It’s a common question: is there a specific real estate license just for referrals?
In most cases, no. There is not a separate “referral-only” license. Agents who operate as a referral only agent typically do so under a standard real estate license.
How Referral Agents Are Actually Licensed
In many states, agents who earn referral fees do so under a standard real estate license.
They’re licensed the same way as any other agent but choose to operate differently. Instead of working directly with buyers and sellers—showing homes, listing properties, or managing transactions—they focus on connecting clients with active agents and earning a referral fee when a deal closes.
The Rules Vary by State
Real estate licensing is handled at the state level, so there are always exceptions and differences in terminology.
That said, the typical structure does not include a distinct referral license. Most states follow the same general model: one license, different ways to use it.
If you want to be precise, it’s always worth checking the rules in your specific state.
Do You Still Need an Active License?
In almost all cases, yes.
Referral fees are tied to real estate transactions, and those payments typically have to go through a licensed individual affiliated with a brokerage. Even if you’re only making introductions, you generally need an active license to be paid.
Where Referral-Only Agents Hold Their License
This is where the idea of a “referral license” usually comes from.
Agents who only plan to make referrals often move their license to a brokerage that supports that model, often referred to as a real estate license holding company or referral-only brokerage.
They’re set up for agents who:
- aren’t actively selling
- want to keep their license active
- want the ability to earn referral income without traditional brokerage overhead
The Bottom Line
There’s usually no separate referral license.
Referral agents use the same real estate license as any other agent—they just use it differently.