āSteeringā buyers to or from a particular neighborhood is a practice most often associated with the history of racial discrimination in real estate. The National Association of RealtorsĀ® (NAR) condemns the illegal practice and urges its members to āsteerā away from it. Recently, though, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) weighed in on what constitutes steering.Ā
In an April 24 letter to NAR signed by Assistant Secretary Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity Craig Trainor, HUD states that the sharing of neighborhood crime statistics is not a violation of racial discrimination laws under the Fair Housing Act. The letter cites a 2024 episode of the āDrive with NARā podcast that told agents āgiving your opinion on the safety of certain areas can lead to fair housing violations,ā as well as a 2021 move by Realtor.comĀ® and Redfin to remove crime data from their portals.Ā
The letter does not only offer new guidance, it criticizes the practice of not giving information about a neighborhoodās crime statistics under concern about racial discrimination.Ā
āRealtorsĀ® and listing services undermine fair housing when they refuse to provide prospective homebuyers or tenants with information about the safety of neighborhoods or the quality of local schools,ā the letter reads, arguing on the basis that āfair housingā is also defined as āsafeā and ādecentā housing.Ā
Any such withholding of information is also a violation of an agentās fiduciary duty to their client that necessitates the āfree flow of nonracial information,ā the letter argues. It specifically affirms that real estate agents are allowed to discuss information about a neighborhoodās crime or schools with a consumer.Ā
āIf the (Fair Housing Act) made it illegal for real estate agents to discuss schools or crime in a neighborhood, grave First Amendment concerns would arise,ā the letter claims.Ā
As the Trump administration has deemphasized fair housing enforcement and eliminated or altered other guidance on the law, what does this letter mean for agents and brokers navigating these conversations with clients?Ā
āWe appreciate the ongoing dialogue and guidance from the administration on this important issue,ā said NAR in response to an inquiry from RISMedia. āAs the leading voice for real estate professionals, the National Association of REALTORSĀ® brings deep expertise in fair housing and how it is applied in practice every day.ā
āWe are carefully reviewing the letter and its implications for our members and the consumers they serve,ā the statement continued. āWe look forward to continued engagement with the administration and other stakeholders to ensure clear guidance that supports both compliance and the ability of REALTORSĀ® to effectively serve clients in every ZIP Code across the country.ā
Letter of the law
During HUD Secretary Scott Turnerās Senate confirmation hearing in January 2025, Senator Jim Banks (R-IN) asked Turner if he supported a 2016 Obama administration rule claiming āit is unlawful discrimination for RealtorsĀ® and landlords to discuss a neighborhoodās crime rate with prospective renters and buyers.āĀ
Turner made it clear he opposed the rule, saying āIf Iām buying a home, or if Iām renting a home, I want to know about the crime rate. (…) I think full transparency and accountability is key. You make the decision if you want to live here or not, but to hide crime from a potential buyer or a potential renter is wrong.ā This sentiment echoes throughout the HUD letter.Ā
Trainor further claims in the letter that NAR has āadded to this confusionā by discouraging association members from sharing neighborhood crime information, even on the premise that sharing such information could lead to āaccidental steering.āĀ
The letter cites a 2023 article from NAR intended to inform agents on how to handle questions about a neighborhoodās school district while avoiding āimplicit bias.ā The articleās conclusions, such as directing a client to a schoolās district website for their answer, is described as āmisguided adviceā in the letter.
The letter takes a critical stance of ādisparate impactā theory, or the premise that seemingly neutral actions (e.g., sharing information about a neighborhoodās crime statistics) can have the effect of reinforcing discrimination. Under this theory, discrimination is measured by result rather than intent, which the letter describes as āthreaten(ing) civil rights liability without any showing of differential treatment or discriminatory intent.āĀ
The letter further claims that racial steering requires discriminatory intent to qualify as steering, citing the Supreme Courtās definition of steering as ādirecting prospective homebuyers interested in equivalent properties to different areas according to their race.ā
ā(HUD) strongly urges (the) industry to revisit ethics training materials and reconsider public statements that stifle real estate agent speech related to nonracial neighborhood characteristics of vital importance to Americans deciding on where to live and raise their families,ā the letter concluded.Ā







