Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 42— - INTERSTATE LAND SALES › § 1702
Lists which kinds of land sales or leases do not have to follow the chapter’s rules, as long as the sale was not set up to dodge the law. It excludes eight main types: sales in tiny subdivisions with fewer than 25 lots; sales of land that already has a building or where the seller promises to build one within 2 years; sales of mortgage notes secured by real estate; sales of securities by a real estate investment trust; sales by any government; cemetery lots; sales to people who buy lots to build or resell them as part of their business; and sales of land zoned or restricted for industrial or commercial use when several conditions are met (local access is approved, the buyer is a business entity and has its own representative, the buyer gives a written statement about intended use or resale, and a title insurance policy or title opinion is issued or the buyer waives that requirement). The rules that require registration and disclosure do not apply in many specific smaller or local situations, if the sale is not meant to evade the law. Examples include subdivisions with fewer than 100 lots; cases where no more than 12 lots are sold in a 12‑month period; noncontiguous parts of a subdivision with no more than 20 lots when the buyer inspects the lot in person; lots of at least 20 acres; lots inside a local government that enforces development standards and that meet several conditions (roads, utilities, title, buyer inspection, no promotional gifts, and warranty or deed delivery within 180 days); homesites for mobile homes sold under paired contracts with escrow and a 2‑year completion rule; sales by developers that are purely within one state when the lot is free of liens, the buyer inspects the lot, the contract shows who will finish roads and utilities and when, the buyer gets cost estimates for utilities, and the buyer has a nonwaivable right to cancel until midnight of the seventh day after signing; sales in subdivisions with fewer than 300 lots when the buyer lives in the same metropolitan area and other protective steps are followed; and condominium unit sales that do not fall under the earlier exemptions. The Director of the agency can also exempt other small or limited offerings when enforcement is not needed to protect buyers. Defined term: Condominium unit — a unit that on sale gives the owner sole ownership of the unit, an undivided share of common areas, and is an improved lot.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 1702
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73