Housing affordability, maintaining sufficient inventory and keeping up with technology were among the biggest challenges cited for firms in the next two years, the 2023 Profile of Real Estate Firms by the National Association of Realtors reports.
The report measures characteristics of firms nationwide to determine how they operate and assess what lies ahead. NAR surveyed its broker members of record to better understand firms’ demographics, composition and characteristics from the executive and manager perspective.
“With interest rates rising to more than 20-year highs, it’s no surprise the biggest current concern for real estate firms is housing affordability,” says Jessica Lautz, NAR deputy chief economist and vice president of research. “This surpassed the concern of maintaining sufficient inventory, which we saw in 2021.”
Characteristics of real estate firms
In 2022, the overwhelming majority of real estate firms – 81% – operated from a single office and typically had three full-time real estate licensees. Roughly nine out of 10 firms – 86% – were independent and non-franchised.
Nearly a third of brokers of record – 31% – were CEOs, COOs, presidents or owners of a multi-office firm. Almost two-thirds – 65% – were managers or owners of a single-office firm.
Business activity of real estate firms
Single-office firms had a median brokerage sales volume of $5.3 million and 15 real estate transaction sides last year, up from $4.5 million and down from 19 transaction sides, respectively, in 2020. Firms with four or more offices had a median brokerage sales volume of $154.6 million and 403 transaction sides in 2022, an increase from $146.2 million and a decrease from 571 transaction sides two years ago.
The typical firm generated 48% of its sales volume from repeat business from past clients and 47% from past client referrals.
“Housing affordability has had an impact on real estate firms’ overall sales activity,” explains Lautz. “There are fewer buyers who can purchase a home due to the rise in prices and interest rates, and fewer sellers are motivated to make a move. While sales are down, sales volume has increased as home prices have augmented because of limited inventory.”
Benefits real estate firms provide to agents and staff
Errors and omissions insurance was cited as the most common benefit – 43% – which firms offered to independent contractors, licensees and agents. E-signature, comparative market analysis, electronic contracts and multiple listing were the most common tools provided or encouraged by firms. A quarter of all firms offered a virtual office space for agents and staff, while 8% offered a virtual assistant.
Future outlook of real estate firms
Nearly one-third of firms – 30% – expect profitability or net income from all real estate activities to increase this year, down from 58% in 2021.
When asked about generational effects on the real estate industry in the next two years, the top concerns for firms were young adults’ ability to buy a home (63%), young adults’ view of homeownership (38%) and baby boomers retiring from real estate (27%).
“Due to tight inventory, the outlook among real estate firms is more conservative since the pandemic-induced housing boom,” Lautz says. “Only 30% of real estate firms believe there will be an increase in profitability from all real estate activities, compared to 58% two years ago.”
Survey methodology
In July 2023, NAR invited a random sample of 176,291 Realtors who were executives and senior management at real estate firms to fill out an online survey. NAR received 5,889 usable responses for an overall response rate of 3.3%.
All information in this report was representative of member characteristics, sales and lease transaction values, and other statistics from the calendar year of 2022.
View NAR’s 2023 Profile of Real Estate Firms