Enter at your own risk! - Anonymous employee Keller Williams Employee Review

1.0
Aug 3, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are some wonderful people still there. Benefits are great, pay is good and once the office remodel is complete it will be a beautiful office.

Cons

I honestly don’t know where to start! There is an exodus of talented people running out the door. People who can leave are, and the rest are riding it out until they can find something else (unless they are long tenured employees who just don’t know any better). This is an incredibly political environment where leadership decisions are made based on personal relationships, family connections (yes! really!!), or whether or not you can stroke the ego of the narcissist in charge. All the talk is about about pivoting into a tech company, but no one really knows what that means and the “tech” being produced is flawed and there is no business or profit model behind it. They just want to create something techish before someone else does and are banking on their cult-like following among real estate agents.

Explore other reviews about Keller Williams

5.0
Jul 13, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of training. Great culture.

Cons

None at the moment that I can think of.

5.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working as an agent at Keller Williams (KW) comes with a highly praised foundation of industry-leading education and a distinct, collaborative culture. Often described as a "training organization disguised as a real estate brokerage," KW offers an extensive library of courses, bootcamps, and structured mentorship programs that are incredibly beneficial for new agents learning the ropes of lead generation and contract management. Additionally, the company operates on a capping system—meaning once you pay a set amount of commission splits to the brokerage each year, you get to keep 100% of your commission for the remainder of that year. The unique profit-sharing model also allows agents to build a stream of passive income by recruiting other productive agents to the firm.

Cons

The downsides are primarily tied to the financial burden placed on agents, especially those just starting out. Keller Williams is known for having higher commission splits initially (often around 70/30) along with desk fees, franchise royalties, and heavily marketed, expensive add-on coaching programs that can quickly drain an agent's bank account before they ever close a deal. Because each market center operates as an independent franchise, the actual quality of management, mentorship, and support varies drastically from office to office. Furthermore, some agents find the corporate culture overly intense or clique-y, noting a relentless push for continuous recruiting and adherence to the rigid "KW model" rather than personalized business development.

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