Property Network: Purpose and Scope
The National Property Authority provider network maps licensed professionals, regulated service providers, and qualified specialists operating across the United States real estate sector. This page defines the organizational logic of that provider network, the criteria that determine entry inclusion, and the regulatory standards used to classify professional categories. Readers using this resource — whether navigating a transaction, conducting market research, or evaluating service providers — benefit from understanding how the provider network is structured before interpreting individual providers.
How to interpret providers
Each provider in this network represents a professional entity, firm, or individual practitioner operating within the US real estate services sector. Providers are not advertisements, endorsements, or ranked recommendations. They are structured reference entries that present verifiable professional data: licensing status, geographic service area, practice category, and where applicable, accreditation or designation held.
Regulatory standing is the primary classification axis. Real estate professionals in the United States operate under licensing frameworks administered at the state level, with the specific body varying by state — for example, the California Department of Real Estate (DRE) governs licensees in California, while the Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC) administers licensing in Texas. Providers reflect the jurisdiction under which a professional is licensed, which directly affects the legal scope of services that professional may provide.
Readers should distinguish between license types when interpreting entries. A real estate salesperson license, for instance, requires supervision by a licensed broker. A broker license authorizes independent operation and, in most states, the authority to supervise other licensees. These are not equivalent credentials, and the distinction carries legal and transactional weight. For a full view of active property providers within the network, that section presents entries organized by category and geography.
Purpose of this provider network
The provider network serves as a structured reference for the US real estate professional landscape — a sector that spans licensed brokers and agents, appraisers, property managers, inspectors, mortgage originators, title professionals, and escrow officers, among other regulated roles. Each of these categories operates under distinct licensing requirements, governed by different state or federal agencies.
Mortgage loan originators, for example, are subject to the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act (SAFE Act), which established the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS) as the central registration and licensing platform (NMLS Resource Center, CSBS). Real estate appraisers operate under standards set by the Appraisal Foundation, including the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP). Home inspectors face licensing requirements in at least 30 states, though requirements vary significantly in scope and examination standards across jurisdictions.
No single regulatory body governs all real estate service categories at the federal level. The provider network structure reflects this fragmentation by organizing entries within clearly defined professional categories rather than presenting the sector as a monolithic industry.
The provider network is further explained as an operational reference — not a review platform — in How to Use This Property Resource. That page addresses search and filtering logic for professional research tasks.
What is included
The provider network encompasses the following professional categories within US real estate services:
- Licensed real estate brokers and salespersons — state-licensed under applicable real estate commission rules; categorized by state, brokerage affiliation, and practice area (residential, commercial, industrial, land).
- Certified real estate appraisers — classified as Licensed, Certified Residential, or Certified General under the Appraiser Qualifications Board (AQB) credential levels; verified by state certification authority.
- Property managers — where state licensing is required (as in California and Florida), entries reflect that licensure; where no license is required, entries document professional designations such as the Certified Property Manager (CPM) credential issued by the Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM).
- Mortgage loan originators — verified with NMLS Unique Identifier, employer, and state endorsement where applicable.
- Title and escrow professionals — verified by licensed entity and state authorization; subject to state department of insurance or financial institutions oversight depending on jurisdiction.
- Home inspectors — verified with state license number where applicable, and InterNACHI or ASHI membership status where those credentials are held.
Generalist business providers, unlicensed consultants, and entities without verifiable regulatory standing are excluded. The provider network does not include staging companies, moving services, interior designers, or other ancillary vendors not subject to real estate-specific licensing or professional credentialing frameworks.
How entries are determined
Inclusion is based on editorial research using publicly verifiable signals, not self-submission or paid placement. This distinction separates the provider network from sponsored provider platforms, which accept entries from any paying entity without validating professional credentials or regulatory standing.
The evaluation framework applies structured criteria across 4 dimensions:
- Regulatory standing — active licensure or registration confirmed through the relevant state licensing board, the NMLS, the Appraisal Subcommittee's National Registry (ASC National Registry), or equivalent authority. Expired, suspended, or revoked licenses disqualify an entry until standing is restored.
- Operational scope — geographic service claims cross-referenced against business registration records and licensing jurisdiction to confirm accuracy.
- Specialization depth — documented practice focus supported by transaction history, professional designations, or employer affiliation within the claimed specialty.
- Credential verification — professional designations such as GRI (Graduate, REALTOR® Institute), CCIM (Certified Commercial Investment Member), or MAI (Member, Appraisal Institute) are verified against the issuing organization's published member directories.
The editorial standard applied here is described in fuller operational terms within the Property Network: Purpose and Scope page structure itself, and the distinction from sponsored directories is a foundational design principle rather than an incidental feature.
Entries are subject to periodic review. A professional whose license lapses, whose regulatory standing changes, or whose operational scope shifts materially may be updated or removed independent of any action by the verified party.