US Real Estate Sector NAICS 531
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Industry Summary
The 412,900 establishments in the real estate sector are involved in the purchase, sale, rental, leasing, and management of properties. Establishments typically specialize in a particular type of property, such as residential, commercial, or industrial.
Dependence on Credit
The real estate sector is capital-intensive and highly dependent on credit.
Maintaining Occupancy
For commercial and residential lessors, maintaining occupancy is critical to generating steady streams of rental income, which are necessary to cover operating expenses and debt costs.
Recent Developments
Jun 23, 2026 - Agents Leaving the Industry Amid Tepid Housing Market
- The Wall Street Journal reports that the slow housing market is pushing more real estate agents and mortgage professionals out of the business. Now in its fourth year, the housing downturn is being driven by high mortgage rates, elevated home prices, weaker demand, longer listing times, and fewer closings, leaving many commission-based workers with lower incomes or needing second jobs. NAR membership fell to 1.4 million in April from a peak of 1.6 million in October 2022. For the residential broker industry, the trend could thin agent ranks, widen the gap between top producers and struggling agents, force smaller brokerages to close or sell, and give larger firms an edge through technology, scale, and added services.
- According to Bisnow, a proposed class-action lawsuit filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois accuses CoStar Group and major commercial real estate brokerages CBRE, Colliers, Cushman & Wakefield, JLL, and Newmark of participating in a scheme to inflate office, retail, and industrial rents. The complaint, filed by commercial tenant FitFactorDC LLC, alleges that CoStar collected and redistributed sensitive lease data, thereby giving competing firms visibility into market pricing and allowing them to align rents, reduce concessions, and weaken tenants’ negotiating power, in violation of the Sherman Act. If the allegations prove true, the case could have significant implications for the commercial real estate industry by increasing scrutiny of market data platforms, leasing practices, rent-setting processes, and the handling of competitive lease information, potentially leading to new compliance requirements and changes in how landlords, brokers, and property managers use market intelligence. CoStar questioned the merits of the lawsuit and said it expects a speedy court judgment in its favor.
- According to Realtor.com, the US median asking rent fell 1.5% year over year in May 2026 to $1,686, marking the 34th consecutive month of annual declines for 0-2 bedroom units across the nation's 50 largest metros. For residential landlords, continued rent softening, combined with elevated multifamily supply, may limit pricing power, increase competition for tenants, and require greater focus on occupancy and retention strategies. Rents declined across all major unit types, though national asking rents remain 17.2% above pre-pandemic levels, even as they are 4.4% below their 2022 peak. Realtor.com also found notable shifts in renter demand patterns, with some markets attracting more local renters while others saw rising interest from out-of-market renters, highlighting evolving migration and housing preferences that continue to influence rental demand nationwide.
- Fitch Ratings revised its 2026 outlooks for the US homebuilding and North America building products sectors to deteriorating from neutral, citing affordability challenges, weak consumer sentiment, and mortgage rates expected to remain near 6.5% through year-end. Fitch forecasts new home sales will decline 2.5%, existing home sales will be flat to slightly lower, and single-family housing starts will fall 4.5%. Homebuilders are expected to see low- to mid-single-digit revenue declines and weaker margins as they offer discounts and incentives to attract buyers. Fitch also expects weaker credit metrics across the sector, citing ongoing cost inflation, lower volumes, and reduced earnings visibility.
Industry Revenue
US Real Estate Sector
Industry Structure
Industry size & Structure
The real estate sector is comprised of 412,900 establishments that employ more than 1.8 million workers and generate $668 billion in annual revenue, according to government sources.
- The real estate sector represents 10% of the nation's Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The real estate sector employs 1.2% of the country's workers.
- The sector is fragmented with the 20 largest firms representing 14% of revenue.
- In addition to employer establishments, the real estate sector has 3 million owner-operated establishments with no employees. Subsectors with the highest numbers of nonemployer establishments are lessors of real estate (44%) and offices of real estate agents and brokers (27%). The owners of nonemployer establishments typically perform the work and may outsource support functions like marketing and accounting.
- The real estate sector has shed about 27,000 establishments annually, which equals about 9.6% of existing establishments. However, the sector has added about 36,000 new establishments annually, which is equivalent to 12.7% of existing establishments. As a result, the sector has an average growth rate of 3.1%.
- The real estate sector is forecast to grow its employment base by 3.1% overall in 2024-2034, which is the same as the national average for all jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Industry Forecast
Industry Forecast
US Real Estate Sector Industry Growth
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