Your buyer asks a simple question: “Is this a safe neighborhood?”
For years, real estate professionals have been trained to pause, pivot and proceed carefully. In fact, I’ve often trained agents to pause. Not because the question isn’t valid, but because the answer has never been simple.
Now, with recent guidance from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the conversation is shifting again. Agents are being told that providing information about crime statistics and school ratings does not automatically violate the Fair Housing Act.
At first glance, this feels like clarity, maybe even relief. But let’s be honest: This isn’t about whether we can share information. It’s about whether we understand the weight of how that information is delivered.
The law sets the floor, not the standard
The Fair Housing Act has always been clear on one thing: Real estate professionals cannot steer clients based on protected characteristics like race, religion or familial status. What HUD has clarified is that sharing objective data — crime statistics, school ratings, public records — is not inherently discriminatory. The issue is intent. That distinction matters.
But legal compliance has never been the highest standard in our industry. It’s the minimum. The real question is not whether something is allowed, it’s whether it contributes to fair and equitable access to housing.
Data is not neutral
Crime statistics. School ratings. Neighborhood “scores.” We often treat these as objective truths. They’re not. They are shaped by historical policy decisions, patterns of investment and disinvestment, enforcement practices, and economic inequality. They don’t exist in a vacuum.
When we present this data without context, we risk reinforcing the very disparities the Fair Housing Act was designed to address. And this is where the conversation gets uncomfortable, but necessary.
In trying to avoid violations, our industry has sometimes treated conversations about “safety” as inherently tied to protected classes. But that assumption itself reveals something deeper. Because if discussing crime is immediately interpreted as steering away from communities of color, what underlying belief are we reinforcing about those communities?
The goal has never been to suggest that people of color are inherently connected to crime or unsafe environments. In fact, that is exactly the narrative fair housing laws were designed to disrupt.
This moment gives us a chance to separate people from place-based data and historical bias from present-day decision-making, but only if we handle it with intention. Done correctly, this shift allows us to move away from coded language and toward more transparent, responsible conversations without perpetuating harmful assumptions.
But that only happens if we are intentional. Without that intention, the same narratives don’t disappear; they just show up in more subtle ways.
This isn’t about limiting information
Let’s be clear: Clients deserve access to information. They should be empowered to make informed decisions about where they live. But access to information and responsible delivery of information are not the same thing.
This is not a debate between transparency and compliance. It’s about discipline: discipline in how we source information, present information and separate data from personal interpretation. Because the moment we move from “Here is the data” to “Here’s what that means,” we step into territory that has long shaped patterns of segregation in this country.
What responsible practice actually looks like
If the rules are evolving, our standards should rise with them. Responsible agents don’t avoid the conversation; they handle it with clarity and consistency. That looks like:
- Providing the same third-party resources to every client
- Avoiding subjective language like “good,” “bad” or “safe”
- Encouraging clients to define what matters most to them
- Staying rooted in facts without adding personal interpretation
It’s not about saying less. It’s about saying it better.
Different perspectives, a common goal
There are professionals who believe this guidance restores necessary transparency. There are others who are concerned about the potential for harm. Both perspectives deserve space because, at the core, most people in this industry are trying to do the right thing for their clients.
But where we must align is here: Every client deserves fair, equitable access to housing, free from influence rooted in bias, whether intentional or not. That is not a political stance. It is a professional responsibility.
What this moment requires
The reality is, the rules may change. Interpretations may evolve. Policies may shift depending on who is leading the conversation. But the responsibility of a real estate professional remains the same.
We are guides — not gatekeepers. We are participants in a system that has historically determined access to wealth, stability and opportunity. That requires more than compliance. It requires awareness and a commitment to doing the work in a way that does not unintentionally recreate the very barriers we claim to be removing.
Because in real estate, how we show up in these conversations doesn’t just shape transactions. It shapes communities.
In addition to hosting the Color of Money real estate podcast, Julia Lashay Israel advises, trains, and coaches leaders, team members, and agents to recognize and address diversity, equity, and inclusion opportunities and challenges.