REAX The Real Brokerage, Inc.
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
The Real Brokerage operates a cloud-based, agent-centric residential real-estate brokerage platform. Unlike traditional brokerages, Real has no physical-office overhead — agents work from anywhere, leveraging Real's transaction-management and broker-support technology stack. The economic-pitch to agents is compelling: lower commission splits to the brokerage, equity-participation through Real's stock-grant program, and access to revenue-share for recruiting other agents.
Revenue is commission revenue from agent-completed real-estate transactions plus brokerage-fee revenue from agent-affiliated payments. The business has been one of the fastest-growing brokerages in North America by agent count, scaling from a few hundred agents to tens of thousands across the US and Canada.
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The US residential brokerage market is structurally large and the agent-economics model is in active disruption. Traditional brokerages charge agents 30-50% of their commissions plus monthly desk fees and forced-marketing contributions. Models like Real (and similar competitor eXp Realty) charge much less and offer equity participation — a meaningful economic improvement for productive agents.
The downside: real-estate-transaction volume itself is structurally tied to mortgage-rate environment and home-price-affordability dynamics. The 2022-2024 rate-cycle compressed transaction volume across all brokerages industry-wide; Real grew agent count through this period (taking share from traditional brokerages) but per-agent productivity was suppressed.
Revenue growth of 56% YoY reflects continued agent-count growth combined with modest transaction-volume recovery.
REVENUE QUALITY
- Gross margin 8.4% — very low, characteristic of brokerage commission-pass-through economics; the gross-margin metric is structurally less informative for this business model
- Operating margin — modest but improving with scale
- Revenue $1.97B TTM — substantial absolute scale
- P/S ~0.22 — cheap on revenue-multiple basis but the right framework is agent-count-and-per-agent-productivity rather than P/S
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Real's defensible asset is its agent-economics-and-equity-participation model combined with the technology stack that supports remote-agent productivity. Switching costs for agents are real once they've built revenue-share-pyramids and accumulated equity grants — exiting Real means leaving these economic positions behind.
Direct competitor eXp Realty operates a structurally similar model with longer history and larger agent count. Real's wedge is continued agent-acquisition momentum plus technology-platform investment — both ongoing variables rather than structural moats.
GROWTH THESIS
Three pieces have to work:
-
Agent-count growth continues at sufficient pace to offset attrition and per-agent-productivity volatility. Each new agent adds to the recurring transaction-volume base.
-
Transaction-volume environment normalizes over the multi-year horizon. Real's economics are most attractive when overall transaction volume recovers from the 2022-2024 trough.
-
Per-agent productivity improves as Real's technology stack matures and agent-tenure deepens.
KEY RISKS
-
Mortgage-rate-and-affordability environment. The dominant variable for residential-brokerage volume. A sustained higher-rate environment compresses transaction volume across all brokerages.
-
Agent-attrition risk. Agent-centric brokerages depend on continued agent-engagement; if Real fails to deliver the economic-promise (equity-grant value, revenue-share, etc.), agent-attrition compresses the model.
-
Capital-structure dilution. The equity-grant-to-agents model is inherently dilutive; if per-agent-productivity improvements lag the dilution rate, per-share economics compress regardless of headline revenue growth.
VERDICT
Real Brokerage is a structural disruptor in residential real-estate brokerage at meaningful scale, with the agent-centric model that has demonstrated competitive advantage versus traditional brokerages over multiple cycles.
The 78.6/100 score captures the agent-count-growth and revenue-scaling dynamics but doesn't fully reflect the equity-grant-dilution headwind that mechanically compresses per-share economics. Investors should evaluate Real on agent-count growth net of equity-grant dilution rather than pure-revenue-growth metrics.
For investors with conviction on the agent-centric-brokerage-disruption thesis and willingness to look past the dilution mechanic in early-stage scaling, REAX is one of the leading public-market vehicles. For investors needing per-share-economics clarity or wanting traditional-brokerage exposure, the model is the wrong vehicle.
Report last updated: May 5, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.