When a buyer asks "are you a Realtor or a real estate agent?", the honest answer is usually "both." When they ask "are you a broker?", the honest answer is almost always "no — but my broker is." The three titles are real, they mean different things, and the differences matter most when commissions, supervision, or a complaint is on the table.
Here's how the hierarchy actually works in 2026, the numbers behind each tier, and the only differences a working agent — or a consumer hiring one — needs to remember.
Real estate agent vs Realtor vs broker: the one-line version
All three are licensed to help people buy and sell real estate. The differences are about license tier and professional membership, and they don't overlap the way most people assume.
- Real estate agent (also called salesperson, sales associate): A state-licensed individual who can represent buyers or sellers but must work under a broker. Entry tier.
- Real estate broker: A state-licensed individual who passed a higher exam, met experience requirements, and can work independently, supervise agents, and run a brokerage. Senior tier.
- Realtor: A real estate agent or broker who is a dues-paying member of the National Association of Realtors and agrees to follow its Code of Ethics. Membership label, not a license tier.
Stack ranking is wrong because two of the categories live on different axes. Broker is a license level. Realtor is a membership. A broker who never joined NAR is not a Realtor. A first-year salesperson who joined NAR is. The Venn diagram has three circles, not three layers.
What does each one actually do?
Real estate agent (salesperson)
Lists properties, shows homes, writes offers, negotiates terms, hands paperwork to the broker for review. Cannot legally hold escrow funds, cannot supervise other agents, and cannot operate a brokerage in their own name. Every commission they earn flows through their sponsoring broker, who then pays them per the split agreement (commonly 70/30 to 90/10 in favor of the agent, with capped or flat-fee brokerage models gaining share).
Real estate broker
Does everything a salesperson does, plus the legal authority to: hold and disburse escrow funds, supervise licensed salespeople, sign listing and buyer representation agreements as the firm, and operate as a brokerage. Most active brokers fall into one of three modes: broker-associate (works under another broker but holds the higher license), designated/managing broker (the broker-of-record for a brokerage), or independent broker (own shop, no upline split).
Realtor (NAR member)
A licensed agent or broker who pays NAR dues — $156/year base plus a $45 Consumer Ad Campaign assessment for 2026, totaling roughly $201/year before local board dues — and agrees to abide by the 17-article Code of Ethics. Realtors get access to the REALTOR® trademark, MLS-related governance, NAR-sponsored Errors & Omissions insurance pools at most boards, and the formal arbitration/grievance process when disputes arise with other Realtors.
License requirements: agent vs broker
The gap between agent and broker is real coursework and real time. Every state runs the rules differently, but the pattern is consistent: pre-licensing hours, exam, then years of full-time practice before you can sit for the broker exam.
A few state-specific markers: California requires 2 years full-time as a licensed salesperson within the past 5 years, plus 8 college-level real estate courses, before you can sit for the broker exam. New York requires 2 years salesperson experience or 3 years general real estate experience. Massachusetts requires 3 years of working for a broker for a minimum of 25 hours per week, plus 40 additional hours of broker-specific coursework. Texas, Florida, and most other states fall in the same 2-3 year band with broker-specific course requirements layered on top.
The salesperson-to-broker upgrade is mostly about supervisory and fiduciary responsibility. The state isn't testing whether you can sell more houses — it's testing whether you can be legally responsible for other people who do.
The income question: do brokers earn more?
On median, yes — but not for the reason most agents assume. The 2025 NAR Member Profile (the most recent available) reports median Realtor gross commission income of $58,100 in 2024, up from $55,800 in 2023. Realtors with 16 or more years of experience — a useful proxy for broker-tier earners — pulled in a median of $78,900. New Realtors with two years or less of experience earned just $8,100, and 62% of new agents made less than $10,000 in 2024.
The income gap isn't because the broker license is a magic earnings unlock. It's because the same operators who survive long enough to earn the broker title also survive long enough to build a sphere, a referral pipeline, and a real book of business. The license is correlated with the income, not causal.
The other half of the broker income story is split structure. An agent on a 70/30 split earning $100K of GCI keeps $70K. An independent broker earning the same $100K keeps $100K (less E&O insurance, MLS dues, transaction fees, and a desk fee if applicable). Brokers don't out-earn agents purely on production — they out-earn them on retention.
Whether you're an agent on a 70/30 or an independent broker keeping 100%, the bottleneck is the same: lead intake, follow-up, and transactions. Run the ROI calculator to see what your real cost is across CRM, dialer, email, calendar, and link-in-bio — the 5 tools most working agents stitch together.
Start free trial →Realtor vs non-Realtor: what the membership actually buys you
If 25% of licensed agents skip NAR membership, what are they actually opting out of? The honest answer is: less than the marketing implies, but more than nothing.
What you get with NAR membership:
- The REALTOR® trademark. Legally enforceable, and it does carry weight on listing presentations and buyer consultations. Consumers who recognize NAR generally trust the trademark even if they couldn't articulate why.
- The Code of Ethics. 17 articles covering duties to clients, to the public, and to other Realtors. The 2026 update (effective January 1, 2026) amended Article 7 to limit compensation disclosure to the Realtor's own client only, and entirely removed Standard of Practice 3-4 on variable rate commission disclosure to cooperating brokers.
- Arbitration and grievance access. Inter-Realtor commission disputes go through NAR's process instead of small claims court. The forum is faster and cheaper, and most awards are enforced.
- MLS access. In most U.S. markets the local MLS is owned and operated by a Realtor association, so non-Realtor licensees either pay non-member MLS access fees (often higher) or piggyback through their broker.
- Group benefits. Health insurance pools, RPAC political advocacy, NAR's annual Member Profile and Home Buyer/Seller research, member-only continuing education.
What you don't get: any actual selling advantage. The Realtor designation does not legally entitle you to higher commissions, exclusive listings, or preferred buyer treatment. The 25% of agents who skip NAR are usually new agents waiting on first commissions, brokers who've decided the math doesn't work for them, or salespeople in markets where the local MLS allows non-member access at competitive rates.
Listing agent vs buyer's agent vs broker: a quick disambiguation
Once you're past agent/Realtor/broker, the next layer of confusion is functional roles. These are job titles within a transaction, not license tiers:
- Listing agent (or seller's agent): Represents the seller. Markets the property, negotiates on the seller's behalf, holds fiduciary duty to the seller. Can be an agent or a broker.
- Buyer's agent: Represents the buyer. Searches inventory, writes offers, negotiates on the buyer's behalf, holds fiduciary duty to the buyer. Can be an agent or a broker. Now usually operates under a written buyer broker agreement post-2024 NAR settlement.
- Dual agent / designated agent: Represents both sides of a transaction (where state law allows). Higher-risk arrangement requiring informed written consent from both parties.
- Broker-of-record / managing broker: The licensed broker who is legally responsible for the brokerage's transactions and supervision. Often does not personally take new clients.
A listing agent and a buyer's agent are typically both salespeople, working under their respective brokers. The "broker vs listing agent" comparison is the wrong axis: the broker is the supervisor, the listing agent is one role the supervised salesperson plays.
Which path should a working agent take?
Most agents who earn enough to make the broker license worth pursuing share a pattern: 3+ years in production, a sphere that generates inbound referrals, a willingness to be legally responsible for other people's mistakes, and a clear reason for the upgrade — usually one of three.
- Keep more of your own commission by going independent or joining a flat-fee/cap brokerage as a broker-associate. The math on a $150K+ producer typically clears the cost of the upgrade in year one.
- Build a team where you are the broker-of-record. Adds $5K–$25K per year of compliance and E&O overhead, but unlocks the ability to recruit and supervise.
- Open your own brokerage. Highest setup cost, highest ceiling. Works for agents with a strong local brand and a clear differentiation play.
The Realtor question is simpler. If your local MLS requires NAR membership to access listings, you're a Realtor whether you wanted the title or not. If your MLS allows non-member access, the calculus is: $200-$700/year in dues against the trademark, the Code, the arbitration access, and the data resources. For most full-time agents, that math works. For brand-new licensees waiting on a first commission, deferring a year is reasonable.
Agent is a license. Broker is a higher license. Realtor is a paid membership on top of either. The income gap between agent and broker is real (median $78,900 vs $58,100 for experienced practitioners), but the upgrade is mostly about retention math, not selling skill. Whichever tier you operate in, the operational stack — CRM, dialer, email, calendar, link-in-bio — is the same.
However you sort the real estate agent vs Realtor vs broker question for yourself, the operational layer is the same — and Jtek runs it at $60/month flat. Same tool whether you're a 1099 salesperson on a 70/30 split or an independent broker keeping 100%. Most agents drop $200–$400/month of subscriptions when they switch in. Compare to Follow Up Boss or to kvCORE if you're shopping.