When a U.S. district court in Texas vacated the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network’s (FinCEN) residential real estate reporting rule targeting all-cash transactions, it marked a turning point for an industry that had been preparing, somewhat uneasily, for its implementation.
But while the immediate reaction may be relief, the ruling raises a more complicated question: what, exactly, does this change, and what doesn’t it change?
Months before the rule was set to take effect on March 1, industry professionals were grappling with both the practical realities of compliance and the broader implications of the rule itself. Those issues were explored in a Keys to Real Estate podcast conversation last year with Texas title agent and attorney Celia Flowers and attorneys from Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF), who would go on to prevail in their successful challenge of the rule.
At the time, the industry’s focus was largely operational, tackling how to build new processes, train staff and integrate an entirely new layer of data collection into already time-sensitive transactions.
In retrospect, those early conversations captured something more than implementation concerns; they pointed to deeper questions about whether the rule, as constructed, could work at all.
The rule would have required data collection and reporting on a wide range of non-financed residential transactions, placing the burden on settlement agents to determine when filings were required and to collect sensitive and extensive information (as many as 111 data fields) from the parties involved. That included non-public personal information that title companies have not traditionally been responsible for collecting or retaining.
It also would have required agents to request personal details at the closing table that many homebuyers may view as unrelated to the transaction itself, introducing friction at precisely the moment when timing and trust matter most.
Even before the rule was vacated, the industry had begun to recognize that compliance would be far from simple.
“It sounds like you just get this information and move on,” Flowers told October Research Chief Knowledge Officer Mary Schuster during the podcast discussion. “But how many times are we going to have to call those individuals … email them … wait for that information to come back?”
What ultimately halted the rule, however, was not the difficulty of implementation. The legal challenge brought by Flowers and PLF focused on a more fundamental issue: whether FinCEN had the authority to require such broad, systematic reporting in the first place.
Rather than targeting specific suspicious activity, the rule applied categorically to a class of transactions that are both common and, in most cases, entirely lawful. That distinction became central to the case.
During the podcast conversation, PLF attorney Luke Wake pointed to the underlying concern.
“If you accept that these transactions are ‘suspicious’ just because they might help law enforcement, then there’s really no limit on the government’s authority to require reporting on any transaction,” he said.
The court’s decision to vacate the rule suggests that this question was central to whether the regulation could stand at all.
For a rule that was only in effect for less than a month, the industry now has something it rarely gets in real time: evidence. During the brief window in March when the rule was active, agents operating under its requirements offered an early glimpse into what compliance would actually look like in practice.
The American Land Title Association is now collecting and sharing feedback from those professionals through a survey designed to capture that experience and inform future policymaking. The responses could help shape how regulators approach any future iteration of the rule.
For title professionals, it presents a practical opportunity: to ensure that future conversations surrounding the rule are informed not only by policy objectives, but by the realities of how transactions actually functioned while the rule was live.
Although the immediate compliance burden of the rule has been lifted by the court, FinCEN’s underlying policy objective of greater transparency around certain real estate transactions has not disappeared. Nor has the possibility of future rulemaking or continued litigation.
The same questions industry members asked early on still apply:
- How should companies prepare for evolving reporting expectations?
- What role will settlement agents ultimately play in gathering and transmitting sensitive information?
- Where are the limits of federal involvement in transactions traditionally governed at the state level?
Those questions are expected to take center stage at the National Settlement Services Summit (NS3) this year as industry stakeholders gather to assess the current and future state of the marketplace. Flowers and representatives from PLF will discuss their experience during their successful challenge of the rule and what may come next for the industry in their session, “From FinCEN to Tax Foreclosure Sales: Property Rights and the Courts.”
For more information about NS3 and to register, visit NS3TheSummit.com.