The Fair Housing Act (42 USC 3601-3619) prohibits advertising that indicates preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin. This applies to every page on your real estate website—not just property listings.
What this means for SEO content:
- Meta descriptions and title tags cannot contain phrases like "perfect for young professionals" (familial status), "close to [specific religious institution]" as a selling point (religion), or "exclusive neighborhood" in contexts that imply demographic exclusion
- Neighborhood pages are the highest-risk content type. Describing school quality, demographic composition, or "character" of areas requires careful language review
- Image alt text used for SEO should describe properties, not idealized occupants
- Blog content about "best neighborhoods for families" or similar topics needs compliance review before publication
HUD's advertising guidelines provide specific examples of prohibited phrases. Many terms that seem neutral—"walking distance to synagogue," "near country club," "mature community"—have triggered enforcement actions.
Note: This is educational content about regulatory frameworks. Consult a real estate attorney for guidance on specific content decisions. Fair Housing enforcement varies by jurisdiction and evolves through case law.