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How MLS Works in Canada: The Multiple Listing Service Explained (2026)

Updated

The Multiple Listing Service is the backbone of Canadian real estate. Understanding how it works — and its limitations — helps you make better decisions whether you are buying, selling, or investing.

How MLS works

The structure

LevelOrganizationRole
NationalCREA (Canadian Real Estate Association)Operates realtor.ca, owns MLS® trademark, sets national standards
RegionalLocal real estate boards (TRREB, REBGV, CREB, etc.)Operate local MLS systems, set local rules
BrokerageIndividual brokerages (Re/Max, Royal LePage, etc.)Access MLS through board membership
AgentIndividual licensed agentsInput listings, search for clients, negotiate deals

The listing process

  1. Seller signs a listing agreement with an agent
  2. Agent enters the property details into the local MLS system
  3. Listing is visible to all member agents within the board (and often shared across boards)
  4. Listing is syndicated to realtor.ca (public view)
  5. Buyer agents search MLS on behalf of their clients
  6. Showings, offers, and negotiations happen through the agents
  7. When the property sells, the sale data is recorded in MLS

Major real estate boards in Canada

BoardRegionAbbreviation
Toronto Regional Real Estate BoardGTA and surrounding areasTRREB
Real Estate Board of Greater VancouverMetro VancouverREBGV
Calgary Real Estate BoardCalgary and areaCREB
Ottawa Real Estate BoardOttawa and areaOREB
Greater Montreal Real Estate BoardMontreal and areaAPCIQ (CIGM)
Realtors Association of EdmontonEdmonton and areaRAE
Winnipeg Regional Real Estate BoardWinnipeg and areaWRREB
Nova Scotia Association of REALTORSNova ScotiaNSAR

Types of MLS listings

Listing TypeDescriptionWho Sees It
Exclusive listingListed on MLS, marketed broadlyAll agents and public (via realtor.ca)
Mere posting / flat-feeListed on MLS by flat-fee service, owner handles saleAll agents and public — but with limited agent involvement
Pocket listing / exclusiveNot on MLS — marketed privately by the listing agentOnly the listing agent’s network
Assignment salePre-construction unit being sold before closingListed on MLS or marketed privately

What MLS data includes

Public view (realtor.ca)

DataAvailable?
Listing price
Property photos
Property description
Number of bedrooms / bathrooms
Square footage (if provided)
Property type and style
Listing date
Property tax amount
DOM (Days on Market)
Agent contact info

Agent-only view (full MLS)

DataAvailable?
Everything above
Sold prices and sold dates✅ (most boards)
Agent remarks (private notes)
Showing instructions
Commission offered to buyer’s agent
Property history (relist, price changes)
CDOM (Cumulative Days on Market)
Room dimensions (detailed)
Legal description and PIN

Listing without an agent (flat-fee MLS)

How flat-fee MLS works

  1. You pay an upfront fee to a flat-fee service ($500–$2,000)
  2. They post your listing on MLS with your photos and description
  3. Your listing appears on realtor.ca and agent searches
  4. You handle all showings, open houses, and inquiries
  5. You negotiate directly with buyer agents or buyers
  6. You still offer a commission to the buyer’s agent (2%–2.5% is standard)
  7. You hire your own real estate lawyer for the paperwork

Flat-fee MLS pros and cons

ProsCons
Save listing agent commission (2%–2.5%)You handle all showings and inquiries
Full MLS exposureNo agent guidance on pricing, staging, or marketing
Control over the sale processMay get fewer showings (some agents avoid flat-fee listings)
Cost savings of $10,000–$25,000+No one negotiating on your behalf
Ideal for experienced sellersRisk of underpricing or overpricing

Cost comparison

ServiceListing CommissionBuyer Agent CommissionTotal on $700,000 Home
Full-service agent2.5% ($17,500)2.5% ($17,500)$35,000 + HST
Discount agent1.0% ($7,000)2.5% ($17,500)$24,500 + HST
Flat-fee MLS$1,000 (flat)2.5% ($17,500)$18,500 + HST
Private sale (no MLS)$0$0$0 (but limited exposure)

Data reciprocity: how boards share listings

Most Canadian real estate boards share data through data distribution agreements:

FeatureDetails
DDF (Data Distribution Facility)CREA’s system that syndicates listings to realtor.ca and third-party websites
IDX (Internet Data Exchange)Allows agents to display other agents’ listings on their own websites
Cross-board sharingSome boards share listings — e.g., TRREB listings may appear in kitchener boards
National coverageNot all boards participate in full data sharing — some regional gaps exist

Sold data access by province

ProvincePublic Access to Sold PricesHow to Access
OntarioYes (through Land Registry)Teranet / OnLand portal (fee per search) or through your agent
British ColumbiaPartial (BC Assessment shows assessed values; agents have sold data)BC Assessment website or through agent
AlbertaThrough agentsAsk your REALTOR® or search SPIN2 (title searches)
QuebecYes (through JLR / Registre foncier)JLR portal or through your courtier (agent)
ManitobaThrough agentsContact your REALTOR®
SaskatchewanThrough agentsContact your REALTOR®
Atlantic provincesVariesThrough agents or provincial property registries

MLS® rules and regulations

RuleDetails
MLS® is a trademarkOwned by CREA — only CREA members can use the MLS® trademark and system
CooperationListing agents must offer to cooperate with buyer agents (this is a core MLS principle)
AccuracyListing agents are responsible for accuracy of property information
Commission disclosureCommission offered to buyer agents is disclosed in the MLS system
Days on MarketMust be accurately reported — reset rules vary by board
Photo standardsBoards set minimum photo requirements and quality standards

How MLS is evolving

TrendWhat Is Changing
Open dataIncreasing pressure to make sold data publicly accessible
Commission transparencyNew rules requiring clearer disclosure of commission structures
TechnologyAI-powered search, virtual tours, 3D scans becoming standard
CompetitionFlat-fee and discount services growing market share
Private listingsCREA considering rules about mandatory MLS listing vs pocket listings
US influenceNAR settlement ripple effects could influence Canadian commission practices
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