Commercial Brokers
Brokers who underwrite, not just list.
Find verified commercial real-estate brokers with the asset-class focus, market data, and transaction history to execute on office, retail, industrial, and multifamily.
Browse commercial brokers →01
Office, retail, industrial, multifamily, and specialty assets.
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Tenant representation, landlord representation, and investment sales.
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Underwriting, cap-rate analysis, and lease structuring.
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Direct introductions to the broker — no lead-resale.
Browse every real-estate specialty
RealtorsLicensed residential agents and Realtors.BrokersReal-estate brokers and brokerage principals.Luxury AgentsSpecialists in high-end and luxury properties.Commercial AgentsOffice, retail, industrial, and investment property.Property ManagersResidential and commercial property management.Mortgage ProfessionalsLoan officers, mortgage brokers, and lenders.Real-Estate AttorneysClosings, title, contracts, and disputes.Home InspectorsPre-purchase and pre-listing inspections.
Frequently asked questions
- What does a commercial real-estate broker do?
- Commercial brokers handle the purchase, sale, and lease of income-producing or business-use property — office, retail, industrial, multifamily, and specialty assets — for owners, users, and investors.
- Do I need a commercial broker instead of a residential agent?
- Yes. Commercial deals involve underwriting, cap rates, NOI, lease structures, zoning, and due-diligence workflows residential agents are not trained for.
- Tenant rep or landlord rep — which do I need?
- If you're leasing space for your business, hire a tenant-rep broker. If you own and want to lease space, hire a landlord-rep broker. The same broker should not represent both sides of the same deal.
- How are commercial brokers paid?
- Sales: a percentage commission on the purchase price. Leases: a percentage of total lease value, typically paid by the landlord. Investment sales sometimes use flat-fee structures on large deals.