
Cold calling is one of the most effective lead generation strategies for real estate investors — but it comes with legal risks that, if ignored, can cost your business thousands of dollars per call. The Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) is the federal law governing how, when, and to whom you can place outbound calls. Violating it is not a matter of if you get caught — it’s when.
This guide gives you a plain-English breakdown of what TCPA compliance means for real estate cold calling in 2025, what the updated FCC rules mean for your campaigns, and how to protect your investing business.
| 💡 Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for guidance specific to your situation. |
The Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) is a federal law enacted in 1991 and enforced by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). It restricts telemarketing calls, auto-dialed calls, prerecorded messages, and text messages to consumers.
For real estate investors making cold calls to homeowners, the TCPA is the primary legal framework you must understand. The FCC regularly updates its interpretations of the law. For the most current FCC guidance, visit the FCC’s official consumer page on unwanted calls.
The National DNC Registry is maintained by the FTC and contains numbers of consumers who have opted out of receiving telemarketing calls. You must scrub your list against it before dialing — and re-scrub every 31 days.
The TCPA restricts the use of Automatic Telephone Dialing Systems (ATDS) — commonly called autodialers or robodialers — for calling cell phones without prior express written consent from the recipient.
What qualifies as an ATDS is still a contested legal question following the 2021 Supreme Court ruling in Facebook v. Duguid. However, to be safe:
Federal TCPA rules allow calls only between 8:00 AM and 9:00 PM local time of the recipient. Many states have stricter rules. Always dial within the recipient’s time zone, not yours.
| 💡 If your list spans EST to PST, your calling window must respect each recipient’s local time. A call made at 9:30 AM EST to a California number is illegal — it’s 6:30 AM there. |
Several US states maintain their own Do Not Call registries that are separate from and stricter than the federal list. Key states real estate investors must watch:
The FCC finalized new one-to-one consent rules that took effect in January 2025. Key changes:
This update primarily affects marketing agencies and lead gen companies. For real estate investors making direct cold calls to property owners using public records data (not inbound leads), the consent rules are less impactful — but DNC compliance remains critical. Read the FCC’s full ruling at fcc.gov.
Before any call goes out, your list must be scrubbed against:
Every caller — whether in-house or a VA — must be trained on:
In the event of a dispute or lawsuit, you need documentation. Keep records of:
One of the safest ways to manage TCPA risk is to work with a cold calling provider that has compliance built into their operation. At vCallers, every campaign includes:
TCPA lawsuits are a booming industry. Class action attorneys actively monitor for mass violations. Here’s what’s at stake:
This is not theoretical. Real estate investors have been named in TCPA lawsuits. The compliance cost is a fraction of what one lawsuit can cost.
Cold calling done right is one of the best ROI activities in real estate investing. Cold calling done wrong can shut your business down. If you want a compliant, done-for-you cold calling operation, book a free strategy call with vCallers today.