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Brokerage Comparison

LPT vs Coldwell Banker: Which is Best for Realtors?

Doug Smart
March 14, 2026
10 min read
LPT vs Coldwell Banker: Which is Best for Realtors?

At-a-Glance Comparison

LPT Realty vs Coldwell Banker side-by-side comparison of commission splits, fees, and benefits

LPT Realty and Coldwell Banker represent two fundamentally different approaches to running a real estate career. LPT is a cloud-based brokerage built around low overhead, flat-fee options, and agent economics. Coldwell Banker is one of the most recognized traditional brokerage brands in the country, with physical offices, national marketing infrastructure, and a name that has been in the industry for over a century.

Agents comparing these two are typically weighing brand recognition and office support against keeping more of what they earn. This comparison breaks down the real numbers – commission structures, every fee, passive income opportunities, and what each brokerage actually costs at $250,000 in GCI.

Commission Structure

LPT Realty

LPT Realty offers agents two distinct plan options, which is uncommon among cloud brokerages. You choose the model that fits your production volume and transaction frequency:

Blueprint Plan (BP)

  • 80/20 split until you reach the annual cap
  • $15,000 annual cap – once paid, you keep 100% for the rest of the year
  • $195 per-transaction fee applies to all transactions including post-cap
  • $89/month recurring fee
  • $500/year annual fee

Blueprint Bold Plan (BB)

  • $500 flat transaction fee – no split percentage
  • $5,000 annual cap – once paid in transaction fees, the per-transaction fee drops to $195 for the remainder of the year
  • $149/month recurring fee
  • $500/year annual fee

Both plans include $0 E&O insurance (covered by LPT) and 0% franchise or royalty fees. The BB plan is designed for higher-volume agents who close many transactions. The BP plan is better suited to agents with larger average commission checks who benefit more from the split cap structure.

Coldwell Banker

Coldwell Banker operates as a franchise system, meaning terms vary by office and are negotiated individually:

  • 50/50 to 90/10 split depending on the office, your production history, and your negotiating position
  • 5% to 8% royalty fee paid to the franchisor on top of the split, embedded in the office’s cost structure
  • No standardized cap – some offices have volume-based renegotiation, but there is no universal cap program
  • Monthly desk fees typically $110 to $179 depending on the office
  • E&O insurance often charged separately – $300 to $350 per month at some offices, or billed per transaction at others

Coldwell Banker’s franchise model creates significant variation between offices. The terms you get depend heavily on which franchise owner you are negotiating with and how much leverage your production history gives you.

Total Annual Cost at Different Production Levels

LPT Realty Fee Schedule

Fee Type Blueprint (BP) Blueprint Bold (BB)
Commission split 80/20 until $15K cap $500 flat per transaction until $5K cap
Post-cap transaction fee $195/transaction $195/transaction
Annual fee $500 $500
Monthly fee $89/month ($1,068/year) $149/month ($1,788/year)
E&O insurance $0 (included) $0 (included)
Franchise/royalty fee $0 $0

Coldwell Banker Fee Schedule (Ranges by Office)

Fee Type Amount
Commission split 50/50 to 90/10 (negotiated)
Cap No standardized cap
Monthly fee $110 – $179/month
E&O insurance $300 – $350/month at some offices (or per-transaction)
Franchise/royalty fee 5% to 8% (embedded in office cost structure)
Transaction fees Varies by office

What an Agent Producing $250,000 in GCI Actually Pays

LPT Realty – Blueprint Bold (BB) Plan (25 transactions at $10K avg):

  • Transaction fees to cap ($500 x 10 transactions): $5,000
  • Post-cap transaction fees ($195 x 15 transactions): $2,925
  • Annual fee: $500
  • Monthly fees ($149 x 12): $1,788
  • Total cost: ~$10,213
  • Net to agent: ~$239,787 (95.9%)

LPT Realty – Blueprint (BP) Plan (25 transactions at $10K avg):

  • Commission to brokerage at 80/20 until $15K cap: $15,000
  • Post-cap transaction fees ($195 x ~7 remaining transactions): $1,365 (approximate – depends on when cap hits)
  • All-transaction fees ($195 x 25): $4,875
  • Annual fee: $500
  • Monthly fees ($89 x 12): $1,068
  • Total cost: ~$21,443
  • Net to agent: ~$228,557 (91.4%)

Coldwell Banker (75/25 split, no cap, mid-range estimates):

  • Commission to brokerage at 75/25 split (no cap): $62,500
  • Monthly fees (~$145 x 12): $1,740
  • E&O insurance (~$330 x 12): $3,960
  • Additional transaction fees (estimated): $480
  • Estimated total cost: ~$68,680
  • Estimated net to agent: ~$181,320 (72.5%)

Estimated difference: approximately $58,000 to $70,000 more in the agent’s pocket at LPT Realty at this production level depending on which LPT plan you choose.

The gap is driven almost entirely by Coldwell Banker’s lack of a cap. An agent producing $250K in GCI caps out quickly at LPT and then pays only modest per-transaction fees for the rest of the year. That same agent at Coldwell Banker pays a percentage of every deal with no ceiling, regardless of how much they produce.

This math compounds at higher production levels. An agent doing $500K in GCI would pay roughly $22,000 to $35,000 at LPT (depending on plan) versus potentially $125,000 to $140,000+ at Coldwell Banker on a 75/25 split. The absence of a cap means the more you produce, the wider the gap grows in absolute dollars.

Revenue Share and Passive Income

LPT Realty

LPT Realty offers agents a 7-tier revenue share program funded by 50% of company dollars:

Tier Who Is In It
Tier 1 Agents you directly attract
Tier 2 Attracted by your Tier 1 agents
Tier 3 Third level
Tier 4 Fourth level
Tier 5 Fifth level
Tier 6 Sixth level
Tier 7 Seventh level

Revenue share at LPT extends deeper into the network than most cloud brokerages, which typically offer 5 tiers. The program is willable to heirs, meaning it can be passed on as an estate asset. LPT is not publicly traded, but offers stock awards that vest at 60% (3 years), 80% (4 years), and 100% (5 years).

Coldwell Banker

Coldwell Banker does not offer revenue share, profit share, or any form of passive income tied to agent activity. There is no retirement income path, no willable income stream, and no stock award program for agents.

Income at Coldwell Banker is entirely commission-based. When you stop selling, your income from the brokerage stops. This is the standard traditional brokerage model.

Training and Professional Development

LPT Realty

  • 24/7 agent support – one of the few brokerages to offer round-the-clock access
  • Virtual training resources available to all agents regardless of location
  • Onboarding and coaching programs for new-to-LPT agents
  • All included with the monthly fee – no additional training costs

Coldwell Banker

  • Coldwell Banker University (CBU) – online learning platform with courses on sales, marketing, and business development
  • Some offices provide dedicated training staff and structured programs
  • Training quality varies significantly by franchise owner and office
  • New agents at some offices receive strong mentorship; others are largely self-directed

Coldwell Banker University is a genuine resource and one of the more developed training programs among traditional brokerages. The challenge is that its quality in practice depends on the local office – the franchise model creates wide variation between locations.

Technology and Tools

LPT Realty

  • Cloud-based platform with transaction management and agent tools
  • Marketing resources and templates included
  • CRM and productivity tools accessible from anywhere
  • No physical office requirement – fully remote-friendly

Coldwell Banker

  • Access to national marketing infrastructure and brand assets
  • Coldwell Banker’s global referral network for relocation business
  • Technology tools vary by office – some are well-equipped, others less so
  • The brand’s national advertising provides passive brand awareness that cloud brokerages do not replicate

LPT’s technology advantage is its low-overhead cloud model that removes geographic and office dependencies. Coldwell Banker’s advantage is the national brand recognition and referral infrastructure that can generate inbound leads through brand awareness. For agents who rely on referral networks and brand-driven buyer/seller inquiries, this distinction matters.

Culture and Work Environment

LPT Realty: Cloud-Based, Agent-Economics Focused

LPT agents work independently without physical office requirements. The company culture centers on agent financial performance – low fees, revenue share, and stock awards are the defining features. The brokerage launched in 2018 and has grown quickly. Glassdoor shows a 3.5 overall rating from approximately 70 reviews, with a notably higher 4.6 rating specifically for the Real Estate Agent role, suggesting agents in the field rate their experience more positively than non-agent employees.

Coldwell Banker: Established Brand, Traditional Office Model

Coldwell Banker has been operating since 1906 and is one of the most recognized real estate brands in the country. Offices range from large, well-staffed locations in major markets to smaller franchises. The culture at any given Coldwell Banker office reflects the local franchise owner as much as the corporate brand. Glassdoor shows a 4.1 overall rating from approximately 2,800 reviews – a much larger sample driven by the brand’s scale and tenure.

The Coldwell Banker culture appeals to agents who want physical office space, colleague interaction, and the credibility of an established national brand on their business card. LPT’s culture appeals to agents who prioritize financial efficiency over brand prestige.

Agent Support

LPT Realty

  • 24/7 support for agents – available nights and weekends
  • Virtual broker access without needing to schedule office visits
  • Consistent support quality across all locations

Coldwell Banker

  • Support depends on the specific office and franchise owner
  • Well-run offices may offer excellent broker availability and administrative staff
  • Smaller or leaner offices may have limited support capacity
  • No standardized 24/7 support infrastructure across the brand

LPT’s 24/7 support is a concrete differentiator for agents who close deals outside of business hours or need broker assistance on evenings and weekends. Coldwell Banker support quality is unpredictable until you evaluate the specific office you are considering.

Who Should Choose LPT Realty

LPT tends to be the stronger fit for agents who:

  • Want to keep the maximum percentage of their commission – the BB plan’s 95.9% net retention at $250K GCI is difficult to match at any traditional brokerage
  • Close a high volume of transactions – the BB plan’s flat-fee structure with a low $5K cap rewards volume producers especially well
  • Do not need a physical office and prefer working independently from any location
  • Want to build passive income through a 7-tier revenue share program with willable income
  • Value 24/7 support access without depending on office hours
  • Want stock awards as part of their long-term compensation, even without a public-market liquidity event yet

Who Should Choose Coldwell Banker

Coldwell Banker tends to be the stronger fit for agents who:

  • Operate in a market where the Coldwell Banker name drives inbound business – in some markets, the brand carries enough recognition to generate leads directly
  • Want a physical office presence for client meetings, colleague collaboration, and administrative support
  • Are new to real estate and want access to an established office environment with in-person mentorship and structure
  • Rely on the national referral network for relocation and out-of-market buyer referrals
  • Prefer in-person collaboration and a more traditional brokerage environment over a cloud-based setup

The Bottom Line

This comparison comes down to a straightforward trade-off: LPT Realty returns dramatically more commission to the agent at every production level, while Coldwell Banker offers a national brand, physical office infrastructure, and a referral network that some agents will find genuinely valuable.

Choose LPT Realty if maximizing take-home pay is your priority. The BB plan’s flat-fee structure with a $5K cap means an agent producing $250K retains approximately 95.9% of GCI. Add revenue share, stock awards, and 24/7 support and LPT offers a compelling package for self-sufficient agents who do not depend on a brand name to generate business.

Choose Coldwell Banker if the brand name is a genuine business asset in your market, you want a physical office, and you believe the national infrastructure and referral network will generate enough incremental business to offset the substantially higher cost. The 72.5% net retention at $250K GCI means you are paying roughly $58,000 to $70,000 more per year than you would at LPT – that premium needs to produce measurable results to be worth it.

If you are exploring other cloud-based alternatives, eXp Realty offers a larger agent network with an established revenue share program. For a broader view, see our complete brokerage comparison guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. LPT Realty offers two capped plans. The Blueprint (BP) plan has a $15,000 annual cap on the 80/20 split, after which agents pay only a $195 per-transaction fee. The Blueprint Bold (BB) plan reaches its $5,000 cap after 10 flat-fee transactions ($500 each), then drops to $195 per transaction. Both caps reset annually. Coldwell Banker has no standardized cap – agents pay a percentage of every deal year-round.
No. Coldwell Banker does not have a revenue share or profit share program. Income is entirely commission-based. LPT Realty offers a 7-tier revenue share program funded by 50% of company dollars, with willable income that can be passed to heirs.
It depends on your average commission check size and transaction volume. The BB plan (flat $500 per transaction, $5K cap) favors high-volume agents who close many smaller-commission deals – once they hit 10 transactions, the rest of the year is just $195 per deal. The BP plan (80/20 split, $15K cap) may be better for agents with fewer but larger transactions, since the cap resets the math in your favor once you hit it. At $250K GCI with 25 transactions, BB saves approximately $11,230 compared to BP.
Coldwell Banker charges franchise offices a royalty of approximately 5% to 8% on each transaction. This cost is typically embedded in the office’s commission split structure rather than charged as a separate line item to the agent. The result is that agents end up indirectly paying this royalty through their split – it is one reason why Coldwell Banker splits are less favorable than they might appear on the surface.
No, LPT Realty is not publicly traded as of 2026. The company does offer stock awards to agents that vest at 60% (year 3), 80% (year 4), and 100% (year 5), but there is currently no public market for those shares. An IPO would create liquidity for vested shares, but no confirmed timeline has been announced. Coldwell Banker operates under Anywhere Real Estate (NYSE: HOUS), though agents have no equity participation in the parent company.
LPT Realty has a 3.5 overall Glassdoor rating from approximately 70 reviews, with a notably higher 4.6 rating specifically from agents in the Real Estate Agent role. Coldwell Banker has a 4.1 overall rating from approximately 2,800 reviews – a much larger sample reflecting the brand’s scale and long history. The gap in agent-specific ratings is worth noting: LPT agents rate their experience more highly than the overall Glassdoor score suggests. Compare All Brokerages: See how every major brokerage stacks up in our complete brokerage comparison guide.

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Doug Smart

Doug Smart

Co-Founder, Smart Agent Alliance

Top 1% eXp team builder. Designed and built this website, the agent portal, and the systems and automations powering production workflows and attraction tools across the organization.

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