Opening a brokerage means running your own real estate firm — you keep your full commissions and earn a share from the agents you sponsor. In every state the path is the same: hold an active broker license, form a business entity, register the firm with your state regulator (naming a designated broker), set up trust accounts and compliance, add E&O insurance, and recruit agents. The gate is the broker license — see your state below.
Ready to go beyond selling and build your own real estate business? Opening a brokerage is the top tier of a real estate career — it turns individual commissions into a company that scales with every agent you sponsor. This guide covers how to start a real estate brokerage: the license, the business setup, the finances and staffing, and the state-by-state steps. New to broker licensing? Start with how to become a real estate broker.
How to Start a Real Estate Brokerage: 5 Steps
- Earn your broker license. Every state requires an active broker license to run a brokerage — that means agent experience plus a broker course and exam.
- Choose and form your business entity. Decide on a structure (LLC, corporation, or sole proprietorship) and register it with your state.
- Register the firm with your state regulator. Obtain a business entity broker license where required and name your designated broker.
- Set up trust accounts, compliance, and E&O insurance. Establish escrow/trust handling, written supervision and advertising policies, and errors-and-omissions coverage.
- Recruit and sponsor agents. Once licensed and registered, sponsor sales agents and grow your brokerage’s production.
Key Things to Consider Before Opening a Brokerage
Getting licensed is the legal gate — running a profitable brokerage is a business. Before you open, plan for these:
1. Startup Capital & Runway
A lean, home- or cloud-based brokerage can launch for roughly $10,000–$25,000; a branded office with staff can run $50,000+. Just as important is runway: keep 6–12 months of operating expenses in reserve, since commissions and override income arrive irregularly. Recurring costs include E&O insurance, MLS and association dues, brokerage software, marketing, and accounting.
2. Your Brokerage Model
Your model drives capital and staffing: a traditional split funds more services but needs volume; a 100% / flat-fee or desk-fee model runs on thin margins; a cloud brokerage minimizes overhead; a boutique competes on specialization. Decide this first.
3. How Many Staff You Need
Most brokerages start lean — just the broker-owner — and outsource the rest. As sponsored agents grow, the first hires are a transaction coordinator, an admin/office manager, and a bookkeeper, commonly around 8–12 active agents. Add marketing and a recruiter as you scale.
4. Recruiting & Retaining Agents
Your income scales with the production of the agents you sponsor, so your value proposition — split, training, leads, technology, and culture — is your growth engine.
5. Technology & Systems
At a minimum: a CRM, transaction management, a website with IDX, e-signature, and accounting/trust-account tools — so a small team can supervise more agents compliantly.
6. Compliance & Risk Management
As the broker you are legally responsible for every sponsored agent. Build written policies, supervision, trust-account handling, advertising compliance, and record retention to your state’s rules, and carry E&O insurance.
Start Your Brokerage by State
Every brokerage starts with the broker license. Pick your state for the qualifying course and the full step-by-step brokerage guide.
| State | Get broker-qualified | Read the brokerage guide |
|---|---|---|
| Florida | 72-Hr Broker Course | Open a FL Brokerage |
| Texas | 270-Hr Broker Course | Start a TX Brokerage |
| New York | 75-Hr Broker Course | Start a NY Brokerage |
| Virginia | Broker Pre-License | Start a VA Brokerage |
Start a Brokerage in Your State
Florida
After 24 months as an active sales associate, earn your 72-hour broker license, then handle the business side: register your Florida real estate company (entity and DBPR RE-7) and meet the Florida broker office requirements.
Texas
Texas requires four years of experience and the 270-hour broker course. See the full guide to starting a Texas brokerage (business entity broker license, designated broker, TREC).
New York
With two years of qualifying experience and the 75-hour broker course, follow the guide to starting a New York brokerage.
Virginia
After 36 months as an active salesperson, complete the Virginia broker course, then follow the guide to starting a Virginia brokerage.
How to Start a Real Estate Brokerage – FAQ
Do you need a broker license to open a real estate brokerage?
How much does it cost to start a real estate brokerage?
How many staff do you need to start a brokerage?
Do you have to be a broker before opening a brokerage?
Can an LLC or corporation own a real estate brokerage?
How long does it take to open a real estate brokerage?
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