This article was shared here with the permission of Mike DelPrete for Inman Intel, a data and research arm of Inman offering deep insights and market intelligence on the business of residential real estate and proptech. Subscribe today.
Why it matters: In a shifting market, the low-fee brokerage models are structurally designed to thrive, and are operating much more profitably than legacy brokerages.
- To recap, the low-fee models are paying out a significantly higher percentage of their revenue to agents than legacy brokerages.
- The only companies that were profitable in Q1 2023 were eXp Realty and United Real Estate, and the largest legacy brokerages were really unprofitable.
- Note: This analysis uses Adjusted EBITDA (think of it as adjusted net earnings) as the metric of profitability — it allows a company to portray its earnings in the best possible light by backing out expenses like stock-based compensation, one-off legal or restructuring charges, and other non-cash expenses.
- It’s worth directly comparing the two fastest-growing models of the past five years, Compass and eXp: in Q1 2023, Compass lost $1,900 per transaction, while eXp generated a profit of $130 per transaction — quite the difference.
- The outlier is Douglas Elliman, which has a much smaller transaction volume (4,600 in Q1 ’23, compared to 36,000 at Compass), so its loss per transaction is much higher than its peers.
- Therefore, while agents are able to “make more money,” they’re on their own and, without brokerage support, are less productive.
- Once again, the evidence suggests otherwise.
Across the nine brokerages in this analysis, the average production was one transaction per agent in Q1 2023.
- The average for the legacy brokerages (Compass, Anywhere, Keller Williams and Douglas Elliman) was 1.03 transactions per agent, while the average for the low-fee brokerages (eXp, Real, RealtyONE, United and Fathom) was 0.98 transactions per agent — effectively the same.
- In aggregate, agents at low-fee brokerages, with “less support,” were just as productive as agents at the legacy brokerages with “lots of support.”
- Four low-fee brokerages (eXp, Real, Fathom, and RealtyONE) were at or below that average — meaning that their agents saw less of a decline in transaction volume than agents at legacy brokerages.
- Support or not, agents at low-fee brokerages were more resilient and saw less variability in production during a changing market.
- Not all low-fee brokerages and legacy brokerages perform similarly.
- Furthermore, inside each organization, there is significant variability in individual agent performance and compensation.
The bottom line: The dual hypotheses that low-fee brokerages aren’t sustainable, and that their agents are less productive due to less support, are false.
- Low-fee brokerages are, in fact, more profitable than the legacy brokerages, even after paying out a significantly higher proportion of their revenue to agents.
- This is classic Innovator’s Dilemma: While the legacy brokerages are racing to cut costs, the low-fee models — built from the ground up with a lower-cost operating model — are taking market share and competing where they can win.
Mike DelPrete is a strategic adviser and global expert in real estate tech, including Zavvie, an iBuyer offer aggregator. Connect with him on LinkedIn.