Real Estate Network: Purpose and Scope

The National Landlord Tenant Authority operates as a structured public reference provider network covering the landlord-tenant service sector across all 50 US states. This page defines the scope of providers maintained within the network, explains how the provider network relates to broader real estate reference resources, and establishes the classification standards applied to each entry. Professionals, researchers, and service seekers navigating landlord-tenant legal, property management, or dispute resolution services will find the provider network organized by function, jurisdiction, and qualification criteria rather than by commercial promotion.


Relationship to other network resources

The landlord-tenant sector sits within a broader real estate service ecosystem that spans property sales, title and escrow, commercial leasing, property valuation, and residential rental management. This provider network focuses specifically on the rental housing relationship — the legal, operational, and dispute-resolution services that arise between property owners and tenants under residential lease agreements.

The Landlord Tenant Providers within this network are scoped to professionals and organizations operating directly within the landlord-tenant relationship: attorneys specializing in housing law, licensed property managers, tenant advocacy organizations, mediation services, and local housing authorities. Services addressing real estate transactions, mortgage origination, or commercial property operations fall outside this provider network's scope and are handled within separate reference properties in the same network.

For a broader orientation to how this resource fits within the national real estate reference landscape, the How to Use This Landlord Tenant Resource page provides structural context on navigation, search filtering, and jurisdictional lookup. The parent reference network — nationalrealestateauthority.com — covers the full vertical, with this provider network serving as the designated reference point for the rental housing subsector.

Regulatory oversight of the landlord-tenant sector is distributed across state and local governments. The US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) establishes federal fair housing standards under the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq.), which apply nationally. State-level landlord-tenant statutes — such as California's Civil Code §§ 1940–1954.06, Florida Statutes Chapter 83, or New York's Real Property Law — govern lease formation, security deposits, habitability standards, and eviction procedures within their respective jurisdictions. This provider network reflects that jurisdictional fragmentation by allowing filtering by state.


How to interpret providers

Each provider in the network represents a discrete service provider or organization operating within the landlord-tenant sector. Providers are not endorsements, ratings, or rankings. The provider network applies a classification schema with the following primary categories:

  1. Legal Services — Licensed attorneys and law firms with documented practice areas in landlord-tenant law, housing court representation, eviction defense, or lease dispute resolution. Licensing verification is cross-referenced against state bar association records, such as those maintained by the State Bar of California or the New York State Unified Court System attorney database.
  2. Property Management — Licensed property management companies and individual property managers holding state-issued licenses where required. The Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM) and the National Association of Residential Property Managers (NARPM) are recognized credentialing bodies in this category.
  3. Tenant Advocacy and Housing Counseling — Nonprofit organizations, legal aid societies, and HUD-approved housing counseling agencies (as verified in HUD's official housing counselor locator under 12 U.S.C. § 1701x).
  4. Mediation and Dispute Resolution — Certified mediators and community dispute resolution centers handling landlord-tenant conflicts outside formal court proceedings. The Association for Conflict Resolution (ACR) maintains professional standards applicable to practitioners in this category.
  5. Local Housing Authorities — Public agencies administering Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher programs and public housing under the oversight of HUD's Office of Public and Indian Housing.

A provider's category determines which qualification fields are displayed. Legal services providers display bar admission state and license number fields. Property management providers display state license type and issuing agency. Housing authority providers display the Public Housing Authority (PHA) code assigned by HUD.

Contrast between legal services and tenant advocacy providers is deliberate: legal services providers are licensed professionals who may represent parties in adversarial proceedings; tenant advocacy organizations are typically nonprofit entities providing information, counseling, or systemic advocacy rather than direct legal representation in a licensed capacity.


Purpose of this provider network

The provider network exists to reduce the friction associated with identifying qualified, jurisdiction-appropriate service providers in a sector defined by fragmented state regulation and high-stakes disputes. Landlord-tenant matters generate approximately 3.6 million eviction filings per year in the United States, according to the Eviction Lab at Princeton University, making access to legal and housing services a high-demand, high-consequence navigation problem.

No single federal licensing framework governs landlord-tenant service providers. Property managers are licensed in 43 states but face no uniform national standard; attorneys are regulated by 50 separate state bars; housing counseling agencies are approved under a federal program administered by HUD but operating through local nonprofits. The provider network's structure reflects this complexity by organizing providers under both service type and state jurisdiction.

The Landlord Tenant Provider Network Purpose and Scope classification framework is maintained as a reference standard, not as a real-time regulatory database. Licensing status, disciplinary records, and organizational standing must be independently verified through the issuing agency or bar association.


What is included

The provider network covers the following service and organizational types within the US landlord-tenant sector:

The provider network does not include real estate brokerages, mortgage lenders, title companies, short-term rental platforms, or commercial property managers whose primary practice falls outside residential lease relationships. Providers are indexed by state, primary service category, and, where applicable, county or metropolitan area for the 20 largest US metropolitan statistical areas as defined by the US Census Bureau.

References