RealPage has been accused of
antitrust violations and
price fixing in the rental market. Lawsuits against RealPage make the claim that if it is illegal for an individual to engage in price fixing, then it should be illegal when it is done by
software or
algorithm. The lawsuits also accuse RealPage of pressuring its customers to comply with its pricing suggestions. In November 2022, the
United States Department of Justice's
Antitrust Division opened an investigation into RealPage, which is accused of contributing to higher rent prices throughout the United States. The company's YieldStar software is alleged to use an algorithm to "help landlords push the highest possible rents on tenants." In November 2023, Attorney General of the District of Columbia
Brian Schwalb filed an antitrust price-fixing lawsuit against RealPage and more than a dozen of the largest apartment building landlords in Washington, D.C., accusing them of illegally conspiring to set rental prices artificially high by sharing competitively sensitive data using RealPage's revenue management platform. In April 2023, more than 20 private civil antitrust lawsuits against RealPage, which had been filed primarily on behalf of renters of multifamily apartments and which alleged that the company illegally conspired to keep prices above market rates, were consolidated in federal court in
Nashville, Tennessee. In November 2023, the US Justice Department filed a "statement of interest" in support of the lawsuits, arguing that the use of shared data and algorithms must "be subject to the same condemnation" as other price-fixing schemes. In December 2023, Chief US District Judge
Waverly Crenshaw denied RealPage's bid to dismiss the consolidated lawsuits. In August 2024, the Department of Justice along with the Attorneys General of eight states filed a civil antitrust lawsuit against RealPage, alleging that the company engaged in an "unlawful scheme to decrease competition among landlords" and sought "to monopolize the market for commercial revenue management software that landlords use to price apartments," thereby harming millions of renters by depriving them of the benefits of competition. In April 2025, the
Attorney General of New Jersey Matt Platkin filed a lawsuit against RealPage and 10 New Jersey-based landlords, accusing them of working together as "a rent-setting cartel" and
colluding to use RealPage's "anticompetitive algorithm" to raise rents in violation of the
Sherman Antitrust Act, the New Jersey Antitrust Act, and the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act.
Bans In January 2024, U.S. Senators
Ron Wyden and
Peter Welch introduced federal legislation, titled the
Preventing the Algorithmic Facilitation of Rental Housing Cartels Act of 2024, that would ban the coordination of rental housing price information, as well as prohibiting the use of services of companies such as RealPage and Yardi that allow landlords to coordinate rental housing prices. In August 2024, the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously approved an ordinance banning landlords from using software or algorithms, such as those offered by RealPage and Yardi, to set rents or manage occupancy within the city. In May 2025, the
Colorado state legislature passed a bill banning algorithmic price setting of rents, but the bill was vetoed by Governor
Jared Polis. RealPage filed a lawsuit against the New York ban in November 2025, alleging it was an "unconstitutional ban on
lawful speech." ==References==