Real Estate Listings
The real estate listings compiled at National Rental Authority serve as a structured reference for rental property types, regulatory frameworks, market segments, and compliance obligations across the United States. Coverage spans residential, commercial, subsidized, and short-term rental categories, with each entry cross-referenced against applicable federal statutes, state codes, and agency guidance. Accurate, well-organized listings reduce the friction that property owners, tenants, and researchers face when navigating a fragmented regulatory landscape affecting more than 48 million renter households nationwide (U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey).
How Currency Is Maintained
Listings are reviewed against updates published by named federal agencies — the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) — as well as state housing finance agencies and local code enforcement bodies. When a statute is amended or an agency issues revised guidance, the affected listing entry is updated to reflect the new regulatory text before the prior version is deprecated.
Source documents referenced include HUD's Fair Housing Act administrative interpretations, IRS Publication 527 (Residential Rental Property), EPA's lead-based paint disclosure regulations under 42 U.S.C. § 4852d, and the National Multifamily Housing Council's periodic market-data releases. Entries that cite state-specific rules — such as rent control laws by state or background check rental laws by state — are flagged for state legislative session cycles so that updates to security deposit caps, notice periods, or screening restrictions are captured within one session cycle of enactment.
No entry is published without a traceable named public source. Where a rule is set by local ordinance rather than state statute, the entry identifies the municipality and ordinance number rather than generalizing across a jurisdiction.
How to Use Listings Alongside Other Resources
Listings function as entry points, not endpoints. A listing on fair housing act rental compliance summarizes the operative statute and its protected classes under 42 U.S.C. § 3604 but links outward to HUD's official enforcement guidance for case-specific detail. Similarly, a listing on rental yield and cap rate explained defines the calculation framework and cites National Association of Realtors transaction data but directs users toward IRS guidance when tax treatment of that yield is in question.
Effective use follows a three-step structure:
- Identify the category. Use the listings index to locate the applicable property type, regulatory topic, or market segment.
- Read the structured summary. Each listing provides a definition, the governing authority, and the primary compliance boundary.
- Follow citations to primary sources. Statutory citations, agency URLs, and publication identifiers are embedded at point of use so that downstream verification requires no additional searching.
For market-context questions — pricing strategies, vacancy dynamics, or investment metrics — listings pair with the rental market overview US and rental market trends data pages, which provide aggregate data from public sources including the U.S. Census Bureau's Housing Vacancy Survey and the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index shelter component.
How Listings Are Organized
The directory is segmented into five classification tracks, each reflecting a distinct regulatory and operational domain:
- Property Type — Covers physical asset categories: single-family rental market, multifamily rental property overview, manufactured housing, student housing, senior housing, and corporate housing. Distinctions between residential rental vs commercial rental define the boundary between tracks.
- Tenancy and Lease Structure — Covers lease agreement types, month-to-month agreements, holdover tenancy, subletting rules, and renewal and non-renewal obligations. Governed primarily by state landlord-tenant statutes and the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (URLTA) where adopted.
- Compliance and Fair Housing — Covers HUD-enforced obligations under the Fair Housing Act, Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Title III requirements for covered properties, EPA lead-paint disclosure, and mold habitability standards.
- Subsidized and Affordable Housing — Covers the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC), and market-rate vs subsidized rentals. IRS Section 42 governs LIHTC compliance periods.
- Investment and Financial — Covers rental property tax deductions, depreciation on rental property, passive activity loss rules, 1031 exchanges, and rental property cash flow analysis, all referenced against IRS Publication 527 and Treasury Regulations.
What Each Listing Covers
Every listing entry follows a consistent internal structure regardless of track:
- Definition — A precise description of the subject using language drawn from the governing statute, agency rule, or standard reference body. For example, the LIHTC entry cites the IRS definition of "qualified low-income building" under IRC § 42(c)(2).
- Governing Authority — The federal statute, state code, or agency rule that establishes the operative standard. Entries distinguish between federal floors (e.g., the Fair Housing Act's 7 protected classes) and state expansions (e.g., California Government Code § 12955 extending protection to source of income).
- Compliance Boundary — The threshold at which an obligation activates — such as the 4-unit cutoff that determines whether an owner-occupied building is exempt from the Fair Housing Act's advertising provisions under 42 U.S.C. § 3603(b)(2), or the 27.5-year depreciation schedule applied to residential rental property under IRS rules.
- Common Scenarios — Discrete fact patterns that illustrate how the rule operates in practice, drawn from HUD administrative guidance, IRS revenue rulings, or published court decisions where those decisions are reported in public federal case databases.
- Cross-References — Inline links to related listings within the same track and to adjacent tracks where regulatory overlap exists — such as the intersection between tenant screening standards and rental discrimination laws under the Fair Housing Act's disparate-impact doctrine as articulated in HUD's 2013 Final Rule (78 Fed. Reg. 11460).