Quick Answer: Your Nashville buyer's agent must disclose any prior business relationships, financial arrangements, or personal connections with the listing agent before you submit an offer. This includes same-brokerage arrangements, repeat transaction partnerships, personal relationships, and referral fees. Tennessee law requires this transparency as part of your agent's fiduciary duty to represent your interests objectively.
A Nashville buyer's agent is required to disclose any prior business relationships, financial arrangements, or personal connections with a listing agent that could influence their ability to represent your interests objectively. Agent-to-agent disclosure is a fiduciary obligation — meaning your agent owes you this transparency before you ever write an offer. This matters whether you're purchasing a starter home in Madison or a luxury property in Belle Meade, and it's especially relevant in 2026 as Nashville's market continues to attract buyers who need full confidence in their representation.
A disclosable relationship is any connection between your buyer's agent and the listing agent that a reasonable person would want to know about before relying on their agent's advice. This goes beyond the obvious scenarios.
Same brokerage. If both agents work under the same brokerage, Tennessee law requires disclosure. This is called designated agency, and it means two agents within one firm represent opposite sides of the same transaction. Your agent still owes you loyalty, but the brokerage itself becomes neutral.
Frequent transaction partners. Some agents do repeat business together — referring clients back and forth, co-listing properties, or consistently showing each other's listings. A pattern of mutual business creates an incentive to maintain the relationship, which can subtly affect how hard your agent negotiates on your behalf.
Personal relationships. Family ties, close friendships, romantic relationships, or shared business ventures outside real estate all qualify. If your buyer's agent and the listing agent vacation together, that's something you deserve to know before they negotiate your inspection repair requests.
Financial arrangements. Referral fees, shared marketing costs, or co-investment in properties should be disclosed. Any money flowing between agents — even indirectly — creates a potential conflict.
Yes. Tennessee's real estate licensing laws, governed by the Tennessee Real Estate Commission (TREC), require licensees to disclose material facts and conflicts of interest. A relationship with the opposing agent qualifies when it could reasonably affect the agent's judgment or loyalty.
The Tennessee Residential Property Disclosure Act focuses primarily on property condition, but TREC's broader licensing standards impose a duty of honesty and disclosure on all licensees. Your buyer's agent must also comply with fiduciary duties outlined in your buyer representation agreement — specifically the duties of loyalty, disclosure, and obedience.
In 2026, with updated buyer representation agreements now standard across Tennessee following industry-wide settlement changes, these obligations are more explicit than they've ever been. Your signed agreement should spell out what your agent owes you, and honest disclosure of relationships with other agents sits squarely within that framework.
They can, but only with your informed consent. Designated agency allows two agents within the same brokerage to represent the buyer and seller separately. The managing broker steps back from advising either side directly.
This arrangement is common in Nashville. Large brokerages with dozens of agents naturally end up on both sides of transactions, especially in active neighborhoods like East Nashville, Sylvan Park, or 12South where inventory moves quickly.
The key question to ask: "Will you still advocate aggressively for my price and terms, even though the listing agent is your colleague?" A confident, competent agent will say yes and explain exactly how they'll maintain that separation. If they hesitate or get vague, that tells you something.
At arrt of Real Estate, our work across residential sales, investment advisory, and off-market acquisitions means we understand the dynamics that shape agent-to-agent negotiations. We believe transparency isn't a checkbox — it's a competitive advantage for the buyer.
Before your agent submits an offer on any Nashville property, these questions protect your position:
"Do you know the listing agent personally or professionally?" Direct and simple. You're looking for a straight answer.
"Have you done deals together before?" Repeat business isn't automatically bad, but you need to know about it. An agent who's closed multiple transactions with the same listing agent may have relationship dynamics that influence negotiation.
"Are there any financial arrangements between you and the listing agent or their brokerage?" This covers referral fees, shared marketing, or co-investment situations.
"If there's a conflict, how will you handle it?" The best agents have a clear protocol. They'll explain how they separate personal rapport from professional obligation.
Disclosure should happen at two specific points:
When you sign your buyer representation agreement. Your agent should outline their general disclosure practices and confirm they'll flag any conflicts as they arise.
Before you submit an offer on a specific property. Once you've identified a home and your agent knows who represents the seller, any existing relationship needs to come to the surface immediately — not after inspections, not at closing, and certainly not after you've waived contingencies.
A common mistake is assuming disclosure only matters when something feels wrong. It matters most when everything feels fine, because that's when undisclosed conflicts do the most damage to your negotiating leverage without you ever realizing it.
Nashville's market in summer 2026 still rewards buyers who move decisively but negotiate strategically. Your agent's transparency about their professional network isn't just an ethical requirement — it's the foundation of trust that lets you make confident decisions on properties worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Strategic Real Estate For Nashville And Middle Tennessee.
Arrt of Real Estate is a Nashville-based brokerage built on high standards, transparency, and results.
Brentwood, Tennessee
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