What’s the Realtor Commission in Montana?
The average realtor commission in Montana is 5.67%. It's critical to understand what the commission is and what's happening...
Why It Matters
Relevant to real estate professionals operating in MT.
Welcome to your daily briefing on real estate developments in Montana. Today we're covering 6 key stories including updates on montana real estate headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.
3 stories
The average realtor commission in Montana is 5.67%. It's critical to understand what the commission is and what's happening...
Relevant to real estate professionals operating in MT.
Check property records in Montana, find owner info, search permits & purchase history, lookup up deed, tax, loan and lien records and much more.
Relevant to real estate professionals operating in MT.
Montana Gallatin Public Records.
Relevant to real estate professionals operating in MT.
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3 stories
A growing number of MT cities require landlords to register rental properties, pass periodic inspections, and pay an annual fee. Penalties for unlicensed operation typically include fines per day and, in some cases, retroactive return of collected rent. The rules apply to single-unit landlords, not just large operators.
Enforcement has shifted from complaint-driven to data-matching against utility and property-tax records. Many landlords discover they were non-compliant when they receive a back-fines notice years after acquiring the property.
In tight markets, sellers compress diligence windows from 30 days to 7-10. The items that survive a compressed window are the ones with hard external dependencies — title work, survey, environmental Phase I — because they cannot be parallelized further. Inspections and financing contingencies tend to get squeezed first.
Buyers who try to do the same diligence in 1/3 the time produce lower-quality findings and end up with surprises at closing. Knowing what cannot be compressed is the difference between a clean close and a re-trade.
A 1031 like-kind exchange has three hard clocks: the 45-day identification window, the 180-day close window, and the same-taxpayer rule (the entity selling and buying must match). Missing any one of these collapses the deferral, exposing the full gain to tax. The most-missed is the same-taxpayer rule when LLCs change membership mid-exchange.
The tax exposure on a busted exchange is the full long-term capital gain plus depreciation recapture — often 25-30% of the basis difference. Process discipline is the only protection.
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