/02/2025
10/02/2025
In Committee
10/23/2025
10/23/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2025-2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill makes various changes to the law governing the practice of real estate, specifically with respect to transactions involving residential property with one to four dwelling units (residential property). Changes in the bill include the following: 1. Creates obligations for listing firms to share information, respond to inquiries, show property, and advertise property on Internet platforms for transactions involving residential property. The bill contains exceptions that allow an owner to a) withhold the owner[s property from public marketing or advertising identified by the owner and b) identify by name any real estate broker or salesperson (licensee), prospective buyer, or prospective tenant that the owner does not wish to work with or allow to view the property, provided that such restrictions comply with all applicable state and federal laws. The bill provides civil immunity to a licensee who, in good faith, acts to fulfill the duties under the bill for any disclosure or representation made in fulfilling those duties, unless the licensee knowingly makes a false, deceptive, or misleading representation. The bill also LRB-4836/1 MED&JPC:wlj&ajk 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 478 requires the Real Estate Examining Board to develop a brochure covering the benefits and impacts of publicly marketing property and the disclosures described above. 2. Requires, in a transaction involving residential property, that if a seller agrees to pay compensation to a firm that is not the listing firm for brokerage services provided to a buyer, the agreement a) be expressly stated in the fully executed offer to purchase or option to purchase and b) be signed by the buyer and the seller as part of the contract. The bill prohibits a firm that is not the listing firm from receiving compensation from a party to a transaction who is not the client of the firm unless the agreement to pay the compensation is documented in the executed offer to purchase or option to purchase. The bill also prohibits a listing contract from requiring or implying that a seller will pay compensation to a firm that is not the listing firm, as prohibited under the bill, unless that obligation is contingent upon its inclusion in the executed offer to purchase or option to purchase as described above. The bill requires a listing contract to include a statement as to whether the seller authorizes the listing firm to disclose if the seller is offering compensation to a firm other than the listing firm. 3. Prohibits a firm from accepting compensation of any kind from another firm in connection with brokerage services performed as part of a real estate transaction involving a residential property containing one to four dwelling units. The prohibition does not apply to compensation for a referral or as a finder[s fee. 4. Requires licensees, when developing advertising for property, to disclose if the advertising has been altered or modified using technology, including artificial intelligence, to add, remove, or change elements of the property that creates a false or misleading impression of the property. Current law prohibits licensees from accepting any fee or compensation without the prior written consent of all parties to a transaction. The bill provides that this does not prohibit the acceptance of a fee or compensation in the context of certain arrangements involving out-of-state brokers acting pursuant to cooperative agreements with in-state real estate firms. For further information see the state fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
AI Summary
This bill makes significant changes to real estate practice laws, focusing on residential properties with one to four dwelling units. The bill establishes new obligations for listing firms, including sharing property information, responding to inquiries, showing properties, and advertising on internet platforms within one business day of listing. Property owners can opt out of public marketing by completing a disclosure form, but they are warned about potential negative impacts on property exposure and sale price. The bill requires real estate licensees to disclose any technological alterations (such as AI-generated modifications) in property advertising that could create a false or misleading impression. It prohibits firms from accepting compensation from other firms for brokerage services in residential transactions, with exceptions for referral and finder's fees. The bill also mandates that any compensation agreements between sellers and non-listing firms must be explicitly stated and signed in the purchase offer, and listing contracts must clarify whether sellers authorize compensation disclosure to other firms. Additionally, the Real Estate Examining Board must develop a consumer brochure explaining the benefits and potential impacts of property marketing strategies. The bill provides civil immunity to licensees who act in good faith and allows electronic signatures for related documents, with an effective date of January 1, 2027.
Committee Categories
Agriculture and Natural Resources
Sponsors (12)
John Jagler (R)*,
Scott Allen (R),
Robert Brooks (R),
Barbara Dittrich (R),
Joy Goeben (R),
Rob Kreibich (R),
Scott Krug (R),
Dave Murphy (R),
Lori Palmeri (D),
William Penterman (R),
Jim Piwowarczyk (R),
Rob Summerfield (R),
Last Action
Available for scheduling (on 10/23/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/proposals/reg/sen/bill/sb478 |
| SB478 ROCP for Committee on Insurance, Housing, Rural Issues and Forestry On 10/23/2025 | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/related/records/senate/insurance_housing_rural_issues_and_forestry/1949618.pdf |
| Fiscal Note - SB478: Fiscal Estimate From DSPS | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/related/fe/sb478/sb478_dsps.pdf |
| BillText | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/document/proposaltext/2025/REG/SB478.pdf |
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