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Sotheby’s vs Berkshire Hathaway: Which is Best for Realtors?

Doug Smart
March 14, 2026
14 min read
Sotheby’s vs Berkshire Hathaway: Which is Best for Realtors?

At-a-Glance Comparison

Sotheby's vs Berkshire Hathaway side-by-side comparison of commission splits, fees, and benefits

Sotheby’s International Realty and Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices are two of the most prestigious names in luxury real estate. Both attract agents who work in high-end markets, both leverage powerful parent brands, and both charge premium fees for the privilege of carrying their name. But the brands operate differently, and the costs are structured in ways that can significantly impact your bottom line.

Sotheby’s trades on 280 years of auction house heritage and global luxury recognition. Berkshire Hathaway trades on Warren Buffett’s reputation for financial integrity and stability. Both names open doors in luxury markets – but with different clients and in different ways.

This comparison breaks down the real numbers on commissions, fees, and total annual costs alongside the differences in training, technology, culture, and support that determine which brand is the right fit for your luxury real estate career.

Commission Structure

Both Sotheby’s and Berkshire Hathaway operate as franchise models where individual offices set their own commission structures. This means the numbers below represent typical ranges – your actual split, fees, and costs depend entirely on the specific office you join. What’s consistent across both brands is that neither offers a commission cap, and both charge franchise royalty fees on top of the commission split.

Sotheby’s International Realty Commission Structure

Sotheby’s positions itself at the top of the luxury market, and its fee structure reflects that positioning. The combination of a royalty fee plus a separate advertising fee creates a higher total franchise burden than most competitors.

  • Commission split: 70/30 to 90/10 (varies by office, production level, and negotiation)
  • Royalty fee: 6% of gross commission per transaction
  • Advertising fee: 2% of gross commission per transaction (separate from royalty)
  • Total franchise fee: 8% combined (royalty + advertising)
  • Commission cap: No (some offices may cap at approximately $18,000, but this is not standard)
  • Monthly fees: Varies by office ($62.50 – $292.50/month reported)
  • Transaction fees: Included in the 6% + 2% royalty/advertising structure
  • E&O insurance: ~$2,200/year

The 8% combined franchise fee is the headline number. On a $20,000 commission, $1,600 goes to the franchise before the office even takes its split. This adds up fast, especially with no cap to limit total annual costs. Luxury agents dealing with large commissions feel this acutely – an 8% royalty on a $100,000 commission is $8,000.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Commission Structure

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices has a similar franchise structure but with a slightly lower total franchise fee and its own set of variable costs.

  • Commission split: 60/40 to 90/10 (varies by office, production level, and negotiation)
  • Royalty fee: 6-7% of gross commission (declining structure at some offices)
  • Commission cap: No (rare office-level exceptions)
  • Monthly fees: Varies by office ($98 – $140/month reported)
  • Transaction fees: $295 – $625 per transaction
  • E&O insurance: Varies by office (agent responsibility)

BHHS doesn’t charge a separate advertising fee like Sotheby’s, but it does charge per-transaction fees ($295 – $625) that Sotheby’s folds into its royalty structure. The net effect is that BHHS’s total franchise burden is slightly lower than Sotheby’s – typically 6-7% royalty versus Sotheby’s 8% combined – but the starting split can be worse (60/40 at the low end versus Sotheby’s 70/30).

Total Annual Cost at Different Production Levels

Both brokerages charge premium fees with no commission cap. This makes total annual costs scale linearly with production – the more you produce, the more you pay in absolute dollars. Here’s how the numbers compare at three production levels.

Sotheby’s International Realty Annual Cost Estimates

Fee Type $100K GCI $250K GCI $500K GCI
Commission split (25%) $25,000 $62,500 $125,000
Royalty (6%) $6,000 $15,000 $30,000
Advertising fee (2%) $2,000 $5,000 $10,000
Monthly fees ($175/mo) $2,100 $2,100 $2,100
E&O insurance $2,200 $2,200 $2,200
Total Cost $37,300 $86,800 $169,300
You Keep $62,700 $163,200 $330,700

Estimates assume 75/25 split (mid-range), 5 deals at $100K GCI, 10 deals at $250K GCI, 20 deals at $500K GCI (luxury volume, larger average deal size). Monthly fees averaged at $175/mo. Actual costs vary significantly by office.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Annual Cost Estimates

Fee Type $100K GCI $250K GCI $500K GCI
Commission split (30%) $30,000 $75,000 $150,000
Royalty (6%) $6,000 $15,000 $30,000
Monthly fees ($120/mo) $1,440 $1,440 $1,440
Transaction fees ($450 x deals) $2,250 $4,500 $9,000
E&O insurance (~$200/mo) $2,400 $2,400 $2,400
Total Cost $42,090 $98,340 $192,840
You Keep $57,910 $151,660 $307,160

Estimates assume 70/30 split, 5 deals at $100K GCI, 10 deals at $250K GCI, 20 deals at $500K GCI, with average $450 transaction fee. Actual costs vary significantly by office.

Head-to-Head: $250K GCI Comparison

At $250,000 in gross commission income:

  • Sotheby’s International Realty: ~$86,800 in total costs – you keep ~$163,200 (65%)
  • Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices: ~$98,340 in total costs – you keep ~$151,660 (61%)

Sotheby’s comes out about $11,500 cheaper at $250K GCI, primarily because of a better starting split (75/25 vs 70/30 in these estimates). But this gap is heavily dependent on the specific splits you negotiate at each brokerage. An agent who negotiates an 80/20 split at BHHS would beat the Sotheby’s numbers.

The larger takeaway is that both brokerages are expensive compared to capped or flat-fee alternatives. Neither caps commissions, so agents at both brands pay their brokerage a percentage on every deal, all year long. An agent doing $500K GCI pays roughly $169,000 – $193,000 in total brokerage costs. At a capped brokerage, those same costs might be $30,000 – $50,000.

The question is whether the luxury brand premium justifies the cost difference. If the Sotheby’s or BHHS name helps you win listings you wouldn’t otherwise get, the higher fees are a business expense that generates ROI. If you’d close the same deals regardless of the sign in the yard, you’re paying for a brand you don’t need.

Training and Professional Development

Sotheby’s International Realty Training

Sotheby’s training is limited at the corporate level. The brand provides some educational resources and the prestige of association with the Sotheby’s auction house, but it does not have a signature training program comparable to what some larger brokerages offer.

  • Onboarding: Varies significantly by franchise office
  • Corporate resources: Some brand-level educational materials and luxury market positioning guides
  • Luxury-specific training: Positioning, marketing to high-net-worth clients, and working with international buyers
  • Mentorship: Dependent on office culture and individual broker relationships

Sotheby’s training experience depends almost entirely on which office you join. Some offices have seasoned managing brokers who mentor agents extensively. Others expect you to arrive as a polished professional who doesn’t need training. If training quality is important to you, ask detailed questions about the specific office’s program before joining.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Training

BHHS provides training through its Career Development Department, but like Sotheby’s, the depth and quality varies by franchise location.

  • Career Development Department: Corporate-level training resources and programs
  • Onboarding: Varies by office, some have structured programs with mentorship
  • Continuing education: Access to corporate educational materials
  • Office-level training: Dependent on local franchise leadership

BHHS has a slight edge over Sotheby’s in training consistency because the Career Development Department provides a baseline level of corporate support. But neither brokerage is a training-first company. Both attract experienced agents who already know how to sell, not newcomers who need to learn the basics. If you need substantial training to succeed, neither of these luxury brands is the right fit.

Technology and Tools

Sotheby’s International Realty Technology

Sotheby’s provides technology tools focused on luxury marketing and global exposure:

  • SothebysRealty.com: Global listing platform with premium presentation
  • Marketing suite: High-end branded materials, professional templates, and digital marketing tools
  • Global network: Listing syndication across international markets and the broader Sotheby’s ecosystem
  • Video and media: Access to the Sotheby’s International Realty YouTube channel and video marketing resources

Sotheby’s technology strength is in presentation rather than lead generation or CRM. The listing platform is beautifully designed and projects the luxury positioning the brand is known for. For agents marketing $5M+ properties to international buyers, the global exposure matters.

Most Sotheby’s agents supplement corporate tools with their own CRM, lead generation, and marketing technology.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Technology

BHHS provides a functional technology suite leveraging the brand’s corporate resources:

  • REsides: CRM and transaction management platform
  • BHHSagent.com: Agent website platform
  • Marketing tools: Branded templates and materials
  • Listing syndication: Distribution to major real estate portals

BHHS’s technology is functional and professional but not cutting-edge. The tools get the job done and maintain the brand’s polished image. Like Sotheby’s, many BHHS agents use third-party tools for CRM and lead generation rather than relying exclusively on corporate technology.

Neither brokerage differentiates on technology. Both provide the basic tools you need with premium branding, and both expect that serious luxury agents will invest in their own technology stack. This is consistent with the premium pricing model – you’re paying for the brand, not the tech.

Culture and Work Environment

Sotheby’s International Realty Culture

Sotheby’s culture is defined by luxury, exclusivity, and global sophistication. The brand attracts agents who operate in the upper echelons of the real estate market and who value prestige as a core part of their professional identity.

  • Elite, exclusive atmosphere focused on luxury properties and high-net-worth clients
  • International orientation – the Sotheby’s brand resonates globally
  • Emphasis on discretion, professionalism, and white-glove service
  • Smaller office environments with selective agent recruitment

Sotheby’s offices tend to be smaller and more curated than the typical BHHS office. The brand is intentionally selective about who carries the Sotheby’s name, which creates an exclusive feel. This works well for agents who want to be part of a boutique, high-end environment rather than a large, bustling office.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Culture

BHHS culture centers on trust, stability, and the Buffett legacy. It’s premium without being as exclusive as Sotheby’s, attracting agents across a broader range of the luxury market.

  • Professional, polished environment associated with financial stability
  • Trust-driven brand that appeals to agents who value long-term relationships
  • Broader agent base than Sotheby’s – not exclusively luxury
  • Traditional office settings with established, collegial relationships

BHHS offices generally have more agents and a wider range of price points than Sotheby’s offices. While the brand positions itself as premium, many BHHS agents work in the $500K – $2M range rather than exclusively ultra-luxury. This creates a more diverse and less rarefied culture than Sotheby’s.

The cultural difference is real: Sotheby’s feels like a private club. BHHS feels like a well-run, professional firm. Both are premium, but in different ways.

Brand Recognition and Market Presence

Sotheby’s International Realty Brand

The Sotheby’s name carries 280 years of history. The auction house is synonymous with the finest art, collectibles, and luxury goods in the world. That brand equity transfers to the real estate division in a way that’s difficult for any competitor to replicate.

Sotheby’s International Realty has approximately 26,000 agents across 1,100 offices in 83 countries. The global footprint is a genuine competitive advantage for agents who work with international buyers and sellers. A $10M listing on SothebysRealty.com gets exposure to affluent buyers across Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and the Americas.

In the ultra-luxury segment ($5M+), the Sotheby’s name may be the most recognizable real estate brand on the planet. Below that threshold, the name recognition narrows.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Brand

The Berkshire Hathaway name is one of the most trusted brands in American business. Warren Buffett’s reputation for integrity, financial acumen, and long-term thinking lends the real estate division a credibility that resonates strongly with domestic buyers and sellers.

BHHS has approximately 55,000+ agents across 1,500+ offices, with a presence primarily in the US. The domestic footprint is larger than Sotheby’s, and the brand recognition is broader among American consumers. The burgundy and cream color scheme is instantly recognizable.

Where Sotheby’s has the global luxury edge, BHHS has the domestic trust edge. In the US market, the Berkshire Hathaway name signals financial stability and trustworthiness in a way that resonates with both luxury and upper-middle-market clients. Internationally, the brand doesn’t carry the same weight as Sotheby’s.

Agent Support

Sotheby’s International Realty Agent Support

Agent support at Sotheby’s is office-dependent and typically more personalized due to smaller office sizes. You’re likely to have more direct access to your managing broker simply because there are fewer agents in the office.

  • 24/7 support: No
  • Managing broker access: Generally more accessible due to smaller office size
  • Marketing support: Corporate brand resources for luxury marketing
  • Global referral network: International referral capabilities through the SIR network

The global referral network is a meaningful support feature for agents who deal with cross-border clients. Being able to refer (or receive referrals from) Sotheby’s agents in 83 countries adds a dimension of support that BHHS can’t fully match.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Agent Support

BHHS support follows the standard franchise model – quality depends on your specific office.

  • 24/7 support: No
  • Managing broker access: Varies by office size and leadership
  • Career Development Department: Corporate-level support resources
  • Transaction support: Some offices provide dedicated transaction coordinators

Neither brokerage offers 24/7 support. Both provide business-hours support through office staff and managing brokers. The support experience at both brands comes down to the specific office you join, which makes due diligence before committing essential.

Who Should Choose Sotheby’s International Realty

Sotheby’s International Realty is the stronger choice if you:

  • Work in ultra-luxury markets ($5M+) where the Sotheby’s brand carries unique prestige and global recognition
  • Serve international clients and need the global network of 1,100 offices in 83 countries for referrals and exposure
  • Value exclusivity and want to be part of a curated, boutique office environment
  • Market to high-net-worth individuals who associate the Sotheby’s name with the auction house’s 280-year legacy of luxury
  • Sell properties that benefit from global exposure on SothebysRealty.com
  • Already have an established luxury practice and don’t need extensive training or hand-holding

Sotheby’s delivers the most value to agents in the true luxury segment where the brand name opens doors that other names cannot. If your average sale price is under $1M, you’re paying a premium for brand equity that won’t materially impact your business.

Who Should Choose Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices is the stronger choice if you:

  • Work primarily in the US market where the Buffett brand carries significant trust and recognition
  • Serve the broader luxury and upper-middle market ($500K – $5M) where trust and stability matter more than ultra-luxury cachet
  • Want a larger domestic network – BHHS has more offices and agents in the US than Sotheby’s
  • Value the stability signal that Warren Buffett’s name sends to clients – financial integrity and long-term thinking
  • Prefer a professional but less rarefied environment with a broader range of agents and price points
  • Want the Career Development Department for ongoing education and corporate support

BHHS works best for agents who need a premium brand but don’t exclusively operate in the ultra-luxury tier. The Berkshire Hathaway name impresses clients across a wide range of price points and market segments within the US.

The Bottom Line

This is a comparison between two premium brands that charge premium fees. Neither caps commissions. Neither offers revenue sharing or profit sharing. Neither has standout training or technology. You’re paying for a name – and both names are exceptional.

Sotheby’s is the global luxury brand. If you sell $5M+ properties to international buyers, the Sotheby’s name carries weight that no other real estate brand can match. The 280-year auction house legacy, the global network in 83 countries, and the exclusive, curated office culture position you at the very top of the luxury market.

Berkshire Hathaway is the American trust brand. If you sell premium properties to domestic clients in the $500K – $5M range, the Buffett name signals integrity, financial stability, and long-term thinking in ways that resonate deeply with American buyers and sellers.

At $250K GCI, Sotheby’s is roughly $11,500 cheaper in this comparison, but that gap depends heavily on the specific splits negotiated at each office. Both brokerages take 35-40% of your GCI when you add up splits, royalties, and fees. That’s a significant cost that only makes sense if the brand is actively helping you win business you wouldn’t get otherwise.

Be honest about your market and your clients. If the brand opens doors, it’s worth the premium. If you’d close the same deals with any yard sign, you’re overpaying for prestige.

Frequently Asked Questions

Generally, no. Some individual Sotheby’s offices may cap at approximately $18,000, but this is not standard across the brand. Most Sotheby’s offices charge the commission split plus the 8% combined royalty/advertising fee on every transaction throughout the year. This no-cap structure is one of the most significant cost factors for high-producing agents.
Sotheby’s has stronger global recognition, particularly in the luxury segment. The 280-year auction house heritage and presence in 83 countries give Sotheby’s International Realty international brand equity that BHHS doesn’t match. Within the United States, both brands are well-known, but BHHS benefits from the Warren Buffett association, which is the most recognized business brand in America. For international transactions, Sotheby’s wins. For domestic transactions, it’s roughly equal.
No, neither Sotheby’s International Realty nor Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices offers revenue sharing, profit sharing, or any form of passive income tied to recruiting other agents. Your income at both brokerages is entirely based on your own production. This is one area where both luxury brands differ significantly from brokerages like eXp Realty, Keller Williams, or LPT Realty that offer agent-to-agent revenue or profit sharing programs.
Neither is ideal for new agents. Both Sotheby’s and BHHS target experienced professionals who already have established practices and clientele. The fee structures are expensive for agents still building their business, and neither brand provides the kind of intensive, structured training that new agents need. A new agent would be better served starting at a brokerage with stronger training programs and lower costs, then potentially moving to a luxury brand once they’ve established their business.
At $250K GCI with mid-range splits, Sotheby’s costs roughly $86,800 versus BHHS at approximately $98,340 – a difference of about $11,500 favoring Sotheby’s. However, this gap is highly sensitive to the specific splits you negotiate. If you get an 80/20 split at BHHS versus 75/25 at Sotheby’s, the numbers shift considerably. Always calculate your total cost based on the actual terms offered by the specific office you’re considering, not brand-level averages.
The commission split is negotiable at both brokerages, but the franchise royalty and advertising fees are generally set by the franchisor and not negotiable at the individual office level. Sotheby’s 6% royalty + 2% advertising fee and BHHS’s 6-7% royalty are corporate requirements that your local office passes through. Some high-producing agents at large offices may have leverage to negotiate how these fees are applied, but this is the exception rather than the rule. 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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