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Is Virtual Staging Legal in Kansas?

Yes — virtual staging is legal in Kansas. There is no Kansas statute that bans digitally staged listing photos, but agents are still bound by the state's real estate license law prohibitions on misrepresentation, by their local MLS rules, and (for REALTORS®) by Article 12 of the NAR Code of Ethics, which requires honest, true-picture advertising. The safe approach: always label altered photos as "virtually staged," never alter the physical condition of the property (don't remove stains, damage, power lines, or change finishes), and keep the original photos available for buyers.

Disclosure Requirements in Kansas

  • Disclose that photos are virtually staged — in the photo caption, on the image itself, or in the listing remarks (do all three for safety).
  • Only add or remove furniture and décor — never alter permanent features, hide defects, or change the apparent condition of the property.
  • Follow your local MLS rules on photo alteration; many MLSs require a "virtually staged" label directly on the image.
  • Keep the original, unaltered photos available in case a buyer, appraiser, or your MLS asks for them.
  • REALTORS® must comply with NAR Code of Ethics Article 12 (present a true picture in advertising).

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Misleading staged photos in Kansas can trigger license discipline for misrepresentation under the state's real estate license law, MLS fines or photo removal, and civil liability if a buyer relies on a deceptive image. California-style statutory disclosure rules (AB 723) may also influence future Kansas regulation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to disclose virtual staging in Kansas?

Yes. While Kansas has no virtual-staging-specific statute, license law prohibits misrepresentation, most MLSs require disclosure of altered photos, and the NAR Code of Ethics requires a "true picture" in advertising. Always label virtually staged photos.

Can I virtually remove damage or defects from listing photos in Kansas?

No. Removing stains, cracks, damage, or other physical defects misrepresents the property's condition and can constitute misrepresentation under Kansas license law regardless of any disclosure. Only add or remove furniture and décor.

What's the best way to label virtually staged photos in Kansas?

Use a visible "Virtually Staged" label on the image itself, repeat the disclosure in the photo caption and listing remarks, and keep original photos available. StagePro can add the label automatically and generate a public disclosure page with your originals.

Does Kansas have a law like California's AB 723?

Not yet. California's AB 723 (effective January 1, 2026) is the first state statute specifically requiring disclosure of digitally altered listing images and access to the originals. Other states are expected to follow, so adopting AB 723-style disclosure now is a safe best practice in Kansas.

Sources

Stay compliant automatically

StagePro adds "Virtually Staged" labels to every image, generates a public disclosure page with your original photos and a QR code, and exports paired original+staged photos for MLS upload — AB 723 compliance built in.

Stage photos compliantly