Calculate how the listing agent commission is split after broker fee deductions. See gross and net commission for agents and their brokerages.
When a home sells, the listing side commission doesn't go entirely to the listing agent. The commission is first divided between the listing and buyer sides, then the listing agent's portion is further split with their brokerage. Understanding this multi-level split is crucial for agents evaluating their compensation and for sellers who want to know where their commission dollars go.
This calculator computes the listing side's share of the total commission, deducts the brokerage's cut, and shows the agent's net take-home amount. You can model different split arrangements from the standard 70/30 agent-broker split to 100% commission models with flat monthly desk fees.
For sellers, seeing this breakdown provides insight into your agent's actual compensation, which can inform negotiation discussions. For agents, this tool helps you evaluate listing opportunities and compare compensation across different brokerage models to find the best fit for your business.
Homebuyers, investors, and real-estate professionals all benefit from precise listing commission split figures when evaluating properties, negotiating deals, or planning long-term investment strategies. Save this calculator and revisit it whenever market conditions or your financial situation changes.
Both agents and sellers benefit from understanding the commission waterfall. Agents can compare brokerage models side by side to determine which structure maximizes their income at different production levels. Sellers gain transparency into where their commission dollars actually go and can evaluate whether the services received justify the total cost.
Listing Side Gross = Sale Price × Total Rate × Listing Share % Broker Fee = Listing Side Gross × (1 − Agent Split %) Agent Net = Listing Side Gross − Broker Fee − Flat Fees
Result: Agent nets $8,950
A $450,000 sale at 6% generates $27,000 total commission. The listing side gets 50%, or $13,500. The agent keeps 70% of that ($9,450) and the brokerage takes 30% ($4,050). After a $500 transaction fee, the agent nets $8,950.
Traditional brokerages offer graduated splits that improve with production. For example, an agent might start at 60/40 and advance to 80/20 after hitting $3 million in sales volume. Flat-fee brokerages charge a fixed amount per transaction or per month regardless of sale price, which benefits agents working with higher-priced properties.
Your effective commission rate is the percentage of the sale price you actually keep. On a $450,000 sale with 6% commission, 50% listing share, and 70% agent split minus $500 in fees, your effective rate is only about 2% of the sale price. Understanding this number helps you evaluate whether each listing is truly profitable after your marketing and time investment.
When evaluating brokerages, create a spreadsheet modeling your expected annual production through each brokerage's fee structure. The brokerage with the highest split isn't always the best choice if it lacks support, leads, or technology that helps you close more deals.
New agents often start at a 50/50 or 60/40 split in favor of the brokerage, progressing to 70/30 or 80/20 as they gain experience and production. Top producers may negotiate 90/10 splits or move to 100% commission models with flat monthly fees.
A 100% commission brokerage lets agents keep their entire commission in exchange for paying flat monthly fees (desk fee, technology, E&O) regardless of production. This model benefits agents closing enough transactions that the flat fees are less than what they'd pay under a percentage split.
No. The listing side commission is split between the agent and their brokerage according to their agreement. After the brokerage takes its share and any fees are deducted, the agent receives the remainder as their net income from the transaction.
Common fees include transaction fees ($200–$500 per deal), errors and omissions insurance ($500–1,500/year), desk fees ($200–$2,000/month), technology fees, franchise fees, and marketing contributions. These reduce the agent's effective income from each transaction.
Some brokerages cap the total amount they take annually. For example, a brokerage might take 20% of each commission until the agent has paid $20,000 for the year. After reaching the cap, the agent keeps 100% of commissions for the remainder of the year.
It depends on your needs and production level. Full-service brokerages with lower splits offer training, leads, and support that benefit newer agents. Experienced agents with established businesses often prefer higher splits or 100% models where they pay for only the services they need.