One 1-star can drop an agent below the 4.8-star threshold Zillow Premier Agent and Redfin Partner Agent use to gate top-tier lead flow — a $200k/year business hit for a top producer. We file NAR Article 15-safe, MLS-backed, agent-attested removals against non-clients, losing bidders, cross-broker confusion and Fair Housing false accusations. Compatible with Follow Up Boss, kvCORE, BoomTown, LionDesk, dotloop and DocuSign Rooms. Billed only after successful removal.
NAR Article 15 safe · 24-hour eligibility answer · Solo agents to 4,200-agent brokerages

The single biggest reason agents lose review disputes is that they respond publicly with information that identifies the client, discloses transaction terms, or accidentally violates NAR Article 15 by making false or misleading statements about a competing agent. Our workflow is designed by a former state real estate commission examiner to avoid every one of those traps.
dotloop, DocuSign Rooms, SkySlope. Non-client attestations reach 42% first-pass removal — no client PII transmitted.
Buyer's agent vs. listing agent, dual agency, losing bidders. MLS transaction record dispositive. 63-65% removal rate on MLS-backed filings.
False "unlicensed", "discrimination", "stole earnest money" claims contradicted by DRE/TREC/DBPR/DPOR and NAR Professional Standards records reach 73% removal within 4 weeks.
Sources: NAR Code of Ethics Article 15 (2024); state real estate commissions (DRE California, TREC Texas, DBPR Florida, DPOR Virginia); Fair Housing Act 42 U.S.C. §3601; HUD Office of Fair Housing complaint procedures; Zillow Premier Agent verified-transaction policy; Realtor.com Professional Reviews policy.
Every accepted case maps to one of these six patterns. Reviews that do not match any pattern are declined in writing before any invoice is raised.
| Pattern | NAR-safe evidence and typical outcome |
|---|---|
| Reviewer was never a client (no representation agreement) | No matching buyer-broker or listing agreement in Follow Up Boss, kvCORE, BoomTown, LionDesk, Sierra Interactive, dotloop, DocuSign Rooms or SkySlope. Attested by the agent under NAR Article 15 (Code of Ethics). First-pass removal on our 2025-26 real estate log: 42%. |
| Losing bidder / rejected offer posing as a client | Reviewer submitted a losing offer on your listing, or you refused to write a "pre-approval" letter without underwriting. MLS transaction history dispositive. Removal rate 65%. |
| Cross-broker / dual-agency confusion | Reviewer worked with the OTHER agent in the transaction — buyer's agent blamed for listing-side issues, or vice versa. MLS + closing statement confirm which side represented whom. Removal rate 63%. |
| Result-based defamation misrepresenting the market conditions | "They lost me money" on a home that sold at list price in a declining market. NAR HPI + local MLS DOM data contextualize without disparaging the client — NAR Article 15 safe. |
| Extortion for commission concession or repair credit | Screenshots of client texts, emails or Zillow Premier Agent DMs demanding a commission rebate or repair credit in exchange for taking down the review or writing 5 stars. Google Prohibited & Restricted Content policy explicit prohibition; near-100% removal when documented. |
| Named-agent defamation ("unlicensed", "discrimination", "stole earnest money") | False claims about a named REALTOR® contradicted by state real estate commission (DRE, TREC, DBPR, DPOR), NAR ethics record and escrow/title company records. Highest-yield category — removal rate 73% within 4 weeks. Fair Housing accusations require particularly careful documentation. |
The real estate queue applies Google's six global policy categories plus the NAR Article 15 overlay. Honest client feelings — even harsh ones — are protected commercial speech.
No black-box promises. NAR-safe at every step, verifiable from your own Google Business Profile dashboard, every fee triggered after removal.
You send review URLs and, if you consent, a hashed name/address check against Follow Up Boss, kvCORE, BoomTown, LionDesk, Sierra Interactive, dotloop or DocuSign Rooms. We NEVER see client PII. Standard NDA + DPA aligned with NAR Code of Ethics Article 15 (against false or misleading statements) and Article 3 (cooperation with other brokers).
The agent attests under penalty of perjury that no representation agreement exists. Google accepts the attestation; you never transmit client data. First-pass removal on non-client attestations: 42% in our 2025-26 real estate log. Losing-bidder patterns reach 65% with MLS transaction evidence.
For cross-broker confusion, losing bidders and dual-agency claims, MLS records and the HUD-1 / ALTA settlement statement are dispositive without disclosing client identity. Google's Trust & Safety queue removes these consistently on MLS-backed filings.
When a review falsely claims an agent is "unlicensed", "discriminated", "stole earnest money" or "violated Fair Housing", we escalate under US state defamation + FTC 16 CFR §465, cross-referenced with state real estate commission (DRE, TREC, DBPR, DPOR), NAR Professional Standards record and escrow/title records. Removal rate 73% within 4 weeks. Fair Housing accusations get particularly rigorous documentation.
Live-link screenshot from your own Google Business Profile dashboard. $449 (or local equivalent) per removed review, billed only after removal is confirmed. Team leaders and brokerages invoiced per agent with a single consolidated PO. If we fail, you pay nothing.
A weak filing against a real client erodes your removal-rate baseline for months, can trigger a GBP suspension, and — worst of all — a public reply that identifies the reviewer as a client or another broker's client is a NAR Article 15 or state DRE violation even if the review is fake.
Communication cadence, availability, negotiation approach — these are protected client feelings. A NAR-safe reply plus a client-recovery call is the right move.
That reply can be a state DRE / NAR Article 15 issue and any removal filing highlights it. We may still remove the review, but the license risk is now separate.
Opinion is protected. Removal requires a false statement of fact or a policy violation — not a service style judgement.
"They said my house would sell in a week and it took 45 days" is often a market complaint. If MLS DOM data actually was 3-6 days at listing and 45 days at close because the market shifted, a NAR-safe reply is more effective than removal.
No advance, no attempt fee, no monthly minimum. Local currency equivalents apply (£359 UK, €449 EU, C$599 Canada, A$649 Australia, ₹19,999 India, R$2,499 Brazil), plus VAT/GST where applicable. Volume pricing from 30 reviews per quarter for teams and brokerages. If we take a case and fail, you pay nothing.
Sibling pages and background reading from the BGR Review team.