The Limits of AI in Real Estate: Why Buyers and Sellers Still Need an Experienced Team

Artificial intelligence is everywhere right now — drafting contracts, answering questions, analyzing data, even “explaining” legal documents in seconds. It’s no surprise that buyers and sellers are starting to wonder:

Do I really need a lawyer or a full real estate team if AI can just tell me the answer?

The short answer: AI can be helpful — but it has real limits. And in real estate, those limits can be expensive.


AI Is a Tool. It Is Not Judgment.

AI excels at pulling together general information:

  • Explaining common contract clauses
  • Summarizing inspection reports
  • Flagging typical timelines or steps in a transaction

What AI cannot reliably do is apply judgment — the kind that comes from handling hundreds (or thousands) of real deals, across different municipalities, personalities, and risk profiles. AI cannot provide legal advice for your specific circumstances, nor can it replace an experienced agent’s input.

Real estate transactions are not plug-and-play. They are deeply contextual:

  • Local custom matters
  • Municipal rules matter
  • The people involved matter

AI does not know when something that looks “standard” is actually a red flag.


Real Estate Is Local — AI Is General

AI pulls from broad datasets. Real estate law and practice are intensely local.

A clause that is routine in one county can be problematic in another. A practice that works fine in one transaction can be disastrous in a slightly different scenario.

An experienced real estate attorney or agent knows:

  • Which issues routinely derail deals in your area
  • Which risks are theoretical versus real
  • When a small change now avoids a major problem later

AI can’t sit across the table from a local lender, municipal official, or opposing counsel and say, “I’ve seen this before — here’s how it actually plays out.”


AI Doesn’t Bear the Risk — You Do

One of the most important differences is this:

AI has no accountability.

If an AI-generated answer turns out to be wrong:

  • You can’t sue it
  • It doesn’t carry malpractice insurance
  • It doesn’t fix the problem

Your real estate team does.

Experienced professionals:

  • Stand behind their advice
  • Carry professional responsibility
  • Are invested in the outcome of your transaction

That accountability matters when you are involved in one of life’s largest personal transaction. six or seven figures are on the line.


Contracts Don’t Fail on the Obvious Issues

Most real estate problems don’t arise from the obvious, headline issues. They come from:

  • Timing misalignments
  • Ambiguous language
  • Unspoken assumptions
  • Unusual property history
  • Personality conflicts that escalate

AI is very good at answering the question you ask.
It is not good at identifying the question you didn’t realize you needed to ask.

That’s where experience shows up.


The Real Risk: False Confidence

Perhaps the biggest danger of relying too heavily on AI is false confidence.

AI answers are often:

  • Polished
  • Confident
  • Definitive-sounding

But real estate law is full of:

  • “It depends”
  • Exceptions
  • Strategic choices, not just correct answers

An experienced real estate team knows when certainty is an illusion — and when slowing down or pushing back is the smartest move.


The Best Use of AI in Real Estate

AI can be valuable when used correctly:

  • As a starting point for questions
  • To help clients understand terminology
  • To organize information

But it works best alongside an experienced real estate team — not instead of one.

Think of AI as a calculator. Helpful? Absolutely.
But you still want an expert who knows what to calculate — and why.


Bottom Line

AI is changing real estate, and that’s not a bad thing. But buying or selling property is still a legal, financial, and emotional transaction where judgment, experience, and accountability matter.

The smartest buyers and sellers don’t choose between AI or professionals.
They use AI with a trusted real estate team who knows how to see what the technology can’t.


23andMe Files for Bankruptcy—And Millions of Users’ DNA Data May Be Up for Sale

What Happened?

In a chilling turn of events, genetic testing giant 23andMe files for Chapter 11, prompting fears that your most personal data—your DNA—could be up for grabs.


DNA as a Commodity?

Genetic testing company 23andMe has officially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, marking a dramatic fall for a company once synonymous with at-home DNA analysis. The bankruptcy filing, made public on Sunday, indicates the company is now courting bidders as it attempts to restructure.

This development raises serious concerns: With more than 14 million users worldwide, 23andMe holds one of the largest private genetic databases ever created. That data—your DNA—may now be considered a corporate asset.

While 23andMe has long promised it won’t sell personally identifiable information without consent, bankruptcy courts can override contracts in certain cases. That means privacy pledges made in good faith may no longer be enforceable.


Privacy Advocates Sound the Alarm

Digital rights organizations and privacy experts are voicing strong concerns about what happens next.

“This isn’t just user data—it’s genetic blueprints,” one privacy attorney noted. “Selling that data, even in anonymized form, could expose people to discrimination, privacy violations, or worse.”

And they’re not wrong. Even so-called “anonymized” DNA data can often be de-anonymized, especially when cross-referenced with other public databases. This opens the door for potential buyers—whether biotech firms, insurance companies, or foreign entities—to gain access to data far more personal than your search history or online behavior.


What Can I Do to Protect My Data?

If you’re a 23andMe user, you’re probably wondering: Can I still do anything to protect my DNA data?

The answer is yes—you can take action to remove your data from their system. But time may be of the essence.


🧬 Step-by-Step: How to Delete Your Data from 23andMe

  1. Log into your account
    Visit https://you.23andme.com and sign in.
  2. Go to Account Settings
    Click your profile image in the top-right corner, then choose Settings.
  3. Scroll to “Delete Your Data & Account”
    At the bottom of the page under Account, click on “Delete Your Data” or “Delete Account”.
  4. Choose What to Delete
    You’ll be prompted to:
  • Delete just your genetic data
  • Or delete your entire account and genetic data Select “Delete my account and all data.”
  1. Confirm Your Decision
    You’ll need to re-enter your password and confirm that this action is permanent and irreversible.
  2. Wait for Confirmation
    23andMe says data deletion may take up to 30 days. If your data was previously shared for research, deletion from third parties may not be possible.

A Cautionary Tale in the Age of Big Data

The 23andMe bankruptcy case serves as a warning for all of us: In a world where data is currency, your most personal information—your DNA—is the ultimate high-value asset.

When we share this kind of data with private companies, even for well-meaning reasons like health insights or ancestry tracking, we must also be prepared for the risks—especially when those companies face financial collapse.

For those who once swabbed their cheeks in search of family roots or genetic insight, the message is clear: now is the time to decide how much of yourself you want to leave behind.