How Real Estate Commissions Work in 2026
Total commission, listing-side / buyer-side split, agent-broker split. Three numbers determine what an agent actually takes home — and the 2024 NAR settlement reshuffled how the middle one gets negotiated.
Read the full breakdown
A real estate commission is a single percentage applied to the final sale price, then chopped up three times before any agent sees a deposit. The first cut is the total commission — historically 5–6% in the US, now closer to 5–5.5% as a national average heading into 2026. The second cut is the listing-side vs. buyer-side split: traditionally 50/50, but no longer the assumed default after the National Association of Realtors' August 2024 settlement. The third cut is the agent-broker split: every agent on either side splits their share with their brokerage, and that split varies wildly based on tenure and commission plan.
The 2024 NAR settlement, which took effect August 17, 2024, changed two things. First, sellers can no longer offer buyer-side compensation through the MLS — that line item is now off-MLS and negotiated directly. Second, buyers must sign a written representation agreement before touring a home, with their agent's compensation disclosed up front. The practical impact through 2025 and into 2026: average commissions have compressed by roughly 0.25 to 0.75 percentage points in most US markets, dual-agent transactions have ticked up, and listing agents are spending more time explaining the new framework to first-time sellers than they ever did pre-settlement. This commission calculator handles both worlds — set buyer-side to 2.5% to model the historical norm, or drop it to 0% and add a seller concession to model the post-settlement structure.
