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Real Estate

Realtor Website Design: What Top Producers Do Differently

By the Coast Creative team6 min read

Pull up ten agent websites in any market and nine look the same: a headshot, a search bar, a paragraph about passion for real estate. Then there's the top producer's site, which somehow feels like a brand. That difference isn't budget — it's a handful of decisions most agents never think to make.

1. They pick a lane and own it

The nine lookalike sites all say the same thing: 'serving buyers and sellers across the metro area.' The top producer's site says something specific: luxury in two zip codes, first-time buyers, relocations, investment properties. Specific positioning feels risky — you're 'giving up' the rest of the market — but it's why sellers in that lane call them first. Your website is where that positioning either exists or doesn't.

2. Their site sells them, not the portal

Zillow already exists. A site that's nothing but a search bar sends visitors straight back to the portals. Strong agent sites lead with the thing portals can't offer: the agent's results, marketing, story, and neighborhoods. Search matters — but as a feature, not the identity.

3. Proof is everywhere

Sold listings with real numbers. Client stories with names and photos. Reviews pulled in from Google. Days-on-market stats when they're good. Buyers and sellers are making the biggest financial decision of their lives; the site's job is to make choosing you feel safe. Every scroll should answer 'why this agent' with evidence, not adjectives.

4. Every page has a next step

Home valuation requests, buyer consultations, neighborhood guides that end in a conversation. The lookalike sites have one contact form buried on one page. The top producer's site asks for the next step everywhere, gently, and makes it a two-field form instead of an interrogation.

5. The design signals the price point

A seller with a million-dollar home judges your marketing by your own. If your website looks like a template, they assume your listing photos, brochures, and open houses will too. Custom design isn't vanity in real estate — it's the demonstration of exactly the skill you're selling: presenting property beautifully.

Where to start

If your site is a brokerage-issued profile page or an aging template, start with positioning (what do you want to be known for?) and proof (what results can you show?). The design follows those answers. We've built sites for brokers, luxury teams, and rental platforms — the pattern above is what separates the sites that win listings from the ones that just exist.

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