MRED Suspends Zillow Data Feed Over Listing Dispute

Midwest Real Estate Information (MRED) suspended its data feed to Zillow Group due to a dispute over listing access standards, specifically involving Compass's exclusives. MRED asserts homeowner control, while Zillow defends its policies and claims MRED sacrificed listings.
Midwest Real Estate Information (MRED) made good on risks to Zillow Group on Wednesday, and soon after 9 a.m. CT introduced it had suspended its data noting feed to the nation’s largest home search website.
MRED mounted Zillow’s recent steps as an act of defiance by a firm that, relatively because of its very own conceit, required “the right” to leave out select listings “it disfavors,” based upon the portal’s listing access standards.
MRED Halts Zillow Data Feed
“We believe homeowners, not websites, must figure out just how their homes are marketed,” a Compass International Holdings agent claimed, adding that vendors deserve versatility and transparency, along with the advice of a real estate professional.
The site likewise published a “reality check” on Wednesday that purports to show “what’s in fact real” about MRED’s insurance claims in the general public fight. In the article, Zillow sought to jab openings in a few of MRED’s bolder assertions and included extra context for the real estate neighborhood and public at huge.
The MLS kept in mind that Zillow’s licensees would additionally be able to continue to accessibility MRED services in order to contribute listings and help with transactions. Zillow-owned items, including ShowingTime and dotloop, have actually not been affected by the suspension.
Zillow’s Reality Check & Unaffected Services
MRED, which solutions better Chicagoland, had threatened to cut off the site’s data feed in the market by 12 a.m. CT on Wednesday as component of a recurring fight between the two organizations. As of the early hours on Wednesday early morning, new listings from the MLS had actually shown up on Zillow, according to screenshots published to the popular industry blog Vendor Street. By concerning 9 a.m. CT, MRED terminated its shot.
MRED, which services better Chicagoland, had endangered to remove the website’s information feed on the market by 12 a.m. CT on Wednesday as component of a continuous fight between the two companies. Since the very early hours on Wednesday early morning, brand-new listings from the MLS had shown up on Zillow, according to screenshots posted to the preferred sector blog Supplier Street. However by concerning 9 a.m. CT, MRED discharged its shot.
The business additionally lauded Chicago as long being a version for “an open, affordable industry” and commended MRED “for enforcing policies that safeguard both customer choice and the fiduciary responsibilities agents owe their customers,” the representative said.
Compass Influence and Listing Disputes
Differing with these criteria, which efficiently ban most listings by mega-brokerage Compass, Compass International Holdings Chairman and CEO Robert Reffkin last loss urged numerous MLSs where Compass has a big visibility “to end Zillow’s listing feeds,” according to a legal filing in a case Zillow has imposed versus MRED and Compass.
“Zillow has actually effectively made a decision not to show 99.98% of MRED’s listings on its platforms because it, in its very own judgment, disagrees with the legal advertising method related to the remaining 0.02% of listings,” a news release published by MRED claimed.
The MLS additionally indicated nine listing offenses Zillow had actually made– which were in states outside of Illinois, the portal kept in mind in lawful filings after Compass and MRED partnered in April– that Zillow might have quickly dealt with to be within MRED’s needs, however rather opted to forgo accessibility to 43,000 listings in fine, instead of bow to MRED.
Legal Threats and Policy Enforcement
In an emailed declaration, Jensen said that “continued display screen of MRED’s listing data is in violation of Zillow’s license arrangement and government copyright legislation,” recommending that legal action could be feasible.
A few weeks later, MRED’s Jensen intimidated to end Zillow’s access to the MLS’s listing feeds, and Zillow validated in November 2025 that is was not imposing its listing requirements in MRED’s coverage location as a result of “the unique circumstance.”
MRED sacrificed them all to safeguard the surprise listing plan of the biggest broker agent in the nation.”
“The individuals paying the price today are actual,” a Zillow representative claimed. MRED sacrificed them all to secure the concealed listing scheme of the biggest brokerage firm in the nation.”
“Our policies apply just as to every participant, and we have a task to enlighten our participants and suppliers, guidance them when they run out conformity, and call for that violations be healed,” Jensen added.
In Might 2026, Jensen sent out e-mails to Zillow claiming MRED– which was now open to agents outside the Chicago area– would revoke the site’s gain access to “if Zillow did not show certain Compass listings nationwide.”
MRED President and chief executive officer Rebecca Jensen stated in a statement that regulations enforcement was “the most difficult and crucial responsibility” that MLS’s take on part of their clients and the market.
Understanding the Conflict’s Origin
The trouble in between MRED and Zillow started as far back as last spring when Zillow introduced new listing access criteria banning listings that had formerly been selectively marketed, such as those initial listed as “exclusives” through Compass’ 3-phased advertising method.
1 Chicagoland Real Estate2 Compass International Holdings
3 Listing Data Suspension
4 MLS Listing Standards
5 MRED Zillow Conflict
6 Real Estate Dispute
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