How Much Can a Part-Time Real Estate Agent Make?

  • $95/Year
  • 85% Referral Split
  • No MLS Fees
  • No NAR® Dues
  • 5-Star Rated

A part-time real estate agent can make anything from nothing to solid supplemental income.

That range is wide because real estate is commission-based. Your income depends on how many deals you close, what the homes sell for, your commission split, and what it costs you to stay active.

The real question is not just how much you can make. It is whether the income is worth the time and overhead.

What “Part-Time” Really Means

Part-time real estate can mean two different things.

Some agents still work directly with buyers and sellers, but only take on a few clients a year. Others stop handling transactions and focus on referrals instead.

Those are very different models.

One requires active client work. The other is closer to operating as a referral-only agent.

Income From Active Part-Time Work

If you represent buyers or sellers directly, your income comes from closed transactions.

For example, if a home sells for $300,000 and the commission on your side is 2.5%, the gross commission is $7,500.

That does not mean you take home $7,500.

Your brokerage receives the commission first, then your split applies. If your split is 50% to 70%, your share would be roughly $3,750 to $5,250 before expenses and taxes.

Close two deals a year, and you may gross somewhere around $7,500 to $10,500 before expenses.

That can be good side income. It can also disappear quickly if your costs are too high.

Expenses Matter More When You Close Less

Part-time agents often carry many of the same costs as full-time agents.

That may include:

  • brokerage fees
  • MLS dues
  • association dues
  • E&O insurance
  • transaction fees
  • marketing costs
  • continuing education

Those costs are easier to absorb when you are closing regularly.

If you only close one or two deals a year, the overhead matters a lot more.

Income From Referrals

For many agents who are stepping back from active sales, referral income is the cleaner option.

Instead of showing homes, writing offers, or managing deadlines, you connect someone with an active agent and earn a referral fee if the deal closes.

A common referral fee is 20% to 35% of the receiving agent’s commission.

For example, if the receiving agent earns a $7,500 commission and agrees to pay a 25% referral fee, the referral fee would be $1,875 before your brokerage split.

Two or three referrals a year can be meaningful side income, especially if your overhead is low.

Why the Brokerage Setup Matters

This is where part-time agents often get squeezed.

A traditional brokerage may make sense if you are actively selling. But if you are closing occasionally, the cost structure can work against you.

You may be paying for tools, MLS access, and support designed for full-time production.

If your goal is mostly referral income, a license holding company or referral-only brokerage may fit better. The point is not to avoid having a broker. You still need one. The point is to use a brokerage setup that matches how you actually use your license.

The Bottom Line

A part-time real estate agent can make money, but the income is inconsistent.

If you close a few transactions a year, the numbers can work. If you mostly run into occasional opportunities through your network, referral income may be the better fit.

The key is simple: your overhead needs to match your activity level.


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