A real estate license holding company is a brokerage that holds your license while you are not actively selling real estate.
Your license stays active, but you are not expected to list homes, work with clients, or close deals.
What a Real Estate License Holding Company Is — and Isn’t
A real estate license holding company is a licensed brokerage. It operates under the same regulatory requirements as any other sponsoring broker. Agents affiliated with a holding company are active with their state in most cases, meaning their license is current and in good standing.
That also means the same ongoing responsibilities apply — including continuing education at renewal. Keeping your license in a holding company doesn’t reduce the state’s requirements. It simply changes the type of brokerage you’re affiliated with.
What it does not provide is the support associated with a traditional brokerage. There is no MLS access, no listing support, no office environment, and no transaction management services. A holding company is not intended for agents who are actively listing property or representing buyers directly.
Its purpose is simpler than that. It allows an agent to remain licensed and eligible to earn referral fees without paying for services they are not using.
How a Referral-Only Real Estate Brokerage Works
The practical difference between a holding company and a traditional brokerage comes down to what you’re doing — and what you’re not.
Instead of listing homes, hosting showings, or negotiating contracts, a broker in a referral-only real estate brokerage connects people in their network with an active agent who handles the transaction. The sponsoring brokers execute a referral agreement before closing. When the deal closes, the referral fee is paid to you through your brokerage.
You are not managing the deal. Your role ends at the introduction. The compensation is tied to making that introduction to a licensed agent who completes the transaction.
An important distinction: referral income is only permitted if your license is active and affiliated with a sponsoring broker. An inactive licensee or unlicensed individual cannot receive referral fees.
License Holding Company vs. Traditional Brokerage
A traditional brokerage is built for agents who are closing transactions regularly. It provides MLS access, listing tools, training, administrative support, and often marketing resources. In return, agents typically pay monthly fees, MLS dues, and commission splits tied to active transactions.
A license holding company operates differently. Because you are not listing property or managing transactions directly, you are not paying for full-service support or MLS access. Most holding companies charge a flat annual fee to maintain active status, and referral fees are handled according to that brokerage’s split structure.
| Feature | Traditional Brokerage | License Holding Company |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Fees | Yes — desk fees, E&O, splits | Usually none |
| MLS Access | Yes | Generally no |
| Production Requirements | Often yes | No |
| NAR® / Association Dues | Typically required | Not required |
| Referral Income | Yes | Yes |
| Transaction Support | Yes | Generally no |
| Best For | Active, full-time agents | Inactive or low-activity agents |
Each model serves a different purpose. A traditional brokerage supports active sales work. A holding company supports agents who want to remain licensed but are not operating a full-time real estate business.
Who Typically Uses a License Holding Company
License holding companies tend to attract agents who are stepping back from real estate, but who are not ready to give up their license entirely. That often includes:
- Agents who have taken a full-time job outside of real estate
- Semi-retired or retired agents who want to remain licensed
- Parents or caregivers who stepped away from full-time sales
- Agents between firms who need a temporary, low-cost affiliation
- New licensees still deciding whether to pursue real estate full-time
- Agents who moved out of state but want to keep their license active
In each case, the license still has value. The agent simply does not need the services or costs of a traditional brokerage. It is not designed for agents trying to build or grow a full-time real estate business.
Frequently Asked Questions
What exactly is a real estate license holding company?
A real estate license holding company is a licensed brokerage that holds your real estate license without requiring you to actively sell. Instead of working transactions, paying MLS dues, or meeting production quotas, you keep your license active at a reduced cost while staying eligible to earn referral income.
Is a license holding company a legitimate brokerage?
Yes. A real estate license holding company is a fully licensed brokerage operating under state real estate law. Your license is actively held with a licensed broker, which means it remains in good standing with your state licensing authority — the same as it would be at any traditional brokerage.
How much does it cost to keep your license in a holding company?
Costs vary by company, but license holding companies are significantly cheaper than traditional brokerages. At NextPath Realty, the annual fee is $95 with no monthly fees, no MLS dues, and no NAR® association costs.
Can you earn referral income while your license is in a holding company?
Yes. This is one of the main reasons agents choose a license holding company over going inactive. As long as your license remains active, you can refer buyers and sellers to other licensed agents and collect a referral fee when the transaction closes.
What is the difference between a license holding company and going inactive?
The biggest difference is referral income. An inactive license generally cannot be used to earn any compensation. A license held with a holding company stays active, which means you can still earn referral fees without paying traditional brokerage overhead. A complete
Who should consider using a real estate license holding company?
A license holding company is a good fit for agents who are taking a break from active sales, switching careers, reducing their workload, or simply tired of paying full brokerage costs when they are not actively selling. It is also a strong option for agents who still have a personal or professional network that may generate future referral opportunities.
The Bottom Line
A real estate license holding company is a brokerage designed to hold your license while you are not actively selling.
It allows you to stay licensed, reduce overhead, and earn referral income when opportunities come up.