Why Real Estate Tech Firms Are Cutting Jobs
Amid a sharp housing slowdown, real estate technology firms are cutting jobs as weaker transaction volume erodes the revenue streams that support brokerages, listing platforms, and mortgage-tech businesses. Lower home sales have reduced commissions, lead generation, and closing-fee income.
Higher mortgage rates have also suppressed buyer demand and refinancing. The rising cost of capital has made growth harder to finance and balance sheets more fragile. Tech firms eliminated more than 141,000 positions so far in 2025, underscoring the scale of tech layoffs. The recent Opendoor settlement over disputed AI pricing claims has also added pressure on investor confidence across real estate tech.
Many firms expanded aggressively during stronger markets and are now cutting staff to protect margins, preserve cash, and satisfy investor demands for profitability. Some reductions reflect remote consolidation, vendor renegotiation, and broader cost discipline.
Others stem from business-model shifts, as companies retreat from weaker units, refocus on core operations, and use automation to streamline support, marketing, and back-office functions.
Zillow and Redfin Lead Real Estate Tech Layoffs
Seattle’s two highest-profile real estate tech companies, Zillow and Redfin, remained at the center of the sector’s job cuts. Both confirmed new layoffs tied to restructuring, weaker housing activity, and shifting business priorities.
Redfin led the Seattle consolidation trend, with 862 jobs cut in one major round. It also eliminated 46 more roles in January 2025 and planned roughly 450 reductions in rentals.
The company said headquarters, program, field leadership, and rentals-support roles were affected. Agents were not included in the cuts.
Zillow also cut deeply, first slashing hundreds of jobs. It later reduced about 125 employees in January 2025 after earlier cuts of about 300.
Its layoffs hit agent software and advertising teams through restructuring.
Redfin’s rentals overhaul was tied to affiliate partnerships. That included a Zillow listings deal that reshaped staffing needs.
At the same time, Zillow was also facing industry pressure over its listing policy, which drew antitrust allegations from Compass in a New York lawsuit.
CoStar, Compass, and Opendoor Cut Staff
CoStar Group, Compass, and Opendoor expanded real estate tech layoffs as housing activity stayed weak and investors pushed for faster cost cuts.
CoStar removed about 200 positions, mainly in photo, video, content, and research. The company is also advancing automation and planning new hiring in several states.
| Company | Estimated cuts | Main focus |
|---|---|---|
| CoStar | 200 | automation |
| Compass | 15% | profitability |
| Opendoor | 10% | centralization |
Disruption Across Core Teams
Compass cut roughly 15 percent, affecting sales support, marketing, technology, and duplicative administrative roles.
The company also consolidated offices and prioritized retention over expansion.
Opendoor reduced about 10 percent across operations, customer service, and processing.
The cuts reflect automation, talent redeployment, weaker volumes, and pressure on employee morale from ongoing restructuring.
Mortgage Rates and AI Are Driving Layoffs
Higher mortgage rates remain the main force destabilizing housing, while AI-related layoffs are adding a new layer of pressure to real estate demand and labor-market confidence.
Freddie Mac placed the 30-year average near 6.0% in early 2026, after rates stayed above 7% during parts of 2025.
Elevated interest rates continue to erode affordability, suppress demand, and reinforce lock-in behavior among owners with cheaper existing loans.
Labor Markets Under Strain
AI restructuring is also affecting white-collar labor markets.
Reports cited more than 31,000 layoffs tied directly to AI in 2025, while another estimate put the figure at 54,836.
Surveys suggest many Americans fear AI will eliminate jobs and make homeownership harder.
Analysts expect the housing impact to be sharper in tech-heavy metros than across the broader national market.
What Real Estate Tech Layoffs Mean Next
The next phase points to a split outlook across housing markets.
Nationally, economists still see limited fallout because tech job cuts remain small relative to the broader workforce.
High mortgage rates, undersupply, and weak confidence continue to shape housing more than layoffs alone.
Pressure Builds in Tech Hubs
San Jose, San Francisco, Seattle, and Austin appear more vulnerable.
There, layoffs among high-income workers can slow home-price growth and reduce transaction activity as buyer psychology turns more cautious.
Supply and Demand Risks
Demand may soften first as displaced workers delay purchases, rentals, or relocations.
That hesitation can cool sales without causing a nationwide slump.
In the hardest-hit neighborhoods, localized supply may rise if owners need to move or struggle with payments.
Still, generous severance could delay listings, muting immediate price declines in some areas.
Assessment
The latest cuts signal a harsher phase for U.S. real estate technology firms.
Companies are reducing payrolls as high mortgage rates suppress housing activity and force sharper cost control.
AI adoption is also reshaping staffing needs, especially in sales, support, and back-office roles.
The result is a leaner industry with fewer workers, tighter margins, and greater pressure on firms to prove profitability amid a slower and more uncertain housing market.















