After 23 years as a licensed real estate professional, I've watched hundreds of people choose their agent based on all the wrong criteria. They pick whoever has the most yard signs, or the agent their neighbor used, or whoever shows up first on Zillow.
Then, three weeks into the transaction, reality hits. Their agent is unresponsive. Critical deadlines get missed. Communication breaks down. And suddenly they're stuck with someone who's either overwhelmed, underqualified, or both—but they're locked into a listing agreement or already under contract.
The problem isn't that people don't interview agents. Most do. The problem is they ask surface-level questions that every agent has polished answers for:
- "What's your marketing strategy?" (Every agent says they do "aggressive digital marketing")
- "What do you think my home is worth?" (Every agent inflates the number to win the listing)
- "How long have you been in business?" (Longevity doesn't equal competence)
These questions sound smart, but they don't reveal what actually matters: whether this agent can realistically handle your transaction well.
Here are the three questions I ask every single agent before I'll recommend them to a client. These questions make agents uncomfortable—which is exactly the point. The ones who answer confidently and honestly are the ones worth hiring.
Question 1: "How many buyers and sellers are you currently working with right now?"
Why This Question Matters
This is the single most important question you can ask, and almost nobody asks it.
Here's why: A real estate agent's most valuable resource isn't their marketing budget or their negotiation tactics—it's their time and attention. If they're juggling 15 active clients, you're not getting either.
Think about the critical moments in a real estate transaction:
- Your offer needs to be submitted in 2 hours before the deadline
- The inspection reveals issues and you need guidance on negotiation strategy
- The appraisal comes in low and you need your agent to work with the lender and seller's agent immediately
- You're at work and need to coordinate a last-minute showing
If your agent is already stretched thin, you'll be the client who gets the "I'll call you back tomorrow" text. Except in real estate, tomorrow is often too late.
What You're Looking For
For a buyer's agent: 3-6 active buyers maximum. Each buyer requires constant MLS monitoring, scheduling multiple showings per week, writing and negotiating offers, and managing the entire inspection-to-closing process.
For a seller's agent: 5-8 active listings maximum. Each seller requires ongoing marketing management, showing coordination, offer evaluation, and transaction management.
An agent handling both buyers and sellers should have a combined total of no more than 8-10 active clients.
Red Flag #1: They won't give you a specific number
"Oh, I always have bandwidth for my clients" or "I make time for everyone" are non-answers. Push back: "I appreciate that, but specifically, how many active buyers and sellers are you working with right now?"
If they dodge again, walk away. They either have too many clients and know it sounds bad, or they're disorganized enough that they genuinely don't know their own workload. Either way, you don't want them.
Red Flag #2: The number is above 12
I don't care how "efficient" someone claims to be—nobody can provide quality service to 15+ active clients simultaneously. What inevitably happens is their responsive clients get attention while everyone else gets ignored until they complain loudly enough.
Red Flag #3: They say "zero" or "one"
Wait, isn't a low number good? Not if it's too low.
An agent with no current clients is a red flag for different reasons. Are they brand new? Do they have a reputation problem? Are they on their way out of the business?
There are exceptions—maybe they just closed 3 deals last week and are catching their breath—but probe deeper to understand why their pipeline is empty.
Good Answers Sound Like This
"Right now I have 4 active buyers and 2 listings. One of those buyers is under contract and we're in the inspection period, so they're taking most of my focus this week. The other 3 are in various stages of their search."
This answer shows:
- Specific numbers (you can verify this makes sense)
- Awareness of where each client is in the process
- Honest acknowledgment of current workload distribution
- Manageable total client load
Question 2: "Do you work on a team or individually? And if you're on a team, who exactly handles what?"
Why This Question Matters
Real estate teams can be great or terrible, and you can't tell the difference from their marketing materials.
The "team approach" has become hugely popular in real estate, but not all teams operate the same way. Some teams provide incredible support systems that make transactions smoother. Others use a bait-and-switch model where you interview the team leader (the "name" on all the marketing) but actually work with a junior associate who has six months of experience.
You need to know exactly who you're working with and what they'll actually do.
The Two Team Models (Good vs. Bad)
Model 1: Specialized Support Team (This is good)
In this model, the licensed agent you hire handles all the client-facing work—consultations, showings, negotiations, and critical decisions—but they have support staff handling administrative tasks:
- Transaction coordinator manages paperwork and deadlines
- Marketing coordinator handles photography, listing syndication, and social media
- Administrative assistant schedules showings and manages communication
This is the best of both worlds. You get consistent service from one experienced agent, plus professional support that ensures nothing falls through the cracks.
Model 2: Rotating Coverage Team (This can be terrible)
In this model, multiple agents on the team rotate client coverage:
- You meet with the team leader initially
- A "buyer's agent" on the team handles your showings
- Another team member covers nights and weekends
- Whoever's available handles negotiations and issues
This can work if the team is well-organized and genuinely collaborative. But often, it results in:
- Inconsistent service (you're explaining your needs to 3 different people)
- Communication breakdowns (one agent doesn't know what another promised)
- Nobody taking ownership when problems arise
- The experienced team leader is completely hands-off after the initial meeting
What You Need to Know
Ask these follow-up questions:
- "Will you personally handle my showings, negotiations, and inspections? Or will someone else on your team?"
- "If someone else handles parts of my transaction, what's their experience level and how many transactions have they personally closed?"
- "What happens if I need to reach you outside business hours or you're on vacation?"
Red Flag: You're actually working with someone much less experienced
"I'll handle the listing presentation and marketing strategy, but [junior team member] will handle your day-to-day needs" means you're interviewing the experienced agent but working with someone who might be brand new.
Ask directly: "How many transactions has [junior team member] personally closed?" If the answer is under 10, you're essentially hiring a rookie agent while paying for an experienced one.
Good Answers Sound Like This
For a team with support (good):
"I work with a transaction coordinator, Sarah, who has 8 years of experience. She handles all the paperwork, deadline tracking, and coordination with title companies and attorneys. But I personally handle every consultation, showing, offer negotiation, inspection, and closing for my clients. You'll work directly with me throughout the entire process."
For a solo agent (also good):
"I work independently. I handle everything personally, from our initial meeting through closing. I don't have a large team, which means I'm selective about how many clients I take on—currently I'm at 5 active clients. I want to make sure everyone gets my full attention."
Question 3: "Have you ever had any disciplinary actions or complaints filed against your license?"
Why This Question Matters
This is the most uncomfortable question to ask. Most people skip it because it feels confrontational.
But here's the reality: Real estate agents are licensed professionals regulated by state real estate commissions. When agents violate regulations, commit ethical violations, or seriously mishandle transactions, formal complaints can be filed against their license.
These actions are public record. But most consumers never think to ask about them—and agents certainly don't volunteer the information.
Would you hire a doctor without checking if they've had malpractice claims? Would you hire a lawyer without knowing if they've been disbarred? Then why would you hire an agent to handle your largest financial transaction without asking about their professional history?
What This Question Reveals
Disciplinary actions can include:
- License suspensions or revocations
- Formal reprimands from the state real estate commission
- Fines for ethical violations
- Mandatory additional training or oversight
- Complaints from previous clients about misrepresentation, negligence, or fraud
Not every complaint means the agent is terrible—sometimes clients file frivolous complaints. But you deserve to know the full story before you hire someone.
What You're Looking For
The ideal answer is: "No, I've never had any disciplinary actions or formal complaints filed against my license."
But even if there is history, what matters is:
- Honesty: Do they disclose it upfront or try to hide it?
- Context: What actually happened?
- Resolution: How was it resolved?
- Pattern: Is this a one-time issue or repeated behavior?
Red Flag: They get defensive or offended
A professional should answer this calmly. "Why would you even ask that?" or "I can't believe you'd question my integrity" are red flags. An agent with nothing to hide should say, "No, I haven't—and I'm glad you asked. It's a smart question."
How to Verify Independently
Don't just take their word for it. After your interview, verify their answer:
- Check your state's real estate commission website: Most states have public license lookup tools where you can see license status and any disciplinary history.
- Google their name + "real estate" + "complaint": See if anything comes up in news articles or court records.
- Check the Better Business Bureau: Look for patterns in consumer complaints.
If you find something they didn't disclose, that's a major red flag—not because of the original issue, but because they lied about it.
Good Answers Sound Like This
Best answer:
"No, I've never had any disciplinary actions or complaints filed. My license is in good standing, and you're welcome to verify that on the state real estate commission website."
Acceptable answer with disclosure:
"I had a formal complaint filed about 5 years ago. A client was unhappy that I advised them to disclose a foundation issue before listing. They felt it would hurt their sale price. They filed a complaint saying I misadvised them. The state reviewed it and found no violation—I was actually following proper disclosure requirements. It was dismissed, but it's still in my record. I'm happy to provide documentation."
This answer shows honesty, context, and proper resolution.
Why These 3 Questions Work
Notice what these questions have in common: They can't be faked with smooth marketing talk.
- You can't fake your current client load
- You can't fake your team structure
- You can't fake your disciplinary history
These questions force agents to give you concrete, verifiable information about their capacity, structure, and professional record.
Most agents aren't used to being asked these questions. The ones who answer confidently and transparently are the ones who have nothing to hide. The ones who dodge, deflect, or get defensive are showing you exactly why you shouldn't hire them.
But Here's the Problem...
These are just 3 questions. And they're not even the most important ones.
After 23 years in this business, I've developed a comprehensive 22-question system that evaluates everything that actually matters when choosing an agent.
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