A.R.
My husband is a realtor. The bottom line after three years in the business - the hours are long and the work is hard. We stopped thinking about what he was making per hour. After fees, taxes, and effort, it is depressing to consider. Typically work is after hours (5 p.m. and later) and on the weekends. Without a doubt he works more hours than I do. He gets up with me and gets after. He is working long after I get off at night. I am off on the weekends but he is insanely busy. It is a pain for our family time.
He spends hours working with clients and it doesn’t always pan out. The client's financing can fall through, the seller and buyer can’t reach an agreement, the client decides to change areas and won’t necessarily keep my husband as the realtor, etc. My husband is a natural salesman so he never had problems working with clients. However, it is a ton of work and hard work at that. The constant phone calls, e-mails, and texts. All aimed at closing deals - persuading buyers and sellers alike, working with mortgage lenders/appraisers/inspectors/etc, the negotiations with all parties involved, the handling of people and their fragile egos/unreasonable expectations, the juggling of all the various factors. For every successful agent we know, there have to be at least ten who don't make it or who don’t contribute meaningfully to their household budgets.
Offices have their politics like any other office. However, the annoying factor is you are trying to work deals and make stable money based on sales. Others agents can be exceptionally cut throat because to be otherwise might mean you won’t make money. Money doesn’t bring out the best in people. You also have to factor in commission splits. You work your backside off on these deals and your broker takes a big chunk out of the earnings. I don’t think there is such thing as an average yearly income. Honestly I think you could reasonably expect to make at or slightly below the poverty line your first year or two. You will work your backside off to make every dime you earn. So much of the business is based on referrals. It takes time to grow your client base enough to get referrals/repeat business. As one agent told my husband you better be exceptional at budgeting to get through those lean times where you don’t make money for weeks on end.
In the end I agree completely with Kimberly F. Ultimately real estate is a competitive sales job and it is realistically an expensive hobby for most agents. If you want to try real estate, find an agent who needs an assistant. You will have the chance to make steady money, learn the business and decide if it is for you. Good luck.