
New data released last week provides a clearer picture of the impact consolidation will have on the real estate industry.
A trove of benchmark data for the real estate industry was released last week, underscoring the ongoing trend of brokerage consolidation.
Compass was already the largest single real estate brokerage by volume before acquiring Anywhere Real Estate (which includes many franchised brands), the largest company by volume, earlier this year.
Data shows that brokerage giant Compass International Holdings Inc. is much larger than its closest competitors, according to nearly every metric tracked by the industry.
The data collected and compiled by T3 Sixty looks back at the performance of brokerages and franchisors in 2025.
Inman has created a tool that uses publicly available data to highlight recent changes at the industry’s largest companies, which are still in the consolidation phase in 2026.
The tool, which can be viewed with or without the Compass-Anywhere intermediary service, shows which companies are growing the fastest, which are retreating, and provides other insights that prepare you for how industry giants will compete against each other.
Sales quantity
The revenue data represents where Compass and Anywhere were prior to their merger, which was completed in January 2026. This visualization shows that the merger created a mega-brokerage firm that is much larger than its competitors, including franchisors.
Keller Williams’ position as the No. 2 company by sales remained unchanged, but the franchisor, which was second to Anywhere in sales before the merger, now lags behind Compass World Holdings.
“Representing more than one-third of the top 500 brokerages clearly demonstrates the strength and scale of our model,” Keller Williams CEO Chris Czarnecki said in a statement. “We are defining how best-performing real estate businesses are built.”
According to the data, Compass and Anywhere generated more revenue than the next three largest companies combined: Keller Williams, REMAX and HomeServices of America.
According to the data, HomeServices of America lost the largest percentage of its revenue year over year, dropping nearly a quarter of its revenue in 2025.
Agent’s profits and losses
The data also shows which companies are gaining agents and which companies are losing them.
LPT was the fastest growing brokerage firm last year, adding 43% more agents than the previous year. Last year, Deloitte named LPT the second fastest growing company in the country.
LPT also outperformed Real Brokerage, which grew its agent count by 20% last year, Compass, which grew by 16%, and Redfin, which grew its agent count by 14%.
“We are extremely proud of the unprecedented growth and accolades LPT has seen recently,” CEO Michael Valdez told Inman. “In the past 18 months, we have grown from 20 states and 10,000 agents to more than 22,000 agents under the LPT brand, added all 50 states and five Canadian provinces under the LPT brand, and opened 20 states and four international destinations under the Aperture brand.”
EXIT Realty and Realty Executives each lost about 17% of their agents in 2025, and HomeServices of America lost about 10%.
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