eXp Realty vs Coldwell Banker: An Honest Comparison for Agents in 2026
At-a-Glance Comparison
eXp Realty and Coldwell Banker represent two very different philosophies in real estate. Coldwell Banker is one of the oldest and most established brands in the industry, founded in 1906 and operating through a franchise model with thousands of offices worldwide. eXp launched in 2009 as a fully cloud-based brokerage with no physical offices and a revenue share model that did not exist in traditional real estate.
Agents comparing these two are typically weighing the credibility and infrastructure of a legacy brand against the lower costs and wealth-building programs of a cloud-based model. Both have genuine strengths. The right choice depends on your production level, whether you value office presence or cost efficiency, and how much long-term wealth building factors into your decision.
This is a detailed breakdown of real numbers – commission structures, every fee, total annual cost at different production levels, and everything else that determines what you actually keep. No sales pitch. Just the data.
Table of Contents
Commission Structure
The biggest structural difference between these two brokerages comes down to one thing: eXp has a cap. Coldwell Banker does not.
eXp Realty
Every eXp agent in every market operates under the same structure:
- 80/20 split until you reach the annual cap
- $16,000 cap – once you have paid $16K to the brokerage, you earn 100% commission for the rest of your anniversary year
- No franchise or royalty fees – the 80/20 split is the only commission-based cost
- ICON Agent Program – agents who cap and meet production and cultural benchmarks can earn their full $16K cap back in eXp stock
There is no negotiation, no variation by office, and no different deal for the agent down the hall. Every agent knows exactly what they will pay before they join.
Coldwell Banker
Coldwell Banker operates as a franchise, and commission structures vary by office:
- 50/50 to 90/10 split range depending on the office, your experience, and your production history
- No production cap – you never stop paying the split, regardless of how much you produce
- 5% to 6.5% royalty/franchise fee on every transaction (some sources report up to 8%)
- Splits can be renegotiated as you build a track record, but the starting point and ceiling depend entirely on your office
The absence of a cap is the single most important thing to understand about Coldwell Banker’s commission structure. At eXp, once you pay $16K to the brokerage, you keep 100% of your commission for the rest of the year. At Coldwell Banker, you continue paying the split on every deal, all year, every year. For high-producing agents, this difference is enormous.
A Coldwell Banker agent on a 70/30 split who earns $500K in GCI pays $150,000 to the brokerage in split alone – and that does not include the royalty fee. An eXp agent at the same production level pays $16,000 in split, then keeps 100%.
Total Annual Cost at Different Production Levels
The real question is not what your split is. It is what you pay the brokerage in total across an entire year. Monthly fees, transaction fees, royalty fees, and E&O insurance all add up – and the absence of a cap at Coldwell Banker makes the math diverge sharply at higher production levels.
eXp Realty Fee Schedule (Same for Every Agent)
| Fee Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Commission split | 80/20 until $16K cap |
| Monthly fee | $85/month ($1,020/year) |
| Transaction fee | $25/transaction |
| E&O insurance | $60/transaction, $750 annual cap |
| Franchise/royalty fee | $0 |
Coldwell Banker Fee Schedule (Ranges by Office)
| Fee Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Commission split | 50/50 to 90/10 (varies by office, no cap) |
| Cap | None |
| Monthly fee | $110 to $179/month (varies by office) |
| Transaction fee | Varies by office (some charge separately) |
| E&O insurance | $300 to $350/month at some offices |
| Royalty/franchise fee | 5% to 6.5% per deal |
What an Agent Producing $250,000 in GCI Actually Pays
Here is what an agent earning $250,000 in gross commission income across roughly 25 transactions would pay at each brokerage. For Coldwell Banker, we are using mid-range estimates since costs vary by office. We model two scenarios for CB: a newer agent on a 60/40 split and a more experienced agent on a 70/30 split.
eXp Realty:
- Commission to brokerage (20% until $16K cap): $16,000
- Monthly fees ($85 x 12): $1,020
- Transaction fees ($25 x 25): $625
- E&O ($60 x 12.5 transactions, capped at $750): $750
- Total cost: $18,395
- Net to agent: $231,605 (92.6%)
Coldwell Banker (60/40 split – newer agent, mid-range estimates):
- Commission to brokerage (40% of $250K – no cap): $100,000
- Royalty/franchise fee (~5.5% on $250K GCI): $13,750
- Monthly fees (~$145 x 12): $1,740
- E&O (~$325/month x 12): $3,900
- Total cost: $119,390
- Net to agent: $130,610 (52.2%)
Coldwell Banker (70/30 split – experienced agent, mid-range estimates):
- Commission to brokerage (30% of $250K – no cap): $75,000
- Royalty/franchise fee (~5.5% on $250K GCI): $13,750
- Monthly fees (~$145 x 12): $1,740
- E&O (~$325/month x 12): $3,900
- Total cost: $94,390
- Net to agent: $155,610 (62.2%)
Difference: Even at the better 70/30 split, an eXp agent keeps $76,245 more per year at this production level.
The math is stark, and it gets worse for Coldwell Banker agents at higher production levels. Because there is no cap, the brokerage’s share scales directly with your income. An agent who earns $500K in GCI at Coldwell Banker on a 70/30 split pays $150,000 in commission alone. At eXp, the cap stays at $16,000 regardless of production.
The Coldwell Banker numbers deserve context. Some experienced agents negotiate splits as high as 90/10, which significantly reduces the commission cost. And the E&O cost of $300 to $350/month is reported at some offices but may be lower at others. However, even at a 90/10 split, the absence of a cap means you are still paying 10% on every dollar of GCI – $25,000 at $250K production – plus the royalty fee. At eXp, your total commission-based cost is capped at $16,000.
Revenue Share vs No Passive Income Program
This is where the long-term financial picture between these two brokerages diverges completely. eXp offers a structured passive income program. Coldwell Banker does not.
How eXp Revenue Share Works
When an eXp agent closes a deal before capping, eXp retains 20% of the commission. This is called the company dollar. Half of that company dollar – 50% – flows into the revenue share pool. The other 50% goes to the company.
For every agent in your network who caps at $16,000, up to $8,000 per year enters the revenue share pool connected to your sponsorship tree.
Revenue share is structured across seven tiers. The first three are auto-unlocked for every agent. Tiers 4 through 7 require either personal production (capping or ICON status) or sponsoring a certain number of First Level Qualifying Agents (FLQAs).
| Tier | Who Is In It | Requirement | Min Annual Payout Per Capping Agent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Agents you directly sponsor | Auto-unlocked | $4,000 (Fast Start year 1) / $1,400 ongoing |
| Tier 2 | Sponsored by your Tier 1 agents | Auto-unlocked | $1,600 |
| Tier 3 | Sponsored by your Tier 2 agents | Auto-unlocked | $1,000 |
| Tier 4 | Fourth level | 5 FLQAs or cap/ICON | $600 |
| Tier 5 | Fifth level | 10 FLQAs or cap/ICON | $400 |
| Tier 6 | Sixth level | 15 FLQAs or cap/ICON | $1,000 |
| Tier 7 | Seventh level (max depth) | 30 FLQAs or cap/ICON | $2,000 |
Maximum revenue share per capping agent across all seven tiers: $16,000/year.
Historically, actual payouts on Tiers 1 through 3 run 20 to 25% higher than the minimums listed above due to a bonus pool that distributes additional funds when company performance allows it.
In 2024 alone, eXp distributed more than $170 million in revenue share payments to agents. Since the program launched in 2015, total payouts have exceeded $889 million.
Coldwell Banker
Coldwell Banker does not offer a revenue share, profit share, or any form of passive income program tied to agent recruitment or network building.
There is no mechanism at Coldwell Banker for an agent to earn income from the production of agents they have helped bring to the company. Some individual franchise owners may offer informal referral bonuses for recruiting, but there is no corporate-level program and no structured, ongoing income stream.
Coldwell Banker also does not offer a retirement income path or willable income stream. When you stop producing at Coldwell Banker, your income stops. There is nothing to pass on to heirs and nothing that continues to pay you after you step away from active selling.
This is one of the most significant structural differences between these two brokerages. At eXp, an agent who sponsors 5 productive agents could earn a minimum of $7,000 per year in ongoing Tier 1 revenue share alone ($1,400 x 5), or up to $20,000 in the first year with Fast Start bonuses ($4,000 x 5). With the historical bonus pool, actual payouts could be 20 to 25% higher. And that is only Tier 1 – if those agents sponsor productive agents of their own, you earn on Tiers 2 through 7 as well.
At Coldwell Banker, that same recruitment effort generates zero ongoing income.
Training and Professional Development
eXp Realty
eXp runs one of the largest agent training programs in the industry through eXp University:
- 50+ live training sessions per week covering new agent fundamentals through advanced marketing and investing
- Full on-demand course library accessible 24/7
- Mentor program pairing new agents with experienced mentors for their first transactions (required, not optional)
- Fast Start program for new agents and Kick Start for experienced agents joining eXp
- All training is included at no additional cost
Training is delivered virtually through eXp World and online platforms. Every agent has access to the same training regardless of location.
Coldwell Banker
Coldwell Banker offers training through Coldwell Banker University (CBU), supplemented by whatever additional training each franchise office provides:
- Coldwell Banker University (CBU) – corporate-level online learning platform with courses on sales, marketing, technology, and business development
- CBx Technology Suite training – specific courses on Coldwell Banker’s proprietary tools
- Designations and certifications available through CB affiliations
- Some offices offer mentorship programs and coaching, but this varies significantly by franchise
The quality of training at Coldwell Banker depends heavily on which office you join. CBU provides a solid baseline of online resources available to all agents. But in-office training, one-on-one coaching, and mentorship programs are up to each franchise owner. Some Coldwell Banker offices invest heavily in agent development. Others provide little beyond the corporate platform.
Coldwell Banker does not have a mandatory mentor program for new agents the way eXp does. If structured mentorship is important to you, ask about it before committing to a specific office.
Technology and Tools
eXp Realty
eXp operates as a fully cloud-based brokerage, and its technology reflects that:
- eXp World – virtual campus for meetings, training, collaboration, and broker access
- kvCORE CRM – included for every agent (a platform that costs $300 to $500/month independently)
- Skyslope for transaction management
- IDX website included for every agent
- Marketing Center with customizable templates, social media content, and branding tools
- Revenos – a dedicated company team focused on generating and distributing leads to eXp agents
Every tool is available to every agent on day one. No premium tiers, no office-dependent access.
Coldwell Banker
Coldwell Banker has invested in its technology platform in recent years through the CBx Technology Suite:
- CBx – Coldwell Banker’s proprietary technology ecosystem that includes AI-powered tools, market analysis, and listing presentation features
- MoxiWorks – CRM and marketing platform used by many CB offices (MoxiEngage, MoxiPresent, MoxiWebsites)
- Listing Concierge – marketing program that creates professional marketing materials for listings (available at participating offices)
- CBx Seller Leads – proprietary lead generation program
- Transaction management varies by office
Coldwell Banker’s technology offering is competitive, and the CBx suite represents a real investment in agent tools. The Listing Concierge program, in particular, is a differentiator that provides professional marketing support many agents find valuable.
The challenge, as with most franchise models, is consistency. Not every office offers the full suite of CB technology tools, and the level of tech support varies. The corporate tools are solid, but your experience depends on which franchise office you join and how much they invest in technology beyond the baseline.
Culture and Work Environment
eXp: Cloud-First, Location-Independent
eXp agents work from anywhere. There are no physical offices to report to, though eXp provides free access to Regus business lounges worldwide for agents who want occasional professional workspace. Collaboration happens through eXp World, virtual meetups, and regional events.
This model works well for self-directed agents, agents who travel, agents in rural areas, and agents who do not want to pay desk fees for space they rarely use. Your network is not limited by geography. You can learn from and collaborate with agents across the country.
The trade-off: there is no physical office culture. No morning huddles around the coffee machine. No broker walking the floor. For agents who thrive on in-person structure and daily face-to-face interaction, this can feel isolating.
Coldwell Banker: Legacy Brand, Office-Centered
Coldwell Banker has been in the real estate business since 1906, making it one of the oldest and most established brands in the industry. Agents work out of franchise offices, and the Coldwell Banker name carries weight with consumers in most markets.
The office environment varies by franchise, but Coldwell Banker offices tend to project professionalism and stability. The brand is associated with experienced agents and quality service. For agents who value being part of a recognized, established brand – particularly in luxury or high-end markets where the Coldwell Banker name resonates – the office environment and brand association can be a genuine asset.
The trade-off is that you are paying for that brand and office presence through your commission split, royalty fees, and monthly costs. And because Coldwell Banker operates as a franchise, the quality of your office experience depends entirely on the franchise owner running your location. Two Coldwell Banker offices in the same city can offer very different cultures, support levels, and agent experiences.
Stock, Equity, and Wealth Building
eXp Realty
eXp is publicly traded on NASDAQ (EXPI) and offers agents multiple paths to stock ownership:
- ICON Agent Program – agents who cap and meet production and cultural benchmarks can earn their full $16,000 cap back in eXp stock
- Agent Equity Program – agents can choose to receive a portion of their commission in stock at a discount
- Top Agent Bonus – $16K ($8K immediate + $8K vesting over 3 years) for qualifying top producers
Stock ownership gives agents a direct financial stake in the company’s growth. No other major brokerage offers agents a realistic path to earn back their entire annual cap in company equity.
Coldwell Banker
Coldwell Banker is owned by Anywhere Real Estate (formerly Realogy), which is publicly traded (NYSE: HOUS). However, there is no agent stock purchase program, no equity awards, and no path for agents to earn company stock through production.
Coldwell Banker agents are independent contractors operating under a franchise. Your financial relationship is with your local franchise owner, not with Anywhere Real Estate. You cannot earn Anywhere stock through your production, and there is no program equivalent to eXp’s ICON or Agent Equity Program.
Your wealth-building at Coldwell Banker comes entirely from your own commission income and whatever you choose to invest independently. There is no equity participation, no stock incentive, and no ownership stake in the company you are building your business under.
Who Should Choose eXp Realty
eXp tends to be the stronger fit for agents who:
- Want predictable, transparent costs – you know exactly what you will pay before joining, with no office-dependent surprises
- Are self-directed – you do not need a physical office or daily in-person structure to stay productive
- Want to build passive income through revenue share – particularly agents whose reputation and results naturally attract other agents
- Are interested in stock ownership – the ICON program and equity awards create wealth-building paths unique to eXp
- Produce at any level – the $16K cap means eXp becomes increasingly cost-effective as your production grows, while Coldwell Banker’s uncapped split takes a larger dollar amount with every increase in GCI
- Want location flexibility – you work remotely, travel frequently, or do not want to be tied to a single office
Who Should Choose Coldwell Banker
Coldwell Banker tends to be the stronger fit for agents who:
- Value an established, legacy brand – Coldwell Banker has over a century of brand recognition that carries weight with consumers, particularly in certain markets
- Want a professional office environment – you thrive with in-person collaboration, a physical workspace, and the structure of a traditional brokerage
- Work in luxury or high-end markets – the Coldwell Banker brand and its Global Luxury program carry particular credibility in premium market segments
- Want Listing Concierge and marketing support – the professional marketing program is a real differentiator for agents who value polished listing presentations
- Prefer local office support – you want a broker you can talk to face-to-face and an office staff that handles day-to-day administrative needs
- Are not focused on passive income or stock equity – if revenue share, retirement income, and company stock are not priorities, Coldwell Banker’s lack of these programs is not a drawback
Coldwell Banker has built successful careers for agents for over a century. The brand carries weight, the offices provide real infrastructure, and the Listing Concierge program is a genuine competitive advantage for listing agents. If brand prestige and office support matter more to you than cost optimization and passive income, Coldwell Banker is a legitimate choice.
The Bottom Line
The financial gap between these two brokerages is the largest of any comparison in this series. At $250K in GCI, an eXp agent keeps roughly $76,245 more per year than a Coldwell Banker agent on a 70/30 split. Even at a favorable 90/10 split, a CB agent still pays $25,000 in commission alone (plus royalty fees and other costs) because there is no cap – compared to eXp’s $16,000 maximum.
Beyond the annual cost difference, eXp offers three wealth-building paths that Coldwell Banker does not: revenue share that can become passive income, stock equity through the ICON and Agent Equity programs, and a retirement-friendly income structure that is willable to heirs. Coldwell Banker offers none of these. Your income is entirely tied to your personal production, and it ends when you stop selling.
Coldwell Banker offers something eXp cannot replicate: over a century of brand heritage, established office infrastructure, the Global Luxury program, and Listing Concierge marketing support. For agents in luxury markets where the Coldwell Banker name opens doors, or for agents who genuinely need the structure and support of a physical office, those advantages have real value.
The question is whether brand prestige and office infrastructure are worth $76,000+ per year in additional costs (at a 70/30 split) and the complete absence of a production cap, passive income, stock equity, and retirement income programs. For a small number of agents in specific niches, they might be. For most, the math overwhelmingly favors eXp.
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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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