Selling with one agent on both sides cost home sellers $1.49 billion over three years
New Zillow data finds sellers consistently lose when their home is hidden from buyers or when one agent holds both sides of the deal
- Home sellers in same-agent dual agency transactions — where one agent represented both buyer and seller — lost a combined
$1.49 billion over three years, according to a new Zillow analysis. - Home sellers who listed off the MLS lost a combined
$1.36 billion over three years, typically selling for 1.3% less than sellers who listed publicly. - The price penalties from dual agency and off-MLS listings have appeared in every year Zillow has analyzed, showing a consistent pattern of harm.
When one agent represents both the buyer and the seller, that agent's economic incentives shift. The additional commission earned by pushing a seller's price up is generally modest, while the potential cost of selling to another buyer and splitting the commission with another agent is significant. That dynamic can incentivize certain agents to close a deal with a buyer they represent, regardless of whether doing so is in the best interest of the seller they have a fiduciary duty to protect.
"Sellers deserve an agent whose only job is to get them the best possible price, and a listing that every buyer in the market can see. When either of those things is missing, the data keeps telling us that sellers lose," said
The estimated loss per home from sellers in dual-agency transactions was about
The same pattern holds for off-MLS listings. Sellers who chose not to ever list their homes on the MLS — keeping them hidden from a swath of buyers — typically sold for 1.3% less than MLS-listed sellers, losing a combined
"I can't tell you how many buyers I've worked with who see a privately-listed home only after it's been sold, and tell me they would have paid tens of thousands of dollars more for that house. It's discouraging for buyers to do everything right, only to find out homes were hidden from view all along," said
The off-MLS price penalty hit sellers in the lower price tier the hardest, who typically lost 2.2% compared to sellers of similar homes listed on the MLS. The harm also fell unevenly by neighborhood. Sellers in communities of color — neighborhoods where the majority of households are headed by people of color — typically lost 1.9%, compared to 1.1% in majority white neighborhoods.
Neither finding appears to be a short-term anomaly. Both price penalties existed in the data for all the study years of 2023, 2024 and 2025. That persistence is notable given that rising inventory over the study period has given buyers more options and made bidding wars less common — conditions that would be expected to narrow the off-MLS penalty, in particular.
Both findings point to the same underlying principle. Whether a home is hidden from some or all buyers or negotiated by an agent with divided loyalties, when the housing market is less transparent and less competitive, American home buyers and sellers bear the cost.
Methodology
Zillow analyzed more than 15 million transactions from 2023 to 2025, with about 6.8 million and 6.2 million meeting our strict inclusion criteria for evaluating dual agency and private listing effects, respectively. Of the home sales that were analyzed, dual agency transactions accounted for 4.7% of the sample, while private home sales accounted for 1.9%.
Dual-agency transactions were defined as having the same individual agent represent both the buyer and the seller.
Private listings were defined as sales that appeared to be marketed privately and submitted to the MLS only after a purchase contract was in place. To classify these sales, Zillow identified sales that were reported pending or closed with at most one day active and with a buyer and seller represented by the same agent or by agents within the same brokerage office.
Zillow also parsed off-MLS transactions, which were never published to the public MLS after being privately listed. Zillow further narrowed these "off-MLS" transactions into a much smaller set — those with a previous sale in the MLS, which allowed us to verify property details. Only this subset among off-MLS transactions was included in the analysis.
In both sets —private listings and validated off-MLS transactions — Zillow excluded new construction homes, foreclosure sales, auction sales, non-arms-length transactions, bank/corporate/government acquisitions, invalid quitclaims and outlier sale prices (below
To determine the impact of listing strategy on the sale price, Zillow started with the Zestimate a full three months prior to sale. If a home was listed at this time, it was excluded (validation was conducted to ensure this exclusion was not driving results). To strip out the effect of market-level price movements during this three-month period, Zillow adjusted the Zestimate using movements in the Zillow Home Value Index at the ZIP code level. The ratio of the sale price to the Zestimate-based expectation was then taken. The median of this ratio was compared between listing groups: dual-agent transactions compared to transactions with separate agents, and the on-MLS listings compared to the private listings and validated off-MLS listings.
The estimated total net loss to sellers uses the shares of dual-agency sales and private listings in our sample and the median percentage losses on the total transaction value for all homes in the sample. Due to estimation at the median, subcategory totals may not sum to the parent total. The exclusion of transactions that do not meet our standards for data completeness means the reported values are an underestimate of the full degree of harm nationally.
About Zillow Group
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All marks herein are owned by MFTB Holdco, Inc., a Zillow affiliate. Zillow Home Loans, LLC is an Equal Housing Lender, NMLS #10287 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). © 2026 MFTB Holdco, Inc., a Zillow affiliate.
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SOURCE Zillow
