Summary
The Hart-Scott-Rodino Act (HSR) requires parties to certain mergers and acquisitions to file premerger notification reports with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Justice (DOJ) and observe a waiting period before closing. Since 1996, the FTC has exempted certain real estate transactions from HSR reporting requirements because these acquisitions are unlikely to violate antitrust laws.
In May 2026, RER submitted comments urging the FTC and DOJ to preserve the real estate exemptions, warning that removing them would impose substantial costs and delays on lawful real estate transactions without delivering any clear antitrust benefit. RER emphasized that real estate markets remain local, highly fragmented, and shaped by property type, geography, zoning rules, neighborhood characteristics, and other market-specific factors.
Key Takeaways
The real estate exemptions were adopted in 1996 because certain categories of real property acquisitions were considered unlikely to violate antitrust laws.
The exemptions cover several categories of real property acquisitions, including office, residential, retail, hotel, warehouse, agricultural, recreational, and other rental real estate assets.
The agencies have not provided evidence that circumstances have changed materially since the exemptions were adopted, or that exempted real estate transactions have had a negative effect on competition.
Eliminating the exemptions would impose new regulatory burdens, increase costs, slow closings, disrupt market liquidity, and create additional uncertainty at a time when capital formation remains critical to investment and development.
Removing the exemptions would not be a targeted way to address concerns about single-family housing acquisitions by large institutional investors, and could instead increase costs for homebuilders and residential developers working to address the nation’s housing shortage.
See the full fact sheet.
Preserve the Real Estate Exemptions: The FTC and DOJ should retain the longstanding HSR real estate exemptions and avoid imposing new filing requirements on transactions that remain unlikely to raise antitrust concerns.
HSR Real Estate Exemptions