Fair Housing
An Oklahoma real estate agent who shows a buyer properties only in integrated neighborhoods when the buyer asked to see all available properties in their price range is engaging in:
AResponsible community development
BSteering, which is an illegal fair housing violation✓ Correct
CProper market segmentation
DStandard buyer consultation practice
Explanation
Steering — limiting a buyer's property search to specific neighborhoods based on the buyer's race or the racial composition of neighborhoods — is an illegal fair housing violation even if the agent believes they are acting in the buyer's interests.
Related Oklahoma Fair Housing Questions
- Which of the following is NOT considered a reasonable accommodation under the Fair Housing Act?
- Which of the following is the BEST example of a reasonable housing accommodation for a person with PTSD in Oklahoma?
- An Oklahoma real estate agent who receives a call from a prospective buyer and takes note of the person's accent before telling them there are no available homes matching their criteria — despite having several — is potentially:
- An Oklahoma landlord who refuses to allow a tenant with a disability to keep a service animal in a no-pets building is most likely:
- A Tulsa real estate agent who consistently shows African-American clients only homes in predominantly minority neighborhoods, even when they request to see homes in integrated or predominantly white areas, is:
- A property manager in Oklahoma refuses to rent to a family because they have three children, citing 'overcrowding' for a three-bedroom unit. This could be:
- An Oklahoma mortgage lender's practice of refusing to make loans in certain neighborhoods based on racial composition — regardless of individual applicants' creditworthiness — is called:
- An Oklahoma housing development receives federal HOME or CDBG funding. The use of federal funds means the development must comply with:
Practice More Oklahoma Real Estate Questions
1,500+ questions covering all exam topics. Start free — no signup required.
Take the Free Oklahoma Quiz →