The History of Real Estate in the United States

  • The Peak: The highest recorded membership occurred in 2024 with 1,510,000 agents.
  • The 2008 Correction: Following the 2006 high of 1,370,000, the industry saw a 20.5% decline by 2008, bringing the count down to approximately 1,089,200.
  • Historical Scale: The industry has grown from just 120 founding members in 1908 to nearly 1.5 million today— a testament to 118 years of professional evolution.
  • Recent Trends: After the 2024 peak, the count shows a slight stabilization at 1,490,000 in 2026.

​The Traditional Growth Engine

​Historically, the value proposition of a brokerage was centered on three pillars:

  • Infrastructure & Brand: Providing a physical office, legal protection, and a trusted name that individual agents couldn’t establish on their own.
  • Knowledge Transfer: Training “green” agents in exchange for a high split of their early commissions. This allowed brokers to recoup the high cost of desk space, marketing, and mentorship.
  • Lead Generation: Brokers often controlled the flow of leads (via floor time or yard signs), making them the gatekeepers of an agent’s success.

​The Shift in the Investment Model

​While this model drove the industry to record numbers of licensees, several factors are disrupting the “hire and train” cycle:

​1. The Migration of Value

​As agents become more sophisticated with their own personal branding and digital lead generation, the “brand” of the brokerage has become secondary. Top-tier producers—the “vital few” who handle the majority of transactions—often feel they are subsidizing the training of new agents without receiving a proportional return in value.

​2. Low Barriers vs. High Attrition

​The industry has historically relied on a massive top-of-funnel recruitment strategy. However, with the rising costs of technology and shifting commission structures, many brokers are finding it difficult to remain profitable when only a small fraction of new hires become consistent producers.

​3. Alternative Models

​We are seeing a move away from the traditional “brick-and-mortar” investment toward:

  • Virtual/Cloud Brokerages: Minimizing overhead to offer higher splits, essentially “unbundling” the training and office costs.
  • The Team Model: Teams within brokerages are now doing the heavy lifting of training and accountability, often more effectively than the brokerage itself.
  • Direct-to-Consumer Platforms: New frameworks are attempting to simplify the transaction, questioning whether the traditional “agent-heavy” model is the most efficient way to connect buyers and sellers.

​The industry grew through volume and mass recruitment, but the current market seems to be demanding a pivot toward production density—where the focus shifts from how many agents a broker can hire to how much high-level output a smaller, more specialized group can generate.

​Do you think the “training” aspect is still a viable investment for brokers today, or has the cost of churn become too high to justify it?

So Where are We Currently?

By mid-2026, several “tectonic” shifts have converged to create this moment:

​1. The Post-NAR Settlement Era

​The removal of mandatory commission sharing on the MLS has fundamentally decoupled buyer and seller agent compensation.

  • The Squeeze: Commissions are no longer a “given.” We’re seeing a rapid move toward unbundled services, where sellers might pay for a “transaction-only” package and buyers are increasingly signing representation agreements with flat-fee or hourly structures.
  • The Survival Gate: This is forcing a “flight to quality.” The part-time agent is being priced out, leaving the market to the high-producers who can clearly articulate their value proposition beyond simply “finding the house.”

​2. Massive Institutional Consolidation

​We are seeing the “Mega-Brokerage” era reach its peak.

  • Vertical Integration: Major players like Compass (following the Anywhere acquisition) and Rocket/Redfin are building closed-loop ecosystems. They want to own the search, the mortgage, the title, and the agent relationship in one stack.
  • MLS Fragmentation vs. Consolidation: While the number of regional MLSs is plummeting, the remaining ones are becoming more powerful, often operating more like tech companies than trade associations.

​3. From HI to “Augmented HI”

​The conversation has shifted from “Will AI replace agents?” to “How do the top 1% of agents use AI to scale their Human Intelligence (HI)?”

  • Warm Engagement: Predictive analytics are now standard for identifying “likely-to-sell” households, allowing the elite producers to ditch cold calling in favor of data-backed, high-probability outreach.
  • Transaction Automation: Middle-office tasks (scheduling, compliance, basic lead nurturing) are being offloaded to AI, allowing the “Vital Few” to focus entirely on high-level negotiation and relationship management.

​4. The Rise of Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Logic

​There is a growing segment of sophisticated buyers and sellers looking for a Peer-to-Peer (P2P) experience. They want the discovery and validation process to be as frictionless as a modern fintech app, removing the “gatekeeper” friction while still having access to an expert advisor when the deal gets complex.

​The “institutional middle” is effectively hollowing out. We’re moving toward a bifurcated industry: high-volume, tech-heavy discount platforms on one side, and highly specialized, high-intelligence advisors on the other.

​Where do you see the biggest friction point in this new landscape—is it the consumer’s perception of value, or the sheer speed of the technological turnover?

Surviving the Great Depression

Real estate agents survived the 1929-1939 Great Depression by navigating a period of severe market contraction characterized by plummeting property values and record-high foreclosure rates.

While many professionals in the industry struggled, those who remained active often shifted their focus toward distressed assets and the evolving federal landscape.
Market Reality:
The real estate sector faced a massive downturn that began even before the 1929 crash, with residential foreclosures rising steadily throughout the late 1920s. As property values collapsed and banks failed, liquidity vanished, leaving few buyers for traditional real estate transactions.
Adaptation and Survival:
Professionals who weathered this era often adapted by identifying opportunities in a market defined by displacement and government intervention.
Distressed Property Management:
Agents and investors focused on properties being liquidated by banks or those in foreclosure, often converting them into rental income streams when traditional sales were impossible.
Government Engagement:
The establishment of federal programs like the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) eventually helped stabilize the mortgage market, providing new frameworks that agents had to learn to navigate.
Diversification:
Surviving agents often expanded into ancillary services, such as property management or investment consulting, rather than relying solely on residential sales commissions.
Market Realism:
Those who survived avoided the trap of clinging to pre-crash pricing models, instead embracing the new, lower-valuation reality to facilitate the few transactions that could still close.
Regulatory Impact:
The industry was fundamentally reshaped by federal involvement during the New Deal era, which sought to secure the housing market through new insurance products and bank regulations. By aligning with these institutional changes, the survivors of the period transitioned from a chaotic, unregulated environment to a more structured real estate marketplace.

Surviving the GFC in 2008

During the 2008 real estate crash, many agents faced sharp revenue drops as transactions halted amid foreclosures and plummeting prices.

Survival Tactics:
Agents who endured often lived frugally and pivoted quickly to stable income sources like property management, which boomed with distressed rentals. Others doubled down on client relationships for referrals, exceeding service expectations to capture scarce deals.
Key Shifts:
Focusing on foreclosures and desperate sellers provided volume, though margins were thin without bidding wars.
Veterans like Barry Jenkins learned to abandon outdated listing strategies, embracing ADAPTability such as buyer advocacy and diversification into consulting.
Long-Term Lessons:
Those who survived tripled business post-crash by building referral networks early, while many novices exited the industry amid claims and market exodus. Persistence through low-earning years (e.g., $1,500 in tough stretches) separated thrivers from failures.