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Texas Law of Agency/Statutory Rule Explanation

Intermediary Relationship Requirements

Last updated: |By Slate Azimuth Specialists
Direct Answer (BLUF)

A Texas broker may act as an intermediary to facilitate a transaction between a buyer and seller they represent.

Under TRELA §1101.559, a broker may act as an intermediary only with written consent from both parties. The broker must remain completely impartial unless they make official appointments.

TRELA §1101.559— Intermediary Requirements

Intermediary Relationship in Texas Real Estate

Texas outlawed standard common-law “Dual Agency” and replaced it entirely with the statutory Intermediary Relationship framework. Under TRELA, an intermediary relationship is the only legal mechanism for a single brokerage firm to represent both a buyer and a seller in the same transaction.

Why This Rule Exists

Dual agency created an inherent conflict of interest: an agent could not perform full fiduciary duties (such as loyalty and disclosure) to two opposing parties at once. The Intermediary framework solves this by establishing strict boundaries of neutrality, or by utilizing “Appointments” to ensure both parties receive active representation.

The Exam Trap

A major exam trap is the difference between Intermediary with and without appointments. If the broker sponsors only one sales agent (or acts as an individual broker), they cannot make appointments because an agent cannot be appointed to represent both sides. The single agent must act as intermediary without appointments, meaning they cannot advise or give opinions to either client.

Worked Texas Example

Scenario: Broker Jane of Houston Properties represents both the seller (Sam) and the buyer (Bill) under written representation agreements. She appoints Agent Alex to represent Sam, and Agent Brad to represent Bill. Outcome: This is “Intermediary with Appointments.” Agent Alex can legally advise Sam to hold firm on his price, and Agent Brad can advise Bill to request repairs. Broker Jane remains a neutral supervisor of the transaction.

Core Comparison Breakdown

Intermediary with AppointmentsIntermediary without Appointments
Requires at least two sponsored sales agentsCan be executed by a single sales agent or broker
Appointed agents can provide opinions and advice to their respective clientsNo advice or opinions can be given to either party
Broker remains a neutral supervisorAll associated agents must remain entirely neutral
RULE

Exam Tip

Texas does NOT allow Dual Agency. A broker must use the Intermediary framework if representing both parties. Any form of dual agency is illegal.
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