In my experience working with property professionals, estate agent earnings vary far more than most people realize.
If you are considering the industry or already working in it, your income depends on experience, location, commission structure, and the number of deals you close.
I have reviewed contracts, negotiated pay structures, and worked alongside agents across London, Manchester, and Scotland, giving me firsthand insight into how salaries really work.
In this guide, I break down earnings at every career stage using data from Indeed UK, Glassdoor, and PayScale, while also exploring whether six-figure incomes are genuinely realistic in today’s UK property market.
How Estate Agent Pay Is Structured?
Most UK estate agents earn through a mix of base salary and commission rather than a fixed wage alone.
The base salary provides stability, while commission rewards completed property deals and often makes up the largest part of earnings.
Agencies usually advertise OTE (On-Target Earnings), which combines a base salary and expected commission if targets are met.
For example, a role offering an £18,000 salary with a £30,000 OTE means reaching targets could bring total yearly earnings to £30,000.
However, advertised OTE figures are often optimistic, so it is important to ask what agents realistically earn. Letting agents usually earn commission from rental income instead of property sales.
Average Estate Agent Salary in the UK
The numbers below reflect 2026 data pulled from Indeed UK, Glassdoor, PayScale, and industry surveys.
| Experience Level | Base Salary | With Commission (OTE) |
|---|---|---|
| Trainee / Entry-Level | £16,000 – £22,000 | £25,000 – £35,000 |
| Mid-Level (2-5 years) | £25,000 – £35,000 | £40,000 – £50,000 |
| Senior (5+ years) | £35,000 – £50,000 | £50,000 – £100,000+ |
| Branch Manager | £30,000 – £40,000 | £45,000 – £70,000 |
| The national average salary sits between £24,685 and £33,297 per year. But as the table shows, base salary alone is never the full story. |
Note: Most agencies offer new agents a short guaranteed commission period before earnings become fully performance-based.
What an Real Estate Agent Earns Per Property Sale
This is where most people are surprised. The agent does not keep the full agency fee. Here is exactly how the money splits.
When a property sells, the agency charges the seller a fee. In the UK, that fee is typically between 1% and 1.5% of the sale price plus VAT. The agency keeps the majority of that fee to cover its running costs.
The agent receives a percentage of the agency’s collections. In most employed roles, that percentage sits between 5% and 15%.
Here is how that plays out across different property prices:
| Property Sale Price | Agency Fee (1.5%) | Agent’s Cut (10%) |
|---|---|---|
| £200,000 | £3,000 | £300 |
| £300,000 | £4,500 | £450 |
| £500,000 | £7,500 | £750 |
| £800,000 | £12,000 | £1,200 |
To earn £50,000 in commission alone, an agent would typically need to close around 10 to 12 property sales per year, roughly averaging one sale per month.
For lettings agents, the structure is different. Instead of a percentage of the sale price, they earn a percentage of the property’s annual rent. That rate usually falls between 7% and 15% per tenancy secured.
| Monthly Rent | Annual Rent | Agency Fee (10%) | Agent’s Cut (10%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| £800 | £9,600 | £960 | £96 |
| £1,200 | £14,400 | £1,440 | £144 |
| £2,000 | £24,000 | £2,400 | £240 |
The lettings figures look small per deal. But lettings agents close deals far more frequently than sales agents, often 3-5 tenancies per month in active markets. That frequency is what builds their annual income.
The key takeaway here is simple. In an employed role, you need volume. The more deals you close, the more your commission stacks up on top of your base salary.
The national average gives you a baseline. But the city or town you work in can push that number much higher or much lower.
Location-Based Salary Differences Across the UK

Where you work in the UK has a direct impact on how much you earn. Higher property prices mean higher agency fees, which in turn mean bigger commissions per deal.
1. London
London is the highest-paying real estate market in the UK by a significant margin. Experienced agents earn between £35,000 and £100,000 per year, with top performers in areas like Mayfair and Kensington earning well beyond that.
The average London property price sits between £750,000 and £1 million, meaning even a standard sale can generate a substantial agency fee.
According to Glassdoor, the average real estate agent salary in London is £40,174 per year before commission, though OTE figures for mid-level agents typically range from £55,000 to £70,000.
2. South East England
The South East includes areas such as Surrey, Kent, and Berkshire, where property prices remain well above the national average. Experienced agents here typically earn between £30,000 and £60,000 per year, with top performers reaching £80,000 to £100,000.
Average property prices in this region range from £500,000 to £800,000, making each sale significantly more valuable in commission terms than in lower-priced markets.
3. Manchester and the North West
Manchester is one of the strongest markets outside London for both sales and lettings agents. Experienced agents typically earn between £25,000 and £50,000 per year. The city has a highly active rental market, which supports lettings agents with regular deal flow throughout the year.
Property prices are lower than in the South, but the volume of transactions helps agents build consistent annual income. For context, growing your income in real estate often depends more on deal volume than property value, especially in mid-tier markets like Manchester.
4. Scotland and the Rest of the UK
In Edinburgh and Glasgow, experienced agents earn between £28,000 and £55,000 per year, according to Belvoir Group. Scotland has strong rental demand, though local regulations on tenant fees can limit lettings agents’ earnings.
Outside these major cities, across the Midlands, North East, and Wales, total earnings for experienced agents typically range from £25,000 to £45,000 per year, with lower property prices keeping commission amounts more modest.
Location sets the ceiling on your per-deal earnings. But whether you are employed or working for yourself determines how much of that commission you actually keep.
Employed vs Self-Employed Estate Agents
How you work as an estate agent matters just as much as where you work. The earnings gap between employed and self-employed agents can be significant.
Employed Agents
Employed agents receive a guaranteed monthly base salary, plus commission on top. The agency covers all running costs, including office space, marketing, and software.
In return, the agent keeps a smaller share of each deal, typically between 5% and 20% of the agency’s fee.
This model offers stability and is the most common starting point for agents entering the industry. The trade-off is a lower earnings ceiling compared to going it alone.
Self-Employed Agents
Self-employed agents give up the guaranteed monthly salary entirely. In return, they keep a far larger share of every deal, typically between 60% and 90% of the commission, according to Estate Agent Jobs.
Platforms like Keller Williams and EXP Realty operate this way in the UK, allowing agents to work under a recognized brand while running their own business. The higher commission split comes with higher personal responsibility.
Self-employed agents cover their own marketing, travel, and business costs. In quiet months, they earn nothing at all.
They also need to handle their own tax planning, insurance, and potentially mortgage options for self-employed professionals, which can be more complex than standard employed lending.
Which One Is Right for You?
In my experience, employed roles suit newer agents or those seeking a stable monthly income, while self-employed roles work best for experienced agents with strong client networks and lead-generation skills.
If you are considering the transition, proven strategies for real estate success can help you understand the broader landscape of property income streams beyond traditional agency work.
With the pay structure and working models covered, one question still stands out for most readers.
Can Estate Agents Earn Six Figures?
Yes, six-figure earnings in estate agency are possible, but they are uncommon and usually achieved only by experienced agents in the right market conditions.
Here is who is realistically earning £100,000 or more per year:
- Senior agents with 5 or more years of experience working in London or the South East
- Self-employed agents keeping 70% to 90% of their commission on high-value property sales
- Agents specializing in luxury or commercial property where individual deal values are significantly higher
- Branch managers and area managers oversee large teams in high-performing regions
- Top performers in super prime London markets like Mayfair and Kensington, where a single sale can generate a commission that most agents would not see in a full year
What Separates Six-Figure Estate Agents?
Agents earning £100,000 or more are usually experienced professionals working in high-value markets or luxury property, or self-employed agents with strong commission splits.
In my experience, the biggest differences are location, deal volume, referral networks, and the ability to consistently generate leads.
According to Belvoir Group, top performers in London’s super prime market can earn well beyond £200,000 annually. While six-figure incomes are achievable, they remain rare and typically require years of strong performance.
Conclusion
After years of working alongside estate agents across the UK, I have learned that earnings are never fixed in this industry.
Income depends on experience, location, consistency, and an agent’s ability to close deals and build relationships.
The highest earners are rarely the most naturally talented. They are usually the most disciplined, persistent, and commercially minded.
From reviewing contracts and commission structures to seeing agents progress from trainees to branch managers, I have seen firsthand that estate agency offers strong earning potential for those willing to put in the work.
The opportunities are real, but long-term success comes from consistency and experience.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Real Estate Agents in the UK Get Paid a Bonus?
Some agencies offer annual bonuses for hitting targets. These are separate from the commission. Not all agencies offer them, so always ask before accepting a role.
How Often Do Estate Agents Get Paid Their Commission?
Most agencies pay commission monthly, after a sale is completed. Some pay it quarterly. The timing depends on the agency’s internal payment structure.
Do Part-Time Estate Agents Earn Less Than Full-Time Agents?
Yes. Part-time agents close fewer deals, resulting in lower commission. Base salary is also lower. Full-time agents have more time to build client relationships and close sales.