Disclosures of Agency and Conflicts of Interest
Imagine walking into a high-stakes legal negotiation where the attorney advising you is secretly on the payroll of the opposing side. The asymmetry of power would be devastating. In real estate, the stakes are just as high, often involving a consumer's life savings and largest financial asset. To prevent this profound imbalance, the law demands absolute transparency regarding who is working for whom. Agency disclosure laws require real estate licensees to inform consumers about the types of representation available in a transaction. This foundational rule ensures that every party understands exactly where a professional’s loyalties lie before a single piece of sensitive information is exchanged.
Before you can write a contract or negotiate a price, you must establish the rules of engagement. A real estate licensee must clearly disclose which party the licensee represents in a given transaction. Are you advocating for the seller? The buyer? Both? Neither?
A common misconception among nervous new agents—and hesitant consumers—is that handing over an agency disclosure form is asking the client to "sign their life away." It is vital to understand, and to explain to your clients, exactly what this document is:
- An agency disclosure document is not a binding contract. It does not create an employment agreement (like a listing agreement or a buyer representation agreement does).
- An agency disclosure document does not obligate the consumer to pay a fee to the real estate broker.
Think of it as the "Miranda Warning" of real estate. You are simply stating a fact: "I am required by law to explain how agency works in this state, and to declare that in this scenario, I represent the seller."

If you fail to provide this clarity, you are not just making a procedural error. Failure to disclose agency relationships violates a real estate agent's fiduciary duty of disclosure. You are withholding material information about the fundamental nature of the transaction.
When exactly do you have to hand over this disclosure? The national standard is that real estate licensees must provide a written agency disclosure document at the first substantive contact with a consumer.
But what makes contact "substantive"? The line is drawn exactly where casual banter shifts into actionable intelligence.
First substantive contact occurs when:
- A real estate licensee and a consumer discuss specific property needs.
- A real estate licensee and a consumer discuss the consumer's confidential financial information.
Let’s look at a practical scenario. You are hosting an open house. A visitor walks in, admires the vaulted ceilings, and asks, "What are the property taxes on this home?" You answer, "They are $4,200 a year."
Have you crossed the threshold? No. Casual conversation at an open house does not constitute first substantive contact. Furthermore, providing strictly factual information about property features does not constitute first substantive contact.
However, if that same visitor leans in and says, "We love this place. We're pre-approved, and our lease is up next month. How low do you think the seller will go?" — Stop. You have just hit first substantive contact. They are discussing specific needs and confidential financial data.
Because you represent the seller, you owe your loyalty to the seller. If you do not stop the buyer and disclose your agency status, they will assume you are their confidant. A real estate licensee must disclose the licensee's agency relationship to any unrepresented customer in a transaction. The primary purpose of this disclosure is protective: the disclosure of agency to an unrepresented customer warns the customer against sharing confidential information with the licensee, because you would be obligated to share that confidential information with the opposing party's agent (or in this case, directly with your seller client).
Real estate transactions are dynamic. The role you play on Monday might change by Thursday. When this happens, a real estate agent must immediately present an updated agency disclosure form upon any change in the agency relationship during a transaction.
The most common shift is into dual agency. Dual agency occurs when a real estate brokerage represents both the buyer and the seller in the same transaction.
Consider this scenario: You have been representing a buyer for three months. You are their dedicated buyer's agent. One afternoon, you show them a new listing—but this property is listed by you (or another agent in your specific brokerage). Suddenly, a buyer making an offer on a property listed by the buyer's own agent triggers a dual agency situation.
Because the brokerage cannot give undivided loyalty to two opposing sides simultaneously, the law requires a hard pause. Lawful dual agency requires the informed written consent of both the buyer and the seller. Both parties must understand that they are giving up their right to undivided loyalty and full confidential advocacy before the transaction can proceed.
At the core of agency law is loyalty. A conflict of interest arises when a real estate licensee's personal interests could compromise the licensee's undivided loyalty to a client.

If there is any shadow of a conflict, sunlight is the only cure. You must actively disclose to your principal any relationship that might make them question whose side you are really on. Specifically:
| Relationship Type | Disclosure Requirement |
|---|---|
| Personal | A real estate licensee must disclose any personal relationship with the opposing party in a transaction. (e.g., The buyer is your best friend). |
| Family | A real estate licensee must disclose the licensee's representation of an immediate family member in a real estate transaction. (e.g., You are listing your mother's house). |
| Business | A real estate licensee must disclose any business relationship with the opposing party in a transaction. (e.g., The buyer is a contractor who frequently hires you). |
The Affiliated Business Arrangement (ABA)
Conflicts also arise in the ecosystem of services surrounding a transaction—title companies, mortgage brokers, and home inspectors. An Affiliated Business Arrangement disclosure is required when a real estate licensee refers a client to a service provider in which the licensee holds an ownership interest. You cannot secretly funnel your client to your own title company to double-dip on profits; the client must know you have a financial stake in that recommendation.
The most severe conflict of interest occurs when the agent enters the transaction not just as a representative, but as a principal. Self-dealing occurs when a real estate agent acts as both a representative for a client and a principal in the same transaction.
Imagine you are listing a property for a client. The client is desperate to sell and prices it below market value. You realize it's a steal and decide to buy it yourself. A real estate agent purchasing a client's listing creates a direct conflict of interest. Your duty as an agent is to get the seller the highest price; your goal as a buyer is to get the lowest price.
Because of this inherent contradiction:
- A real estate licensee must disclose any ownership interest the licensee holds in a firm proposing to buy a client's property. (You cannot hide behind an LLC).
- A real estate licensee cannot legally collect a commission and act as an undisclosed principal in the same real estate transaction.
Buying and Selling for Your Own Account
Even if you are not dealing with your own clients, your status as an insider gives you an immense advantage over the general public. You know the market, the contracts, and the negotiation tactics better than an average consumer. Therefore, the law mandates strict transparency when you enter the market for yourself.
- A real estate licensee must provide written disclosure of the licensee's active real estate license status when buying property for the licensee's own account.
- A real estate licensee must provide written disclosure of the licensee's active real estate license status when selling the licensee's own property.
Timing here is critical. The disclosure of a real estate licensee's personal interest in a transaction must be made in writing prior to signing a purchase agreement. You cannot slip it into the closing documents at the 11th hour.
Advertising Your Own Real Estate
This transparency extends to how you market properties. If you are selling your own home, a licensee must provide written disclosure of the licensee's status as a real estate professional in all personal real estate advertising. (Usually noted as "Owner/Agent" in the ad).
Furthermore, the public has a right to know when they are calling a regulated professional rather than a private citizen. A blind ad is an advertisement placed by a real estate licensee that fails to disclose the name of the licensee's brokerage firm. Because this obscures the agent's professional status and regulatory accountability, real estate licensees are strictly prohibited from publishing blind ads.
By mastering these disclosures—understanding not just the when and how, but the why—you protect the consumer, you protect your license, and you uphold the integrity of the entire real estate marketplace.