I ran the commission split calculation on my own production numbers last year, and the amount I was giving away surprised me.

Not because I didn’t know commission splits existed — I did. But because I had never actually multiplied the percentage by twelve months of transaction volume and looked at the annual number as a single financial decision.
Real estate agents earn a median annual wage of around $56,320, but that figure masks the wide variation in both production levels and the percentage each agent keeps after their brokerage takes its share. The split itself functions as a recurring cost that compounds over time — not unlike interest on debt, except this one never gets paid down.
Here is the basic setup. An agent who closes five million dollars in annual sales volume on a standard buyer-side commission of 2.5 percent generates $125,000 in gross commission income. On a traditional 70/30 split, that agent pays $37,500 to the brokerage over the course of a year. On a 60/40 split, the number climbs to $50,000. That is fifty thousand dollars annually — not for leads, not for active transaction coordination, but for access to a brand and a desk.
Most agents I know can tell you their split percentage instantly, but very few can tell you what they paid their brokerage last year in actual dollar terms. I couldn’t either, until I sat down and did the calculation explicitly. The number changed the way I thought about my business structure.
This is not a rant against traditional brokerages. They provide value — training, brand recognition, office space, sometimes leads. But from a personal finance perspective, the commission split is effectively a tax on your labor. And like any recurring expense, it should be evaluated in the context of what you are actually receiving in exchange and whether a different structure might leave you with more capital to deploy toward financial independence.
What the 100% Commission Model Actually Costs and What It Saves Over Time
The alternative to the percentage split is the 100% commission model, and the core difference is structural: instead of giving up a percentage of every transaction, you pay a flat fee per deal or per month, and you keep the rest. That shift changes the economics significantly at almost any production level above the breakeven point.
When I looked at the real estate franchise cost comparison between a traditional split brokerage and Realty ONE Group’s 100% commission model — which charges a flat fee rather than a percentage of each transaction — the DO THE MATH calculator on their site made the annual savings number concrete in a way that the general pitch about keeping more commission does not.
The real difference shows up when you project the model forward across five and ten years of consistent production.
Take the same five million dollar production example. On a 100% model with a flat transaction fee of, say, $500 per deal, an agent closing 20 transactions per year pays $10,000 annually in fees and keeps the remaining $115,000. Compare that to $87,500 on a 70/30 split or $75,000 on a 60/40 split. The five-year difference between the 60/40 model and the 100% model at that production level is $175,000. Over ten years, it is $350,000.
Self-employed individuals generally must pay self-employment tax as well as income tax, so every dollar kept on the front end of commission income reduces the taxable base and keeps more capital in the business. The math becomes even more favorable as production increases.
Most nonemployers are self-employed individuals operating unincorporated businesses, which may or may not be the owner’s principal source of income, and for agents running real estate as their primary wealth-building vehicle, the cost structure directly impacts long-term outcomes.
The 100% model is not free. Most charge a monthly desk fee or a per-transaction fee, and some charge both. Technology fees, compliance costs, and E&O insurance are typically separate line items. But these costs are fixed or capped, which means they scale differently than a percentage-based split. The agent who closes 30 transactions pays the same per-deal fee as the agent who closes 10 — the percentage model penalizes higher production.
What the Flat-Fee Model Includes and What It Does Not
One of the questions I had before switching to a cost-per-transaction model was what support infrastructure I would lose. The short answer is that it depends entirely on the brokerage, but in general, 100% commission brokerages have leaned heavily into technology and streamlined compliance systems rather than physical office space and in-person management.
Most 100% brokerages provide transaction management software, compliance support, access to standard forms and contracts, errors and omissions insurance, and some version of marketing tools or templates. What they typically do not provide is dedicated office space in every market, a large support staff, or proprietary lead generation at the brokerage level. The trade is explicit: lower cost, more autonomy, fewer built-in services.
For an experienced agent who already has their own lead sources and referral systems in place, that trade often makes financial sense. Franchising vs independent real estate investing comes down to whether the structure supports execution or creates friction, and at a certain production threshold, paying for services you do not use becomes inefficient.
For newer agents, the calculation is different. Training, mentorship, and a structured onboarding process have real value, especially in the first two years when most agents are learning transaction mechanics and building a client base.
Most first-year agents earn between $30,000 and $50,000, and median gross income for members with two years of experience or less is around $8,100, which suggests that early-stage agents may benefit more from a brokerage that trades a higher split for hands-on support.
The model works best for agents who treat real estate like a business rather than a side project, who have consistent deal flow, and who do not rely on the brokerage for lead generation. It is not a solution for production problems — it is a cost optimization for agents who are already closing deals and want to keep more of what they earn.
Who the 100% Model Works Best For at Different Production Levels
The breakeven point for a 100% commission model varies depending on the specific fee structure, but the general rule is that the more transactions you close, the more you save. An agent closing five deals per year at a $500 per-transaction fee pays $2,500 annually. On a 70/30 split with $10,000 in average gross commission per deal, that same agent would pay $15,000 to the brokerage. Even at low production, the flat-fee model can be cheaper.
But the real advantage shows up at higher production levels. An agent closing 40 deals per year at a $500 transaction fee pays $20,000 in fees. On a 70/30 split with the same $10,000 average commission, that agent pays $120,000 to the brokerage. The difference is $100,000 annually — money that could be reinvested, saved, or deployed toward other income-producing assets.
The model also works well for agents in high-price markets where transaction volume may be lower but commission per deal is significantly higher. A luxury agent closing eight transactions per year at an average gross commission of $30,000 generates $240,000 in income. On a 60/40 split, that agent pays $96,000 to the brokerage. On a flat-fee model with a $1,000 per-deal cost, the same agent pays $8,000. That is an $88,000 annual difference.
It does not work as well for agents who rely heavily on brokerage-provided leads, who need significant transaction support, or who are still in the early stage of building systems and client relationships. Self-employed individuals operating businesses must manage their own quarterly tax payments and business expenses, and the 100% model requires a higher degree of financial and operational self-sufficiency.
My Take on Whether the Switch Math Justifies the Transition
I switched to a 100% model three years ago, and the decision paid for itself within the first six months. The reason it worked for me is that I was already generating my own leads, I had established referral sources, and I did not need daily management or office space. What I needed was lower overhead and the ability to keep more of what I closed.
The transition itself was straightforward. I reviewed my prior year’s production, calculated what I had paid in splits, ran the same numbers through a flat-fee structure, and made the decision based on the five-year projection. The difference was material enough that it would have been financially irresponsible not to make the change.
But the math only works if your production supports it and if you are operationally ready to run your business without relying on brokerage infrastructure. Agents who need training, regular supervision, or significant transaction coordination may find that the services provided by a traditional brokerage justify the cost, at least in the short term.
The question is not whether 100% commission models are better — it is whether the model fits your current business structure and production level.
For agents who are already self-directed, closing consistent volume, and looking to optimize costs, the switch can unlock significant capital. For agents still building their foundation, a traditional split with strong support may be the better financial decision. The key is running the actual numbers on your own situation rather than defaulting to whatever model you started with.
Real estate is one of the few careers where your income structure is negotiable, and the cost of that structure compounds across your entire career. The commission split is not inherently good or bad — it is a tool. But like any tool, it should be evaluated against the alternatives, and the evaluation should be based on math, not inertia.
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