The planned acquisition of REMAX Holdings by The Real Brokerage is set to reshape the residential real estate landscape, combining a fast-growing, cloud-based brokerage with one of the industry’s largest global franchise networks.
Valued at roughly $880 million including debt, the deal will create a new holding company — Real REMAX Group — with more than 180,000 agents across over 120 countries.
Industry observers say the transaction reflects a broader push toward scale and efficiency as brokerages navigate a slower housing market and pressure on commissions.
Steve Murray, senior advisor for HousingWire and founder of RealTrends and RTC Consulting, said the real opportunity in the deal lies in how the combined company leverages technology across a massive network.
“One of the things that [Real] brings to the table, which would assist in strengthening REMAX’s franchises and even selling more, is offering their platform to all the REMAX franchises,” he said. “You would assume it’s a very substantial, well-rounded, beginning-to-end platform for operating a brokerage company.”
“It has to function really well for them to be a public company and do all the reporting and all the compliance they have to do.”
Real REMAX Group is expected to generate about $2.3 billion in revenue and $157 million in adjusted EBITDA before synergies — with projected cost savings of $30 million by 2027.
Everything we know about the deal
The transaction is structured as a mix of cash and stock, with REMAX shareholders able to elect cash or shares, subject to limits.
Real shareholders are expected to own 59% of the combined company, with REMAX shareholders holding the remainder, the Wall Street Journal said.
The combined platform will support approximately 1 million transaction sides in North America and 1.8 million globally. REMAX and Motto Mortgage will continue operating under their existing brands, while Real remains the core brokerage.
Real CEO Tamir Poleg will lead the combined entity, which will be headquartered in Miami with ongoing operations in Denver, the companies said.
The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2026, pending approvals.
Strategically, the companies aim to unify brokerage, franchising, fintech and ancillary services — including mortgage and title — while deploying Real’s AI-powered platform across the REMAX network.
At its core, the deal brings together two fundamentally different brokerage models.
Real operates a digital-first, agent-centric platform, emphasizing high commission splits, revenue sharing and equity incentives.
Its model is built for scalability, with minimal physical infrastructure and a focus on recruiting agents and growing transaction volume.
REMAX, by contrast, operates a traditional franchise system, generating revenue through franchise fees, agent dues and brand licensing — with independent broker-owners running local offices.
Cost structure and integration outlook
Much of the integration focus is expected to center on reducing duplicative overhead while maintaining franchise performance.
Murray said the franchise sales and service side of REMAX is likely to remain intact, given its importance to revenue generation, while corporate functions may be consolidated.
He added that areas such as HR, legal, finance and marketing are more likely to be streamlined over time — potentially resulting in some senior-level job reductions as the companies integrate operations.
“My guess is they’ll consolidate as many of those functions as they can into their existing headquarters in Florida,” Murray said. “I imagine that over the period of six months to a year, Real will decide what personnel they need to run REMAX, and in my view, that doesn’t include keeping the whole headquarters staff above franchise sales and service.”
Technology as the unifying layer
A central thesis of the deal is Real’s technology platform — particularly its reZEN system — becoming the backbone of the combined company.
Murray said extending that platform across thousands of REMAX offices could significantly reduce operating costs and simplify brokerage operations.
“If you picture this down the road, you have Real REMAX Group with all of the owned brokerages and all the franchises operating in one platform,” he said. It reduces the cost to operate a franchise, because now you have this really good platform, and it’s one platform that takes care of everything.
“It replaces all kinds of software that these brokers have to have to run their businesses, whatever it might be.”
Beyond cost savings, Murray pointed to the scale of the combined entity as a major advantage — especially in terms of data and analytics.
“It may improve [REMAX’s] ability to sell franchises because they have this platform and the amount of data that Real would have,” he said. “Given the fact that they’re doing about a million transactions in North America, that’s a ton of data about sellers, buyers, agents, markets and everything else.
“Look at it in terms of sticking an AI system on that [data] to develop critical information about the operation of their business.”
By combining Real’s growth engine with REMAX’s global brand and footprint, the companies are betting they can create a more durable, diversified model that balances growth with recurring revenue.
For agents, brokers and franchise owners, key questions now center on execution — how quickly technology is deployed, how costs evolve and whether the combined platform can deliver on its promise of efficiency and scale.