June 25, 2026 - 19:14

The math in residential real estate agent compensation has become impossible to ignore. For decades, the standard split between a listing agent and their brokerage hovered around 70-30, with the brokerage taking the smaller slice. But a growing number of agents are now walking away from those traditional firms entirely, signing on with brokerages that offer a 100% commission model.
Under this structure, agents keep every dollar they earn from a sale. In exchange, they pay a flat monthly fee or a per-transaction charge to the brokerage, rather than handing over a percentage of each check. For a top producer closing 20 deals a year at an average commission of $15,000, the difference is staggering. At a traditional 70-30 split, that agent would give up roughly $90,000 annually. Under a 100% model with a $500 monthly desk fee, the cost is just $6,000.
The shift is accelerating as agents realize they are essentially paying for a brand name and office space they rarely use. Many have built their own client lists through years of personal marketing and referrals, making the brokerage's lead generation less valuable. The pandemic also normalized remote work, proving that agents can negotiate contracts and host open houses without a physical office.
Critics argue that 100% brokerages offer less training and support, which can hurt newer agents. But for experienced agents with established pipelines, the choice is purely financial. As one veteran agent in Texas put it, "I was paying a franchise fee to use a logo. My clients come to me, not the brand. The math stopped making sense."
The trend is reshaping the industry. Traditional firms are now scrambling to offer lower splits or hybrid models to retain their top talent, but the genie is out of the bottle. For agents who do the math, the answer is clear: keep the full commission, pay a flat fee, and never look back.
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