- The US housing market is in its fourth consecutive year of severe slowdown — existing-home sales as a share of households hit their worst pace since 1982 last year — and real estate agents who survived this far are now quitting, taking second jobs, or shutting down brokerages.
- NAR membership has fallen to 1.4 million from a peak of 1.6 million in October 2022; more tellingly, only 71% of agents said real estate was their sole profession in 2025 — the lowest on record in survey data going back to 2005 — with the rest relying on other income to survive.
- The typical agent with two or fewer years of experience closed just three transactions and earned $8,100 in gross income in 2024; mortgage-loan officer employment has fallen nearly 40% from its 2021 peak, and the count of active originators doing at least 10 deals a year has roughly halved.
- The slowdown has structural causes beyond rates: the 2024 legal settlement changing how agents get paid has encouraged some buyers to go unrepresented, and AI tools are making it easier for buyers and sellers to navigate transactions independently — permanently raising the bar for agents to justify their fees.
What Happened?
The US housing market’s prolonged freeze — caused by high mortgage rates, high prices, Iran war-driven inflation, and the aftershocks of the 2024 commission-structure settlement — has now extended long enough to break real estate professionals who had endured prior downturns. Agents who launched brokerages in 2023 expecting a rate-driven recovery are shutting down. Mortgage-loan officers who entered the industry during the 2020–21 boom are quitting for banking and insurance jobs. The NAR membership decline of 200,000 agents since the 2022 peak understates the true damage because many lapsed agents retain their licenses and are counted as active even while working other jobs. High-producing agents continue to do well, but the “real-estate professional middle class” — the large cohort of mid-volume agents who form the backbone of local markets — is hollowing out. The Iran conflict has added a direct headwind: higher gas prices and inflation uncertainty are keeping buyers who were almost ready to transact on the sidelines another season.
Why It Matters?
The real estate industry functions as an economic multiplier: every home sale generates downstream activity for appraisers, inspectors, photographers, mortgage professionals, home-warranty sellers, movers, furniture manufacturers, and appliance companies. A fourth year of suppressed transaction volume means all of those downstream industries are simultaneously underperforming. For the broader economy, the housing market’s paralysis has knock-on effects on household formation, geographic mobility, and labor market flexibility — people who are locked into homes by high effective mortgage rates (either as owners who won’t sell, or buyers who can’t afford to buy) cannot easily move to pursue jobs. The structural shifts — AI-assisted transactions, commission reform — mean the industry will not fully recover even when rates eventually normalize; the agent count will likely settle permanently lower.
What’s Next?
The near-term catalyst that could break the logjam is a meaningful decline in mortgage rates — which is directly tied to whether the Bessent-announced Iran deal framework actually closes and sends oil prices lower, relieving inflation pressure and giving the Fed room to ease. Without that, the Spring 2026 buying season is shaping up as another disappointment: mortgage rates recently hit a nine-month high, and the consumer spending data showing two-thirds of Americans cutting back is not the backdrop for large discretionary purchases. Watch NAR’s monthly sales data for any sign of a floor forming. For investors, the consolidated brokerage model — large firms like Rocket/Redfin with title, escrow, and mortgage under one roof — is best positioned to capture share in a structurally smaller market.
Source: The Wall Street Journal














