Real Estate Fees and Practices That Cost You Money. Get Compensated.
5 active settlements · Up to $2,000 available 5 No-Proof-Required
Real estate class action settlements cover excessive commissions, hidden fees, deceptive agent practices, and antitrust violations by real estate companies and platforms.
5 open real estate settlements as of May 6, 2026. The highest payout is $2,000 from the Leasing Expenses Co., NLS Equipment Finance settlement. The next filing deadline is Jun 2, 2026.
Real estate class action settlements compensate home buyers, sellers, and renters who were overcharged or misled by real estate agencies, mortgage lenders, title companies, and MLS platforms. Landmark cases have challenged commission structures that inflated costs for sellers, undisclosed steering practices that directed buyers toward higher-commission properties, junk fees added at closing, and data practices that violated consumer privacy.
Eligibility for real estate settlements is typically based on the dates of your real estate transaction and the name of the brokerage, platform, or lender involved. Closing documents, HUD-1 settlement statements, and purchase agreements serve as supporting evidence, but many settlements can be filed with just your closing date and property address. Settlement payouts in real estate cases can be substantial because they are often proportional to the transaction size or commissions paid.
Browse all open real estate class action settlements below. If you bought or sold a home, refinanced a mortgage, or rented through a major platform during the last several years, check whether any open settlements apply to your transaction. Use our eligibility quiz to determine your potential recovery in under 60 seconds.
Leasing Expenses Co., NLS Equipment Finance Settlement
Leasing Expenses Co., NLS Equipment Finance
How Real Estate Settlements Work
Four steps from eligibility check to payment
Find the real estate company
Browse settlements involving real estate agencies, MLS platforms, mortgage lenders, and title companies. Recent landmark cases cover major national brokerages.
Confirm your transaction dates
Real estate settlements typically cover home buyers or sellers who used the defendant company during a specific date range. Check whether your transaction falls within the covered period.
Prepare your documentation
You'll likely need your closing date, property address, and the name of your real estate agent or brokerage. Settlement documents or HUD-1 forms can serve as supporting evidence.
Receive your compensation
Real estate settlements can result in significant payouts depending on your transaction size and the fees at issue. Some settlements provide refunds as a percentage of the commission you paid.
No paperwork. Done in 60 seconds.
Related Guides & Articles
How Much Do Class Action Settlements Actually Pay? (Real Numbers, 2026)
The honest answer: it depends. But here are the real numbers from hundreds of settlements so you know what to actually expect.
Read article →How to Tell If a Class Action Settlement Is Real or a Scam (2026 Guide)
Settlement scams are rising. This 2026 guide covers every red flag, legitimate settlement signs, and a 5-step verification method so you never fall for a fake settlement email.
Read article →How to Tell If a Class Action Settlement Notice Is Real (Not a Scam)
Class action settlement scams exist, and legitimate notices are easy to fake. Before you file anything or share personal information, use this checklist to verify a notice is real.
Read article →📋 First time filing a Real Estate claim?
Step-by-step guide — eligibility, documents, and how to maximize your payout.
Popular Real Estate Settlements
Highest-payout open settlements in this category right now.
Get alerts for new Real Estate settlements
New real estate class actions are added weekly — we'll email you before deadlines close. Free, no spam. 5 active right now.
👥 63+ people tracking settlements · Unsubscribe anytime
Browse Real Estate Settlements by State
Find real estate class action settlements open to residents in every state.
Real Estate Class Action Settlements — FAQ
What is a Real Estate class action settlement?
A Real Estate class action settlement is a court-approved agreement where a company compensates affected individuals for real estate-related violations. If you were affected during the covered period, you may be entitled to a payment.
How do I know if I qualify for a Real Estate settlement?
Eligibility is determined by the specific settlement. Typical requirements include using the company's product or service during a certain date range, or being affected by the misconduct in question. Each settlement page shows the exact criteria.
How much money can I get from a Real Estate class action?
Payouts vary widely based on the total settlement fund and number of claimants. Real Estate settlements on SettlementRadar range from $5 to over $1,000 per person. File early — more claims means smaller individual payouts. Use our free payout calculator for a personalized estimate on any specific real estate settlement.
Do I need a lawyer to file a Real Estate settlement claim?
No. You can file directly with the settlement administrator for free. See our step-by-step guide to filing Real Estate claims or use SettlementRadar's $12.99 assisted filing service — we handle everything, no lawyers needed.
Do I qualify if I was the buyer rather than the seller?
It depends on the specific settlement. Many real estate commission settlements cover sellers who paid agent commissions. Some broader cases include buyers who were steered toward higher-commission properties. Check each settlement's eligibility criteria.
My real estate transaction was several years ago. Can I still file?
Yes. Real estate settlement class periods often extend back 4–7 years. As long as your transaction falls within the covered period stated in the settlement, you can file.
What is the NAR settlement and do I qualify?
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reached a landmark $418 million settlement over commission practices. Home sellers who paid buyer-agent commissions through NAR-affiliated MLSs between 2014–2024 may qualify. Check the official settlement site for full eligibility details.
How do real estate settlements calculate payout amounts?
Most real estate settlements calculate payouts proportionally based on your transaction size or the commissions paid. Larger transactions generally result in larger individual payments.