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How Much Do Real Estate Agents Make in New Hampshire?

Real estate agent income in New Hampshire varies widely based on market conditions, volume of transactions, experience, and the agent's niche. Unlike salaried positions, agents are typically paid entirely through commissions — so income is a function of how many transactions you close and the average price in your market.

Understanding how agent income works in New Hampshire helps you set realistic expectations for your first year and build a plan for growing your income over time.

How New Hampshire Agent Income Works

Commission-Based Income

Most New Hampshire real estate agents earn a percentage of each home sold. The total commission — set by the listing agreement — is typically split between the listing agent and buyer's agent, then each agent splits their share with their sponsoring broker. New agents often start on 50/50 splits.

New Hampshire Market Context

Home prices in New Hampshire vary significantly by metro area. Agents in high-price markets earn more per transaction, while agents in lower-price markets must close more transactions to reach the same income. Your local market is the single biggest factor in your per-transaction income.

Volume Is the Key Driver

Top-earning agents close 20–50+ transactions per year through strong referral networks, consistent lead generation, and efficient systems. Building volume takes 2–3 years for most agents — first-year income is typically much lower than experienced-agent income.

First-Year Reality

Most new agents take 3–6 months to close their first transaction in any state. The National Association of REALTORS® reports 87% of new agents leave the business within five years, primarily due to income challenges in the first 12–18 months. Financial planning before you start matters.

Planning Your New Hampshire Real Estate Income

Before going full-time as a New Hampshire real estate agent, calculate how many transactions you would need to close per year to meet your income goals, given average home prices in your target market area and your expected commission split with your brokerage.

Most brokerages offer new agents splits in the range of 50/50 to 70/30 (agent/broker). As your production grows, your split typically improves. Some brokerages offer 100% commission models with a flat monthly fee instead — these can be advantageous for high-volume agents but require more production to break even.

In addition to commission income, factor in business expenses: MLS fees, association dues, marketing, E&O insurance, transportation, and technology tools. Real estate agent income is gross — expenses can reduce net income significantly, especially in the first year.

Income Planning Checklist for New Agents

Research average home prices in your target New Hampshire market area

Calculate your per-transaction income at your expected commission split

Estimate how many transactions you need to close to meet your income goal

Have 6–12 months of living expenses saved before going full-time

Compare brokerage commission splits and fee structures before signing on

Understand that building a referral pipeline takes 12–24 months of consistent effort

New Hampshire Career and Licensing Resources