California Regional MLS (CRMLS), the nation’s second-largest multiple listing service, announced on Tuesday that it is expanding access to RealReports, an AI-powered property analysis platform, to all users at no additional cost.
The platform was previously offered as an opt-in product through CRMLS’s Product Co-Op, allowing individual associations to decide whether to provide access. After strong adoption and positive feedback from early users, CRMLS has opted to roll out RealReports across its entire user base.
RealReports allows CRMLS users to generate comprehensive property reports that pull data from dozens of sources, providing insights on factors ranging from liens and zoning details to climate risk and other property variables. The platform also includes an AI assistant called Aiden, which can answer property-related questions and summarize complex reports to help agents quickly understand key details.
“Agents and brokers are constantly adapting to being even more efficient and more knowledgeable in an ever-increasingly demanding market,” CRMLS CEO Art Carter said in a statement. “RealReports helps with the heavy lift of going through documents, pulling the most vital and valuable information, and making it easy to present to clients.”
CRMLS users can access RealReports through a product tile on their REcore dashboard.
AI tools move into the MLS
CRMLS’s decision to roll out RealReports across its entire user base reflects a shift within the real estate industry toward integrating AI-powered data tools directly into MLS platforms.
Traditionally focused on listing data, MLS systems are increasingly adding property intelligence features that aggregate information such as zoning, liens, environmental risks and other records.
By embedding these tools into agents’ everyday workflows, MLS operators aim to help real estate professionals analyze properties more quickly and deliver deeper insights to clients in an increasingly data-driven market.
Several MLSs have already begun experimenting with AI-powered property intelligence tools. MLS Now in Ohio, Doorify MLS in North Carolina and Georgia’s First Multiple Listing Service have all partnered with RealReports. CRMLS’s decision to roll out the platform to its entire user base represents one of the largest deployments of the technology to date.
For agents, the growing availability of property intelligence tools is part of an effort to strengthen the advisory role of real estate professionals. As consumers gain access to more housing data online, agents are under increasing pressure to provide deeper insights about properties, risks and neighborhood conditions.
Platforms that consolidate and analyze complex datasets may help agents answer those questions more efficiently while positioning themselves as trusted advisors to buyers and sellers.