25 Real Estate Agent Bio Examples

25 real estate agent bio examples by niche and experience level. Copy the closest to your situation, swap in your details, and publish in minutes.

These 25 real estate agent bio examples cover new agents, experienced realtors, team members, niche specialists, and short-format profiles. Copy the example closest to your situation, replace the details with yours, and you have a working draft in ten minutes.

For a full breakdown of structure, length, and voice, the real estate bio guide covers every element in detail.

25 real estate agent bio examples organized by niche and experience

The examples below are ready to copy and adapt. Each is labeled by agent type so you can find your closest match fast.

New agent bios

Use these five when you are starting out and your transaction count is still building. The strategy in each: lead with your local ties, your transferable skills, and one clear way to reach you.

1. New agent, no prior sales history

Sarah Chen helps first-time buyers find their footing in the Portland market. A Portland native with five years in residential property management, she knows how leases become deeds and how neighborhoods shift season to season. She joined Apex Realty in 2025 and works exclusively on buyer representation, walking clients through every offer and counteroffer in plain language. Call her at [phone] or book a 20-minute intro call at [website].

2. New agent, career change from finance

After twelve years as a financial analyst in Chicago, Marcus Webb moved into real estate to put the spreadsheet behind a front door. He holds his Illinois license with Greenfield Realty and specializes in helping buyers model total ownership costs before choosing a home. He understands debt-to-income ratios, rate locks, and closing cost credits in the same conversation. Reach him at [phone].

3. New agent, career change from education

Former middle school teacher Jess Rivera brings the same patience she used in a classroom to every buyer consultation. Based in the Austin suburbs, she specializes in families relocating for schools and knows the attendance boundaries for seven districts. She joined Hill Country Properties in 2025 and takes every client from signed buyer agreement to close with no handoffs. Text her at [phone] or visit [website].

4. New agent, deep local roots

Born and schooled in Naperville, Daniel Park knows the difference between the old-town grid and the subdivisions off Route 59 the way a long-time local does. He earned his Illinois license in 2024 and focuses on first-time buyers and move-up families within a 10-mile radius. He does his own neighborhood research because he finds it genuinely interesting. Message him at [email].

5. New agent, military spouse with relocation experience

Having moved seven times in nine years as a military spouse, Alicia Torres knows what buyers need when they have four weeks and a floor plan to work with. Now licensed in Virginia with Capital Region Realty, she focuses on VA-loan transactions and relocation buyers in the Quantico and Fort Belvoir corridors. Book a 15-minute call at [website].

Experienced agent bios

These seven examples work for agents with an established track record. Each leads with a specific number or credential to earn credibility in the first sentence.

6. Experienced agent, 10-plus years, general residential

Kevin Marsh has listed and closed more than 300 homes in the greater Phoenix metro over 11 years, earning his broker’s license in 2019. He runs a three-person team at Desert Ridge Realty and handles every listing consultation personally. His clients receive weekly written updates, a pre-listing staging plan, and a pricing analysis with at least five recent comparable sales. Call or text [phone].

7. Experienced agent, luxury specialist

Vanessa Cole sells luxury properties in coastal South Carolina, focusing on oceanfront and deepwater dock homes priced between $1.2 million and $6 million. Over 14 years, she has represented buyers and sellers in more than 180 waterfront transactions and holds the Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist designation. She stages each listing with a stylist partner and includes a twilight photo session with every engagement. Reach her at [email] or [phone].

8. Experienced agent, first-time buyer specialist

For eight years, Mia Nguyen has helped first-time buyers in the Denver metro close on homes they thought were out of reach. Her process starts with a budget audit and a realistic price range, then moves to private tours and a single written offer built to win. She has averaged 18 days from first tour to signed contract for clients who follow her process. Text [phone] to start.

9. Experienced agent, relocation specialist

James Holbrook has handled more than 140 corporate relocation transactions in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro over nine years, working with employers moving teams to North Texas. He specializes in compressed timelines: buyers who receive a relocation offer and close in 45 days or less. He works directly with HR teams to coordinate moving allowances, temporary housing, and closing dates. Email [email].

10. Experienced agent, investment properties

Nina Patel focuses on residential investment property in the Cleveland market, from single-family rentals to eight-unit apartment buildings. She has represented buyers on more than 90 income-property transactions in seven years, including a 12-unit off-market acquisition and two fourplexes purchased through a 1031 exchange. She underwrites each deal before writing an offer. Reach her at [phone] for a cap-rate analysis on any listing you are watching.

11. Experienced agent, neighborhood specialist

Andre Williams has lived in Midtown Atlanta for 14 years and sold real estate there for nine. He knows which blocks are quietest, which streets flood in heavy rain, and which sellers in his network are weighing a move before formally listing. His clients receive neighborhood intelligence built from years of local relationships. Call [phone] for a neighborhood briefing before you tour.

12. Experienced agent, multifamily

Carol West sells 2-to-20 unit multifamily properties in the Tampa Bay metro and has closed 60 transactions in that category over a decade. She analyzes gross rent multipliers and deferred maintenance costs before advising on price. Her seller clients receive a proforma positioned for an investor buyer alongside the standard pricing analysis. Email [email] for a multifamily valuation.

Team bios

Write one bio per role: team leader, buyer specialist, listing specialist. Clients want to know which person they are actually working with.

13. Team leader

The Park Avenue Team, led by Rachel Gomez, has closed more than 500 transactions in suburban New Jersey since 2015. Rachel leads every buyer consultation personally and has built a four-agent team where each specialist covers specific towns. The team’s average list-to-close time is 38 days. Visit [website] to meet the team.

14. Buyer’s agent on a team

Tyler Oakes is the buyer specialist on the Park Avenue Team, working with clients purchasing between $350,000 and $700,000 in Bergen and Passaic counties. He has completed more than 80 buyer transactions in four years and holds the Accredited Buyer’s Representative designation. He runs every client through a written property comparison worksheet before writing an offer. Text [phone] to schedule a consultation.

15. Listing agent specialist on a team

Emma Richardson handles listings for the Park Avenue Team in Ridgewood, Glen Rock, and Wyckoff, with a focus on pricing strategy and marketing execution. She has managed more than 110 listings in six years, averaging 14 days on market in her most recent full selling season. Every listing receives professional photography, a written neighborhood narrative, and a social media distribution plan. Call [phone] for a seller consultation.

Niche specialist bios

These five cover agents who have defined a specific property type or client segment. The more specific the niche, the shorter and more direct the bio can be.

16. Luxury market, concise version

Stephanie Park represents buyers and sellers of fine homes in Marin County, California, with a focus on properties above $3 million. She has sold more than $120 million in residential real estate over 10 years and holds the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing designation. Every engagement begins with a private property consultation. Contact her assistant at [email] to arrange a meeting.

17. Rural and agricultural property

Rob Calloway sells rural land, farms, and hobby ranches across central Missouri, a territory he has worked for 15 years. He holds the Accredited Land Consultant designation and has closed more than 70 transactions involving agricultural land, timber acreage, and conservation easements. He understands mineral rights, water rights, and farm-lease structures. Call [phone] for a rural land valuation.

18. Urban condo specialist

Priya Mehta specializes in condominium sales in the Chicago Loop and River North, two neighborhoods she has tracked since 2016. She has completed more than 120 condo transactions and reviews HOA financials, reserve studies, and special assessment history before advising on an offer price. Her depth of knowledge in specific buildings lets her alert clients to emerging opportunities and help them move quickly when inventory appears. Text [phone] for a building briefing.

19. Senior and downsizing specialist

Diana Farrell has helped more than 80 homeowners aged 60 and older navigate the transition from a family home to a right-sized property in the Scottsdale and Tempe markets. She holds the Senior Real Estate Specialist designation and coordinates with estate sale companies and movers on behalf of her clients. Call [phone] for a no-rush consultation.

20. Military and VA loan specialist

Chris Nguyen, a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, has helped more than 100 military families purchase homes using VA financing in the San Diego market since 2016. He knows the entitlement process, the VA appraisal requirements, and which builders accept VA financing in the county’s new communities. He works with buyers on active duty, veterans, and surviving spouses. Text [phone] or email [email].

Short-format bios

Use these three when the platform limits your space. Aim for 50 to 100 words on social profiles, 20 to 40 words for email signatures, and 50 to 75 words for a Google Business Profile.

21. Social media profile

Local market, real results. I’ve closed 200-plus homes in Minneapolis and I’m still counting. DM me if you’re buying or selling in the Twin Cities.

22. Email signature

Alex Torres, Realtor | 12 years in San Diego real estate | DRE #01234567 | Buyers, sellers, and relocations | [phone] | [website]

23. Google Business Profile

Maria Santos serves buyers and sellers in Broward County with nine years of experience and more than 150 closed transactions. Bilingual in English and Spanish. Call [phone] for a same-day consultation.

Long-form website bio

Use this format for your About page, where the reader is already interested and you have room to build trust with a short story.

24. Website About page

Growing up in a family of contractors, I learned to walk a house the way my father did: footings first, then structure, then finish work. That habit followed me into real estate when I started selling in Charlotte in 2014. In my first year, I noticed buyers falling in love with paint colors and glossing over condition questions. So I started requiring a pre-offer walkthrough on every property I showed, building a written list of condition observations and repair history questions to bring to a licensed inspector before we moved forward.

Twelve years and more than 400 transactions later, that walkthrough is still the foundation of my practice. I run a two-person team with my partner Diane at Carolinas Realty Group, specializing in move-up buyers and sellers in the Myers Park, Dilworth, and Elizabeth neighborhoods. We list every home with professional staging, drone photography, and a listing video included.

If you are selling, I will tell you exactly what your home needs before it hits the market, with comparables to back up every recommendation. If you are buying, I will walk every property with you in person and give you a written summary before you decide.

I hold a broker’s license in North Carolina and South Carolina. References available on request.

Video bio intro script

Use this as a starting script for a short about-me video. Read it naturally, not verbatim, and keep the video under 90 seconds. Pair it with your listing videos so buyers see your properties right after they meet you.

Copy-paste

Video bio intro script

My name is Luis Ferreira, and I've been selling homes in the Boston metro for six years. I work with buyers and sellers from the South Shore to the inner suburbs, and I specialize in condos and multifamily properties. I run a 30-minute strategy session before any showing, no pressure, just a look at what's available and what fits. Here's how that works.

Scene note: open on your face, then cut to one neighborhood shot or one listing clip while you explain the strategy session. Keep the finished video under 90 seconds.

What makes each real estate bio work: four patterns in the best examples

A strong real estate bio names a specific market, states one verifiable credential, shows a concrete work style, and ends with a direct contact action. Every example above hits at least three of these four elements.

Specificity over vague claims. Agents with an established history lead with transaction counts or dollar volume. New agents lead with a specific geography, a niche, or a transferable skill from a prior career. Both approaches work because they give the reader something concrete to evaluate rather than something to take on faith.

One verifiable credential. A designation (ABR, CLHMS, ALC, SRES), a license number, or a years-of-service figure anchors the bio in fact. Readers cannot verify “experienced” or “dedicated,” but they can verify “14 years and 180 waterfront transactions” or “Accredited Land Consultant.”

A visible work style. The strongest examples describe a process: “I walk every home with you in person and give you a written property summary before you decide.” That one sentence answers the question every buyer carries: what do I actually get when I work with you?

A direct close. Each example ends with one specific action: call, text, email, or book a call at a link. “Reach out to connect” is vague. “Text [phone] for a 15-minute call” is a next step. Name the channel and the number.

Matching a bio to your situation: picks by agent type and niche

The right example depends on where you are in your career and which client you want to attract next. This table maps your situation to the best starting point from the 25 above.

Your situationBest starting exampleKey move
New agent, no sales yet1, 2, 3, 4, or 5Lead with local knowledge or transferable skill
Experienced, general market6, 7, or 8Open with a transaction count or years
On a team13, 14, or 15Name your role and your coverage area
Narrow niche or property type16 through 20Specialize the credential and the geography
Social media profile only21Keep it under 75 words
Website About page24Use a story opener, then credentials
Video bio or listing reel25Write for speaking, not reading

The real estate agent biography template gives you a fill-in structure if you prefer to build from scratch rather than adapt an existing example.

For new agents, how to write a real estate bio for a new agent goes deeper on framing credentials when your transaction count is still low.

Common real estate bio mistakes and quick fixes

Most weak bios share the same five errors. Each has a one-step fix.

1. Generic opener. “Passionate about helping buyers and sellers achieve their real estate goals” appears in thousands of bios. Replace it with a specific market, a transaction count, or a one-sentence story opener.

2. No contact action. A bio with no phone number, email, or booking link leaves the reader without a next step. End every version of your bio with one clear channel and one specific action.

3. Coverage area too broad. “Serving all of Southern California” is too wide to signal expertise. Narrow to a county, a corridor, or a property type. A buyer searching for a condo specialist in River North does not call the generalist.

4. Credential list with no context. Six designations in a row signals effort but does not communicate expertise. Pick the one designation most relevant to your target client and, if space allows, add one sentence explaining why it matters to them.

5. Wrong voice for the platform. Third person (“John is a results-driven agent…”) suits print bios and award submissions. First person reads as more direct and approachable on a website or social profile. Match the voice to where the bio lives.

6. Outdated numbers. A bio that reads “5 years of experience” when you have been licensed for eight years loses credibility the moment a reader notices. Update transaction counts and years-of-service figures once a year.

How to adapt these examples into your own bio

Copy the example that matches your situation, replace the specific details with yours, and read it aloud. If it sounds like something you would actually say, keep it.

Start with the structure, because the structure is what makes these examples effective. Each follows the same four-part frame: market or client type, credential, work style, contact action. That frame works at 60 words and at 300 words. Do not break it by adding a fifth element before the first four are solid.

Swap the placeholders from the outside in. Replace the market first (city, county, or corridor), then the credential (years, designation, or transaction count), then the work style sentence, then the contact action. Changing all four at once makes it harder to hear which part sounds right.

Match the point of view to the platform. The same facts read differently in first person versus third person. Use first person for your website, social profiles, and email signature. Switch to third person for print bios, press releases, and award submissions.

Update the bio once per calendar year. Add any designations earned, update the transaction count, and move the most recent year forward. A bio that references “2022” in 2026 reads as neglected.

If your marketing extends beyond the bio to listing materials and social content, real estate slogans give your videos, flyers, and posts a consistent tagline that pairs well with the bio voice you have just built.

Frequently asked questions

Good real estate agent bio examples name a specific market or client type, state one verifiable credential such as a transaction count or designation, describe a concrete work style, and close with a direct contact action. The 25 examples above cover new agents, experienced realtors, team roles, niche specialists, and short-format profiles for social media and email signatures.

A website About page bio works best at 150 to 300 words. A social media profile bio should stay under 100 words. An email signature bio runs 20 to 40 words, and a Google Business Profile bio performs well at 50 to 75 words. Match the length to where the bio will appear rather than a single target number.

A new real estate agent bio should lead with local market knowledge or a transferable skill from a previous career, include a specific geography or client niche, and close with a direct contact action. Skip transaction counts until you have a meaningful number to cite. The five new-agent examples above show how to build credibility without a long sales history.

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