Real Estate Authority Network: Standards and Editorial Policy
The National Real Estate Authority operates as a hub for 19 member reference sites covering the full spectrum of residential and commercial property topics across the United States. This page defines the editorial standards, classification logic, and subject-matter boundaries that govern content published across the network. Understanding these standards helps practitioners, researchers, and property professionals assess the reliability and scope of the information presented. The network draws on named public agencies, federal statutes, and recognized standards bodies — not sponsored sources or promotional content.
Definition and scope
The Real Estate Authority Network is a structured collection of reference-grade web properties, each assigned to a defined subject vertical within the broader property and housing ecosystem. The network covers 19 member sites, organized under four primary verticals: landlord-tenant relations, residential housing, property services, and mortgage and finance. No member site publishes legal advice, professional services referrals, or transactional solicitations — content is informational and regulatory in orientation.
Scope boundaries follow published federal frameworks. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) defines core housing program categories that inform vertical assignments. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) governs mortgage disclosure and lending terminology standards referenced by finance-adjacent member sites. The index of this site maps network-wide coverage for readers navigating the full 19-member directory.
Each member site is independently scoped but editorially governed by the same standards described on this page. Subject overlap is managed through explicit cross-reference protocols — a reader finding HOA governance material on a residential site will be directed to the designated authority resource rather than encountering duplicated or conflicting content.
How it works
The network operates through a four-phase editorial framework:
- Vertical assignment — Each member site is classified into one of four verticals based on primary subject matter. Landlord-tenant, residential, property services, and mortgage verticals each carry distinct regulatory citation requirements and named-source density minimums.
- Source validation — Every factual claim must trace to a named public agency, federal statute, state code, or recognized standards body. Commercial sources, press releases, and paywalled publications are excluded.
- Scope enforcement — Member sites publish only within their assigned subject boundary. A site covering rental agreements does not publish mortgage underwriting content, even where topics intersect.
- Cross-reference integration — Where a topic crosses vertical lines, content links to the designated member site rather than duplicating coverage. This maintains single-source authority for each subject domain.
The conceptual overview of how real estate works provides the foundational framing that supports scope decisions across the network. Regulatory framing for all content draws on the regulatory context for real estate, which maps federal and state agency jurisdiction across property types.
Terminology standardization across the network follows the definitions published in real estate terminology and definitions, ensuring that terms like "tenancy at will," "fee simple," and "escrow" carry consistent meaning across all 19 member sites.
Common scenarios
Landlord-Tenant Vertical
The landlord-tenant vertical includes the highest density of regulatory citation requirements because it intersects with the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq.), state eviction statutes, and HUD's enforcement programs. Three member sites anchor this vertical:
- National Landlord Authority covers landlord obligations, lease structuring, and property maintenance standards as defined by state housing codes and federal fair housing requirements.
- National Landlord-Tenant Authority addresses the bilateral relationship between landlords and tenants, including dispute resolution frameworks, security deposit regulations, and notice requirements across U.S. jurisdictions.
- National Tenant Rights Authority documents tenant protections under the Fair Housing Act and state-level tenant protection statutes, providing jurisdiction-specific reference material without rendering legal opinion.
Residential and Rental Vertical
- National Residential Authority covers owner-occupied residential property, including title, zoning classifications, and homeowner association governance frameworks.
- National Rental Authority focuses on rental housing market structures, lease types, and rental pricing frameworks as analyzed through HUD and Census Bureau data sources.
- National Renters Authority provides renter-facing reference content covering lease interpretation, habitability standards, and rent payment dispute procedures.
Property Services Vertical
- National Property Management Authority covers professional property management standards, including licensing requirements enforced by state real estate commissions and the Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM) framework.
- Property Inspection Authority covers home and commercial property inspection standards as published by the American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) and InterNACHI, including inspection scope, defect classification, and report standards.
- National Property Services Authority addresses the full range of property maintenance, repair, and vendor services that operate within code compliance frameworks established by the International Code Council (ICC).
HOA and Specialized Verticals
- National HOA Authority covers homeowners association governance, including CC&R enforcement, assessment collection procedures, and the Davis-Stirling Act (California Civil Code § 4000 et seq.) as a model for state-level HOA legislation analysis.
- National Mortgage Authority covers mortgage product types, underwriting standards, and disclosure requirements under the Truth in Lending Act (TILA, 15 U.S.C. § 1601) and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA, 12 U.S.C. § 2601).
Decision boundaries
Hub content vs. member site content
The hub site (nationalrealestateauthority.com) publishes network-level standards, cross-vertical definitions, and structural frameworks. Member sites publish subject-specific reference content. A factual question about lease termination procedures belongs on National Tenant Services Authority — not on the hub. A question about how federal fair housing enforcement works at the regulatory level may appear on both, with the hub providing the statutory framing and the member site providing jurisdiction-specific application.
Included vs. excluded source types
| Source Type | Included | Excluded |
|---|---|---|
| Federal agency publications (HUD, CFPB, FTC) | ✓ | |
| State statutes and administrative codes | ✓ | |
| Standards bodies (ASHI, IREM, ICC, NAR) | ✓ | |
| Commercial vendor content | ✗ | |
| Paywalled academic journals | ✗ | |
| Press releases and promotional materials | ✗ |
Tenant-facing vs. landlord-facing content
The network maintains parallel member sites for tenant-facing and landlord-facing content within the same subject domain. National Tenant Authority and National Landlord Authority cover overlapping legal terrain — lease obligations, habitability, and notice — but from distinct regulatory perspectives. Content on one site does not simply mirror the other; each site develops its subject from the applicable statutory standpoint.
The Property Authority Network provides a cross-network index for users navigating between verticals. National Real Estate Services Authority covers licensed real estate brokerage services, agent standards, and state real estate commission oversight — a distinct domain from property management or landlord operations.
Additional member resources include National Property Authority for general property ownership and title reference, National Intellectual Property Authority for intellectual property considerations intersecting with real estate branding and trade name issues, Residential Services Directory as a categorized reference index for residential service providers organized by trade type, and Property Services Authority covering licensed contractor standards, state licensing board requirements, and code compliance processes.
References
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
- Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq.
- Truth in Lending Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C. § 1601
- Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. § 2601
- International Code Council (ICC)
- American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI)
- Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM)
- California Civil Code § 4000 et seq. (Davis-Stirling Act)