What happened
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield announced a $7 million settlement with LivCor, LLC, resolving allegations that the property-management company used RealPage software to coordinate apartment rents with rivals in an ongoing antitrust case.
The deal, which remains subject to court approval, requires LivCor to pay $7 million to the states and to stop using revenue-management software that relies on competitors' nonpublic pricing data to generate rent recommendations, according to the Oregon DOJ announcement. The agency said LivCor has stopped using RealPage software and must refrain from sharing competitively sensitive pricing information with rival landlords or property managers, establish an antitrust compliance and training program, accept a monitor in some circumstances and cooperate with the states' ongoing case.
The announcement frames the case as an algorithmic-pricing antitrust matter, alleging that RealPage's models recommended rent increases using competitively sensitive information supplied by landlords who understood their nonpublic data would be used to price competitors' units as well as their own. Oregon said LivCor managed about 1,649 multifamily rental properties in the state that used RealPage pricing software.
The LivCor deal is the states' second settlement in the litigation, following a $7 million settlement with Greystar announced in November 2025. Litigation remains pending against RealPage and property-management defendants Camden, Pinnacle and Willow Bridge, according to the Oregon DOJ release.
The release says the settlement was secured by attorneys general from Oregon, North Carolina, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Tennessee. The packet does not include the complaint, proposed consent decree, docket materials or any statement from LivCor or RealPage, so those documents and responses should be obtained before final publication.