What the FTC Referral Probe Is
An FTC referral probe is a review in which the Federal Trade Commission examines suspected misconduct. It may send the matter to another enforcement authority rather than resolve it only within the agency.
This means FTC referrals are not the same as a final FTC enforcement action. They can involve an early transfer of information or a fuller case record for another agency. Recent allegations involving Zillow and Zillow Home Loans show how referral-related conduct in real estate and mortgage markets can raise broader consumer protection concerns.
How the Process Functions
The FTC can investigate business conduct, practices, management, and organization across commerce, except in certain banking categories. It may use subpoenas, interviews, complaints, document requests, and 6(b) orders to gather evidence.
When facts suggest possible criminal behavior, the matter can shift toward criminal coordination with local, state, federal, or international authorities. The approach grew under a 2021 policy statement aimed at strengthening responses to corporate crime. The policy was adopted to expand the FTC’s criminal referral program and speed referrals to criminal law enforcement.
Which Real Estate Platforms Are Under Scrutiny
Federal scrutiny is centered most directly on Zillow, the only company publicly identified in lawmakers’ letter to the FTC.
Broader concern also extends across major online real estate platforms.
Zillow’s listing features, including Contact agent and Request a tour, are part of the review.
The issue raised publicly is Zillow transparency, especially whether consumers can clearly understand referral and advertising arrangements.
Its market reach and dependence on lead generation deepen regulatory interest.
Google’s rollout of full real estate listings inside search results has also intensified concerns about how platforms handle agent leads and consumer discovery.
Other Companies in the Wider Scrutiny Field
Redfin also sits within the broader platform focus.
Separate FTC antitrust action in 2025 named Zillow and Redfin over rental advertising competition.
Compass is not named in the referral letter, but Compass accusations against Zillow add pressure.
eXp Realty appears only indirectly through allegations about similar listing distribution policies.
How Referral Practices May Mislead Buyers
Attention is now shifting from which platforms are under scrutiny to how their referral practices can shape buyer decisions in ways consumers may not recognize.
Commissioned referrals can steer buyers toward agents, lenders, or partners chosen for payment rather than fit. Without clear disclosure of a referral fee and its specific amount, a recommendation may appear independent when it is not.
That gap can fuel buyer trust erosion.
Hidden Costs and Distorted Choice
Reports cited by the Consumer Policy Center say referral fees can reach about 25% to 35% of an agent’s commission. Those costs may be built into commissions or other charges paid by buyers.
A 2025 paper also found referred loan officer borrowers paid higher rates and about $2,310 upfront.
Undisclosed incentives, including cash or gift-based rewards, can narrow choices and reduce objective comparison.
What the FTC May Examine Next
Beyond the platforms already in view, FTC staff may next seek records showing how referral placements are selected, ranked, labeled, and revised across websites, apps, and related ad systems.
Records and representations
Likely requests would cover policies, training materials, product specifications, decision documents, emails, contracts, pricing sheets, and platform logs tied to referral programs and related advertising tools.
The agency may also examine complaint files, consumer disclosures, and records showing when disclosures were changed, weakened, or removed.
Controls and substantiation
Review may test whether labels and interface design clearly reveal paid placement or commercial ties, rather than leaving key information in secondary pages or fine print.
Staff could compare public claims with backend rules, while checking approval workflows, escalation paths, monitoring practices, corrections, takedowns, and audit trails.
If responses appear incomplete, compulsory process could follow.
How the Probe Fits Broader Platform Scrutiny
In that wider context, the referral probe fits a broader FTC approach that now examines platforms through overlapping lenses of data practices, content moderation, advertising systems, and competition concerns.
Rather than isolating one alleged violation, the agency has increasingly reviewed how platforms collect, infer, and apply personal data, and how they rank and recommend content.
How engagement systems shape user behavior has also become part of that broader review.
Expanding Theories of Accountability
That broader posture also connects referral issues to algorithmic transparency, disclosure compliance, and youth protections.
FTC scrutiny has reached endorsement practices, ad selection, and platform tools, while stressing that brands and influencers retain disclosure duties.
At the same time, investigations into ad-market coordination, platform self-preferencing, and ecosystem gatekeeping show that oversight now spans consumer protection and antitrust-style concerns.
It also extends beyond operators to commercial intermediaries and compliance systems.
Assessment
The referral probe marks a sharper federal focus on how major real estate platforms steer consumers and monetize agent connections. Its outcome could reshape disclosure standards, lead-routing practices, and scrutiny of platform-driven transactions across the housing market.
For buyers, sellers, and agents, the investigation signals growing regulatory pressure on systems that may blur advertising, referrals, and consumer choice.
The case also fits a wider pattern of oversight aimed at digital gatekeepers with expanding influence over critical financial decisions.
















