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Once you pass both portions of your Texas Real Estate Sales Agent Exam one of the most important decisions you will make is choosing which broker to sponsor your license. In Texas you cannot practice real estate independently as a Sales Agent — you must work under a licensed broker. That makes this choice especially important. Here is everything you need to know to find the right fit.

📋 Quick Answer: For most new Texas agents the most important factors in choosing a sponsoring broker are training and mentorship, commission split, culture, and local market presence. In Texas's highly competitive and fast-moving market strong training early in your career is worth far more than a slightly higher commission split.

Why Your Sponsoring Broker Matters in Texas

Texas law requires all Sales Agents to work under a licensed Texas broker. This is not just a legal formality — your sponsoring broker is your mentor, your supervisor, and in many ways your business partner in your early career. The right broker provides training, systems, leads, marketing support, and guidance through your first transactions. The wrong broker leaves you with a desk and a wish of good luck in one of the most competitive real estate markets in the country.

Types of Brokerages Available in Texas

🏢 Large National Franchise Brokerages

Companies like Keller Williams, RE/MAX, Coldwell Banker, Century 21, and Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices have extensive Texas operations particularly in DFW, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio. They offer brand recognition, structured training, and large agent networks.

✅ Pros

  • Strong brand recognition
  • Structured training programs
  • Large referral networks
  • Marketing support tools

❌ Cons

  • Higher desk and royalty fees
  • Less personal mentorship
  • Large competitive offices
  • Lower splits for new agents

🏡 Boutique Independent Brokerages

Smaller locally owned Texas brokerages that often specialize in specific markets or niches. More common in luxury markets and smaller Texas cities. Often provide more personalized mentorship from the broker directly.

✅ Pros

  • Personal broker mentorship
  • Higher commission splits
  • Strong local reputation
  • Niche market expertise

❌ Cons

  • Less brand recognition
  • Fewer agent resources
  • Smaller referral network
  • Less structured training

💻 Virtual and 100% Commission Brokerages

Companies like eXp Realty and Real Broker have large Texas presences. Agents pay a monthly or transaction fee instead of a commission split. Texas has been a major growth market for these virtual brokerage models due to the state's large agent population.

✅ Pros

  • Keep most of commission
  • Flexible work environment
  • Good technology platforms
  • Revenue share opportunities

❌ Cons

  • Little to no training
  • No in-person mentorship
  • Monthly fees add up fast
  • Not ideal for new agents

The 7 Questions to Ask Every Texas Broker Before You Sign

Our Recommendation for New Texas Agents

For most newly licensed Texas Sales Agents we recommend starting at a large national franchise with a strong training program — particularly Keller Williams which originated in Austin and has deep roots in the Texas market. The KW MAPS training system and agent culture are well suited to new agents. Once you have two to three years of experience and consistent production you will have the foundation to evaluate higher-split or independent brokerage options from a position of strength.

Before You Can Join Any Brokerage — You Need to Pass the Exam

Everything starts with passing both portions of the Texas Real Estate Sales Agent Exam with a minimum score of 70% on each. Our A+ Simulator gives you 1,300+ TREC-aligned practice questions covering both the national and Texas state law portions with instant explanations and category weakness tracking.

Pass Your Exam and Start Your Texas Career

1,300+ Texas real estate practice questions — ready when you are.