MV Realty Settlement Voiding 700+ Nevada Homeowner Benefit Agreements
Summary
The Nevada Attorney General and Nevada Consumer Affairs Unit announced a settlement with MV Realty resolving investigations into deceptive trade practices. All 700+ MV Realty Homeowner Benefit Agreements in Nevada are declared null and void, and encumbrances recorded against affected properties must be removed within 30 days. MV Realty must cease all collection efforts, provide $200,000 in restitution to consumers who paid early termination fees, and waive repayment of promotional fees received.
“Under the terms of this settlement, all MV Realty agreements in Nevada will be null and void and MV Realty will remove the encumbrances against properties of Nevada residents.”
MV Realty offered Nevada homeowners upfront promotional fees in exchange for 40-year exclusive listing commitments that were recorded against properties in a lien-like manner. Early termination fees of 3% of the home's sale price were triggered if homeowners did not use MV Realty as their listing agent. Real estate firms and brokerages offering exclusive-listing agreements, home equity access products, or any service contract recorded against property should assess whether their terms comply with SB 355 (2023) and general deceptive-trade-practices standards — this settlement signals that Nevada will pursue enforcement against similar practices regardless of when the agreement was executed.
What changed
The settlement voids all MV Realty Homeowner Benefit Agreements in Nevada and requires the firm to remove encumbrances recorded against affected properties within 30 days, cease all collection activity, distribute $200,000 in restitution on a pro rata basis to consumers who previously paid early termination fees, and waive any requirement for consumers to repay promotional fees. The agreements, which carried exclusive listing commitments of up to 40 years and early termination fees of 3% of sale price, were marketed as offering upfront promotional fees in exchange for long-term commitments, functioning in a manner similar to liens against homeowners' properties.
Affected Nevada homeowners are relieved of obligations under these agreements, including any early termination fees. Real estate firms and brokerages that market exclusive-listing or home equity access products should review the terms of their agreements for compliance with Nevada law, particularly SB 355 (2023), which prohibits non-title recorded agreements for personal services with terms exceeding one year. The settlement demonstrates active enforcement of consumer protection standards for real estate-related financial products in Nevada.
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Apr 20, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Attorney General Ford and Nevada Consumer Affairs Announce Settlement Voiding MV Realty Agreements, Delivering Relief to Nevadans
April 17, 2026 Carson City, NV - Today, Nevada Attorney General Aaron D. Ford, in conjunction with the Department of Business and Industry’s Nevada Consumer Affairs Unit, announced a settlement with MV Realty following investigations into deceptive trade practices that impacted hundreds of Nevada homeowners. The Nevada Attorney General’s Office began its investigation into MV Realty in September 2025.
Through a joint effort, the Office of the Attorney General and Nevada Consumer Affairs identified harmful contractual practices tied to MV Realty’s “Homeowner Benefit Agreements.” These agreements offered upfront “promotional fees” in exchange for long-term, exclusive listing commitments often lasting up to 40 years, which were recorded against properties in a manner similar to a lien. These encumbrances impacted the homeowner’s ability to sell, refinance or access home equity. Under the terms of this settlement, all MV Realty agreements in Nevada will be null and void and MV Realty will remove the encumbrances against properties of Nevada residents.
“This settlement will provide much-needed relief to Nevadans who fell for these harmful contractual practices that MV Realty had implemented in our state,” said Attorney General Ford. “I am proud of the work that my staff, as well as the staff of the Nevada Consumer Affairs Unit, has done to ensure these Nevadans are protected. Consumer protection is one of the cornerstones of the work my office does, and we will never allow business to abuse Nevada consumers."
“I want to applaud the staff at Nevada Consumer Affairs for their hard work and dedication to help bring this matter to a resolution,” said Department of Business and Industry Director Kristopher Sanchez. “This outcome reflects what strong coordination between agencies can achieve for Nevadans. Through partnership with the Attorney General’s Office, we were able to deliver real relief to impacted homeowners.”
MV Realty entered into more than 700 such agreements with Nevada homeowners throughout the state starting at the beginning of 2020 through July 2023. In many cases, homeowners who did not use MV Realty as their listing agent were subject to early termination fees equal to 3% of the home’s sale price — often amounting to tens of thousands of dollars.
In response to concerns about these agreements, the Nevada Legislature passed SB 355 in 2023, which prohibits “non-title recorded agreements for personal services” (NTRAPS) with terms longer than one year. While this bill was not retroactive for agreements entered into before July 1, 2023, this announced agreement with MV Realty does address those agreements.
Under the terms of the settlement, MV Realty has agreed to:
- Cease all collection efforts in Nevada;
- Record rescissions to remove any encumbrances tied to these agreements on affected properties within 30 days of the effective date of the settlement agreement;
- Provide $200,000 in restitution to Nevada consumers who previously paid early termination fees, to be distributed on a pro rata basis within 18 months of the effective date of the settlement agreement; and
- Waive any requirement for consumers to repay promotional fees received under the agreements.
A copy of the Assurance of Discontinuance is attached.
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