Tap any paragraph to write a margin note. Your notes collect in the Desk below the text and file under cases with @. The side-by-side margin rail opens on a larger screen.

Code · Wisconsin · Chapter 452 — Real estate practice

452.133 Duties of licensees; prohibitions.

1,325 words·~6 min read·/wi/chapter-452/452-133-2

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

452.133 Duties of licensees; prohibitions.
(1)Duties to all parties to a transaction. A firm providing brokerage services to a party to a transaction owes all of the following duties to the party:
(a)The duty to provide brokerage services honestly and fairly.
(b)The duty to provide brokerage services with reasonable skill and care.
(c)The duty to timely disclose in writing all material adverse facts that the firm knows and that the party does not know or cannot discover through reasonably vigilant observation, unless the disclosure of a material adverse fact is prohibited by law.
(d)The duty to keep confidential any information given to the firm in confidence, or any information obtained by the firm that the firm knows a reasonable person would want to be kept confidential, unless the information must be disclosed by law or the person whose interests may be adversely affected by the disclosure specifically authorizes the disclosure of particular information. The firm shall continue to keep the information confidential after the transaction is complete and after the firm is no longer providing brokerage services to the party.
(e)The duty to provide accurate information about market conditions that affect the transaction, within a reasonable time after a request for such information by the party, unless disclosure of the information is prohibited by law.
(f)The duty to safeguard trust funds and other property held as required by rules promulgated under s. 452.13
(5).
(g)When the firm is negotiating on behalf of a party, the duty to present contract proposals in an objective and unbiased manner and disclose the advantages and disadvantages of the proposals.
(2)Duties to clients. A firm providing brokerage services to a client owes the client the duties that the firm owes to a party under sub.
(1)and all of the following additional duties:
(a)The duty to loyally represent the client’s interests by doing all of the following:
1. Placing the client’s interests ahead of the interests of the firm.
2. Placing the client’s interests ahead of the interests of persons in the transaction who are not the firm’s clients by not disclosing to persons in the transaction other than the firm’s clients information or advice the disclosure of which is contrary to the interests of a client of the firm, unless the disclosure is required by law.
(am)The duty to provide, when requested by the client, information and advice to the client on matters that are material to the client’s transaction and that are within the scope of the knowledge, skills, and training required under this chapter.
(b)The duty to disclose to the client all information known by the firm that is material to the transaction and that is not known by the client or discoverable by the client through reasonably vigilant observation, except for confidential information under sub.
(d)and other information the disclosure of which is prohibited by law.
(c)The duty to fulfill any obligation required by the agency agreement, and any order of the client that is within the scope of the agency agreement, that is not inconsistent with another duty that the firm has under this chapter or any other law.
(d)The duty to negotiate on behalf of the client.
(3)Prohibited conduct. In providing brokerage services, a licensee may not do any of the following:
(a)Accept any fee or compensation related to the transaction from any person other than the licensee’s client or firm without the prior written consent of all parties to the transaction. This paragraph does not prohibit an out-of-state broker from accepting a fee or compensation in the case of a cooperative agreement under s. 452.137
(am).
Effective date note NOTE: Par.
(a)is shown as amended eff. 1-1-27 by 2025 Wis. Act 69 . Prior to 1-1-27 it reads:
Effective date text
(a)Accept any fee or compensation related to the transaction from any person other than the licensee’s client, principal firm, or firm, without the prior written consent of all parties to the transaction.
(b)Act in a transaction on the licensee’s own behalf, on behalf of the licensee’s immediate family if the firm is an individual, on behalf of the licensee’s firm, or on behalf of any organization or business entity in which the licensee has an interest, without the prior written consent of all parties to the transaction. For the purpose of complying with this paragraph, a licensee shall obtain the written consent in the offer to purchase, option, lease, or other transaction contract.
(c)Except as provided in s. 452.19
(a), refer, recommend, or suggest to a party to the transaction the services of an individual or entity from which the licensee may receive compensation for a referral or in which the licensee has an interest, unless the licensee has disclosed in writing the fact that the licensee may receive compensation or has disclosed in writing an interest in the individual or entity providing the services.
Effective date note NOTE: Par.
(c)is shown as amended eff. 1-1-27 by 2025 Wis. Act 69 . Prior to 1-1-27 it reads:
Effective date text
(c)Except as provided in s. 452.19 (1), refer, recommend, or suggest to a party to the transaction the services of an individual or entity from which the licensee may receive compensation for a referral or in which the licensee has an interest, unless the licensee has disclosed in writing the fact that the licensee may receive compensation or has disclosed in writing an interest in the individual or entity providing the services.
(d)Negotiate the sale, exchange, purchase, or rental of personal property unless related to the transaction. The licensee may use a form approved by the board under s. 452.05
(b)for the conveyance of the seller’s interest in the personal property. In this paragraph, “use a form” has the meaning given in s. 452.40
(a).
(4)Subagent’s duties.
(a)A subagent owes all parties to whom the subagent is providing brokerage services in a transaction the duties specified in sub.
(1)but does not owe the clients of the principal firm the duties under sub.
(2).
(b)A subagent may not do any of the following:
1. Place the subagent’s interests ahead of the interests of the clients of the principal firm in the transaction in which the subagent has been engaged by the principal firm.
2. Provide advice or opinions to parties in the transaction if providing the advice or opinions is contrary to the interests of the clients of the principal firm in the transaction in which the subagent has been engaged by the principal firm, unless required by law.
(4m)Duties and prohibitions; application to licensees.
(a)Subject to par.
(d), a firm’s duties under sub.
(1)extend to each licensee associated with that firm, and each licensee associated with a firm owes the same duties to a party that the firm owes to that party under sub.
(1).
(b)Except as provided in s. 452.134
(b)and subject to par.
(d), a firm’s duties under sub.
(2)extend to each licensee associated with that firm, and each licensee associated with a firm owes the same duties to a client of the firm that the firm owes to that client under sub.
(2).
1. Subject to par.
(d), a subagent’s duties under sub.
(a)extend to each licensee associated with that subagent, and each licensee associated with a subagent owes the same duties to a party that the subagent owes to that party under sub.
(a).
2. Subject to par.
(d), the prohibitions that apply to a subagent under sub.
(b)extend to each licensee associated with that subagent, and no licensee associated with a subagent may take any action that the subagent is prohibited from taking under sub.
(b).
★   the supreme law of the land   ★
Don't Tread on Me
E Pluribus Unum — out of many, one

"If you don't know your rights, you don't have any."

Marginalia · a citizen's law index
A research desk, not legal advice. Always read the cited source before relying on a summary.
Questions or an issue? support@self-law.org
disclaimerMarginalia is a research index, not a law firm. Nothing on this site is legal, tax, or financial advice and no attorney–client relationship is formed by using it. Statutes, regulations, and case law change; summaries, search results, AI output, and member posts may be incomplete, out of date, or wrong. Any interpretation drawn from material on this site should be validated by a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before you act on it.