Beginning March 1, 2026, a new federal FinCEN rule will require reporting for certain non-financed transfers of residential real estate.

Who Does This Apply To?

The rule applies when:

  • The property is purchased without traditional bank financingand
  • The buyer is a legal entity or trust (LLC, corporation, partnership, or trust).

This primarily affects:

  • All-cash entity purchases
  • Some seller- or privately-financed entity purchases
  • Investor and higher-end transactions

Who Is Not Affected?

  • Buyers obtaining traditional mortgage financing
  • Individuals purchasing property in their own name (not through an entity or trust)

What Is Required?

The designated reporting professional (typically the title or escrow company) must file a Real Estate Report with FinCEN that includes:

  • Beneficial ownership information (the individuals behind the entity)
  • Identification details
  • Transaction information

Importantly:

  • The reporting obligation falls on the closing professional — not on REALTORS®
  • This is a federal anti-money laundering reporting requirement, not a new tax or transfer restriction

What This Means for REALTORS®

  • Most financed transactions will see no change
  • Entity buyers in non-financed deals should be educated early to prepare documentation
  • Title companies are complying with federal law, not adding local red tape

Key Take Aways:

  • The rule increases transparency for certain entity-based cash purchases, while leaving the majority of traditional financed homebuyers unaffected. 
  • If your clients are planning a quick close (cash), you might want to check with your broker and/or title to help manage timing expectations. 

Learn More:
For more information plan to attend NAR’s upcoming webinar on March 11th. 

NAR FAQs related to the FinCEN Residential Real Estate Rule are now live.