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MRED cuts Zillow’s Chicago feed over 9 Compass listings, blocking 43,000 listings

Published
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13

Why it matters

Zillow lost access to roughly 43,000 Chicago-area home listings—approximately 60% of active inventory in the region—after Midwest Real Estate Data (MRED), the local MLS provider, cut off Zillow's listing feed. The cutoff followed MRED's accusation that Zillow breached its licensing agreement by refusing to display a small number of Compass Private Exclusive listings in California, Florida, and Georgia. Compass, Chicago's largest real estate brokerage, has simultaneously pulled its listings from Zillow across multiple states, compounding the dispute.

Zillow has filed a federal antitrust lawsuit in Illinois alleging that MRED and Compass conspired to block its access to listings. MRED counters that it is simply enforcing contractual terms Zillow previously accepted, including a 24-hour listing display policy. The core disagreement centers on private listings marketed outside public platforms: Zillow claims MRED is favoring Compass by restricting access to these exclusive properties, while MRED maintains Zillow agreed to display all listings it receives. A federal judge granted Zillow a temporary injunction restoring its feeds, but the underlying antitrust claims remain unresolved.

Attorneys should monitor this case for its implications on MLS control over major listing platforms and the enforceability of private listing restrictions. The outcome will likely shape how brokerages can use exclusive listings as competitive tools and whether MLSs can leverage feed access to enforce compliance with display policies. The temporary injunction buys time, but the substantive legal questions—whether MRED's actions constitute antitrust violations or legitimate contract enforcement—remain pending.

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