There are no pricing-based limits on how many listings or how many communities you can show with MLSimport. Every site on the single $49 per month plan, after a 30 day free trial, can import all active listings from one supported MLS(Multiple Listing Service) and reuse them across as many neighborhood or niche pages as you want. Any limits you see in practice come from your hosting power and WordPress setup, not from the plugin’s pricing rules.
How many MLS listings can I import with each MLSimport plan?
There is no fixed upper limit on how many listings you can import per site.
MLSimport uses a single paid plan at $49 per month after a 30 day free trial, and that one plan already includes unlimited listings for each WordPress installation. The plugin connects your site to one RESO Web API feed and can import every active property in that MLS if you want. There are no price jumps if you pass 500 or 5,000 listings on a site, as long as your hosting can handle the database size.
At first this sounds like you should import everything. You usually should not. In practice, most users pick focused import rules instead of pulling the entire MLS, because loading, indexing, and searching 30,000 or more posts will stress a small shared server. With MLSimport you can set filters by city, county, price, property type, or other RESO fields, so you stay inside your host’s comfort zone. The plugin then runs an hourly sync to keep imported listings fresh without asking for a higher fee.
Once listings are in WordPress, they live as normal property posts that your theme can search, cache, and paginate like any other content. That means the real bottlenecks are WordPress basics such as database size, query speed, and page caching, not any artificial cap inside MLSimport. As a loose rule, a tuned VPS can handle many tens of thousands of listing posts, while a cheap shared host might be happier in the low thousands.
| Item | MLSimport behavior | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing plan | Single $49 per month tier | After 30 day free trial |
| Listings per site | No hard software limit | Constrained by hosting only |
| MLS feeds per site | One RESO Web API MLS feed | Per WordPress installation |
| Sync frequency | Hourly background updates | New and changed listings |
| Trial period | 30 days full featured use | Same unlimited behavior |
The table shows that the paid plan does not change based on listing volume, only on a per site basis. As long as one WordPress installation is tied to one RESO MLS feed, MLSimport will pull and sync whatever number of properties your server can reasonably support without pushing you into a higher tier.
Are there limits on how many neighborhoods or communities I can show?
You can create and display unlimited community pages without affecting your subscription.
WordPress itself does not cap how many pages or archives you build, and MLSimport works within that open model. You can define many neighborhood, subdivision, school zone, or lifestyle pages, each using its own filtered listing loops or custom queries. The plugin supplies the property data, while your theme and page builder handle how many separate community views you design on top.
Inside MLSimport you can set multiple location based import filters to bring in the areas you care about, such as several cities, a group of ZIP codes, or a handful of custom polygons, all under the same plan. Those imported listings can be reused across many page types, like condos in downtown, homes near a park, and golf course communities, without paying anything extra. The subscription is never tied to page count, neighborhood count, or number of areas you cover.
Because the plugin saves listings as native posts, you can also use taxonomies, custom fields, and shortcodes from your theme to slice the same pool of data into dozens of local pages. A single property might appear on a city archive, a school district landing page, and a gated community page at the same time. No matter how many community views you build, the MLSimport bill stays the same flat monthly rate, even if those pages start to feel like a lot to manage over time.
Does MLSimport charge more if I only want my own or office listings?
Filtering down to only your own listings does not change the monthly cost.
The MLSimport plan uses a flat $49 per month fee for each connected site, no matter how many properties you choose to import. Inside the plugin settings you can target by agent ID, office or broker ID, or other RESO fields to pull only your own inventory or your brokerage’s listings. Whether that filter grabs 50 active properties or 5,000 across a whole region, the subscription price does not move.
Many agents start by importing only their personal or office listings so the site feels lighter and easier to manage. With MLSimport you can later widen the filters to include a full city, county, or price band without needing to upgrade a plan. The cost model is about one MLS feed per WordPress site, not about how aggressive or narrow your import rules are.
Can I combine multiple MLS markets or sites under one MLSimport license?
Each website can connect to one MLS feed, with one subscription per site.
MLSimport licenses are sold per WordPress installation, with a direct pairing between that site and a single RESO Web API MLS feed. If your brokerage runs three separate branded sites, each one needs its own $49 per month subscription even if they all connect to the same board. This keeps the setup simple with one site, one plugin instance, one MLS connection, and no cross site confusion.
On any given installation, MLSimport is designed to talk to one MLS at a time, which keeps the data model clean and reduces field mapping problems between boards. If you work across two MLS regions, you either need a combined feed provided upstream or you set up a second WordPress site and a second plugin subscription. Many agencies build a small network of sites this way, one site per board or per major market, so each remains fast and less cluttered.
From an operations view, this per site rule also makes scaling more predictable. An office with 10 agent sites spread across two MLSs(Multiple Listing Services) would run roughly 10 subscriptions, with clear separation of content and branding for each agent. MLSimport then handles hourly syncs on each site independently, so a spike in one market does not slow down another. There is no multi site bundle inside the plugin, so you choose how many sites to run and match your subscriptions to that count.
How do MLSimport’s “unlimited listings” compare to traditional IDX pricing limits?
The monthly fee stays flat even as your listing and neighborhood coverage grows.
Where old style IDX tools often come in several pricing tiers, MLSimport sticks to a single $49 per month plan that already includes core features and no per listing fees. Traditional IDX vendors like IDX Broker or iHomeFinder usually decide pricing by feature sets, user seats, and sometimes by adding charges for extra MLS feeds or advanced area tools, even if listing volume itself is unlimited. That structure can make planning tricky when you expect your business to grow or add agents later.
With MLSimport you do not worry about moving from a starter to a pro tier just because you added new farm areas or doubled your imported inventory. The plugin keeps your MLS data hosted inside WordPress, so you keep control over design, URL structure, and SEO without being pushed into higher plans for deeper customization. Your main scaling concern is picking good hosting and caching so that WordPress itself can serve more pages quickly.
- MLSimport avoids per listing or per area upcharges by using one flat plan per site.
- Some legacy IDX platforms raise costs when you add extra MLS feeds or more user seats.
- Competitors that gate key tools behind higher tiers end up less flexible than MLSimport.
- The plugin model keeps budgeting simple while your content and coverage expand.
FAQ
Does “unlimited listings” really mean infinite, or are there hidden caps?
Listing display is functionally unlimited, with limits driven by your hosting and database, not by pricing.
MLSimport itself does not set a ceiling on how many posts you can import or show per site, and the subscription cost does not climb with listing count. The real world limit comes from how much load your server can handle before queries feel slow, which depends on hardware, caching, and theme efficiency. On solid hosting, thousands or even tens of thousands of MLS listings are realistic without hitting any plugin cap.
How many community or neighborhood pages do typical MLSimport users build?
Most sites end up with somewhere between 10 and 100 focused community pages as a rough rule of thumb.
Because MLSimport does not charge by page or area, users tend to build as many neighborhoods, school zones, condo buildings, and lifestyle sections as their content plan calls for. Some solo agents might only maintain a dozen high value communities, while larger teams use the same listing pool to power dozens of tightly targeted landing pages. The plugin does not care how many such pages you create or how often you rearrange them, which is nice until you realize someone has to keep them updated.
Do sold or archived listings count toward any kind of limit?
Sold and off market listings do not trigger any special caps, but they still live in your database if you keep them.
MLSimport follows the MLS feed and can remove inactive listings or keep them as archives, depending on your settings and theme strategy. Keeping several years of sold data will grow your database and can slow some queries if you do not plan indexes and caching well, yet the plugin never adds new fees when you keep history. You decide how much past inventory to retain based on SEO goals and server capacity, even if the choice feels slightly annoying.
What happens to my listings and pages if I cancel my MLSimport subscription?
Cancelling stops future data syncs, but the existing WordPress content can remain until you delete it.
Once MLSimport is disconnected, your site will no longer receive new or updated listings from the MLS, so prices and statuses will drift out of date over time. The property posts already stored in WordPress are just content, so you can keep, edit, or remove them like any other posts. Some people clean out old MLS posts, while others repurpose the site for manual listings if they decide to stop the feed, and honestly both paths work.
Related articles
- How does MLSImport’s pricing model compare to typical monthly IDX solutions, and is it cost-effective for solo agents or very small brokerages with tight budgets?
- Does the plugin allow neighborhood or community pages that automatically pull in MLS listings for that specific area without me manually curating them?
- How much does this cost per year, including any MLS or data fees, and are there extra charges for multiple MLS boards?
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