A post-edit IDX check for cleaner public listing updates
May 26, 2026
8 min read
A price change feels finished when someone clicks save.
The seller has agreed. The agent has updated the source record. The team can see the new number internally. Everyone moves on to the next call.
Then the seller texts an hour later: “Why does the old price still show online?”
That is usually when teams find the gap. They have MLS access, an IDX display, maybe a website vendor, and a few people who know who to call when something breaks. What they often lack is a small routine for checking whether a public-facing edit has landed where buyers, sellers, and other agents will see it.
For a newer agent, IDX is the system that lets brokers and agents display MLS listing information on approved websites. NAR’s Internet Data Exchange policy describes IDX as limited electronic display of listings by other MLS participants. RESO’s Web API guidance explains the data transport side, but the source, permissions, and local MLS rules still matter.
That means a post-edit check is not busywork. It connects “we changed the listing” with “the public version now tells the right story”.

Treat the edit as unfinished until someone checks the display
Most teams slow down before a listing goes live. The weak spot is the normal Tuesday edit:
- Price reduced after a vendor call.
- Status moved from active to pending.
- Public remarks tightened after a broker review.
- A photo order changed because the lead image was weak.
- Map pin or address display adjusted.
- Attribution details updated after a local MLS rule check.
Each one can create a public mismatch if the team assumes the feed, website, map card, and listing detail page all updated on the same clock.
Good MLS listing tools move data. Good team habits catch the awkward bits around the data: the seller who needs a note, the lead image that still looks wrong, the search card that did not refresh with the detail page.
The rule is simple: every public-facing listing edit needs an owner, an expected destination, and a next check time.
The 15-minute post-edit check
Use this after any price, status, public remarks, address/map, attribution, or media edit.
| Minute | Check | What to record |
|---|---|---|
| 0-2 | Name the change | Field changed, old value, new value, who approved it |
| 2-4 | Confirm source save | MLS/source record updated, timestamp, editor |
| 4-7 | Check the primary public page | Correct price/status/remarks/media on the listing detail page |
| 7-9 | Check the small displays | Search card, map card, saved-search email preview if available |
| 9-11 | Check attribution and display notes | Listing broker/agent credit, required wording, seller display instruction |
| 11-13 | Tell the seller what changed | Short note sent or scheduled, especially for price/status changes |
| 13-15 | Set the next check | Owner, time, escalation point if the display has not caught up |
This does not mean every change must be visible everywhere within 15 minutes. Many systems refresh on their own timing, and local MLS and vendor arrangements vary. The point is to put a name and time against the gap.
If the public display has not caught up, record:
- What changed.
- Which public destination was checked.
- What still looks wrong.
- Who owns the next check.
- When the team will escalate to MLS, website, or vendor support.
Without that last line, “quick check later” can become a seller complaint and then a group chat.
Check the places buyers actually notice
Agents often check the full listing page and stop. Buyers do not always start there. A stale price can appear on a search card before the listing page. A wrong lead image can show in a map result. Attribution can be visible in one display and buried in another.
For each edit type, check the display most likely to create a bad conversation.
| Edit type | First public check | Second check |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Listing detail page | Search result card |
| Status | Search result card | Detail page and any “featured listing” area |
| Public remarks | Detail page | Mobile view if your IDX display shortens text |
| Media order | Lead image on search card | Full gallery order |
| Address or map setting | Map card | Detail page address block |
| Attribution | Detail page credit area | Search card or compact display |
The California Regional MLS IDX Standards of Practice are a useful reminder that display details such as attribution and listing credit can be specific. Your local MLS rules govern your exact obligations, so the habit should be localised.
The operating principle still travels: check the public places where that edited field appears.

Keep seller communication separate from technical checking
The agent tells the seller, “I’ve changed the price.” The seller hears, “The market can now see the new price.”
Those are not always the same thing.
Use clearer language:
| Situation | Better seller note |
|---|---|
| Source record saved, public display not checked yet | “The price change has been entered. I am checking the public display now.” |
| Public page correct, search card still catching up | “The listing page now shows the new price. I am doing one more check on the search results display.” |
| Vendor or MLS support needed | “The source record is correct, but one public display has not updated. I have logged it for support and will update you at 3pm.” |
| Media order changed | “The approved photo order has been updated. I am checking the lead image and gallery display now.” |
This protects trust. Sellers rarely expect you to control every system instantly. They do expect you to know what happened and what is still being checked.
Build the check into the listing record
The best IDX solutions still need agency discipline around change control. In AvaroAI, we think about this as part of the listing lifecycle.
A public-facing edit should sit on the listing record beside the property data, media, files, and related tasks. The useful fields are plain:
- Edit type: price, status, remarks, media, address/map, attribution, other.
- Source changed by.
- Approval source: seller, broker, listing agent, admin, other.
- Public destinations to check.
- Seller update needed: yes or no.
- Current display state: not checked, correct, partial, wrong, escalated.
- Next check owner and time.
- Closure note.
That is the minimum memory a team needs when a seller calls, a colleague is out, or a broker asks whether the public record caught up.
AvaroAI’s task and event management is built around this idea: the task should stay attached to the listing, contact, or event that explains why it exists. “Check IDX” is weak. “Confirm pending status visible after 10:20am MLS edit” gives someone a real job.
The same applies to photos. If the approved internal gallery says the exterior twilight shot should lead, but the IDX card still shows the kitchen, the team needs a record of who owns the fix.
Use an escalation rule before frustration sets in
Every team needs a simple escalation rule because refresh times vary. Try this:
| If this happens | Do this |
|---|---|
| Source record is wrong | Fix source first. |
| Source is correct but no public check has happened | Assign a check owner and time. |
| Detail page is correct but card or map is stale | Record partial display and set a second check. |
| Seller has already seen the mismatch | Send a plain status note before chasing support. |
| Same mismatch remains after the team’s normal wait window | Escalate with source screenshot, public screenshot, edit timestamp, listing ID, and affected URL. |
| Attribution or required display wording looks wrong | Escalate sooner and involve the broker or MLS contact according to local rules. |
The exact wait window should be local. If you are comparing IDX integration for Realtors or reviewing MLS data feed software, ask about refresh behaviour and support paths.
Do not mistake that answer for the whole operating system. Your team still needs the post-edit habit.

The habit to start tomorrow
Pick one edit type first. Price changes are usually best because sellers notice them quickly and buyers act on them.
For the next 5 price changes, require:
- Source edit timestamp.
- Public listing page check.
- Search card or map card check.
- Seller confirmation note.
Do that before adding status, remarks, photos, attribution, and map checks. The aim is to stop public listing edits from living in someone’s memory.
A 15-minute check gives the team a shared answer to the question sellers actually ask: “Has the change gone through?”
When the answer is “yes”, you can say it cleanly. When the answer is “not everywhere yet”, you can say what is being checked, who owns it, and when the next update is coming.
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