When Real Brokerage and REMAX announced their $880 million merger Monday, the public message centered on scale, technology and what executives described as a “transformational moment for the industry.” Investor materials and SEC filings offer more insight into how the combined company — the Real REMAX Group — plans to generate revenue.
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At the center of that strategy is a largely untapped asset in REMAX’s consumer-facing websites. According to investor materials, those sites generate more than 1 million gross leads annually, including about 750,000 from REMAX.com and another 250,000 from REMAX.ca.
From traffic to pipeline
Real executives have described that traffic as a significant opportunity to drive growth beyond traditional brokerage operations. That opportunity sits alongside the company’s projected $30 million in annual cost savings, underscoring that the deal’s financial upside is tied not only to efficiency gains but also to capturing more value from consumer demand.

Ravi Jani
On an investor call following Monday’s announcement, Real executives pointed to REMAX’s digital footprint as a key piece of the company’s long-term strategy. The plan is to deploy HeyLeo, Real’s AI-powered home search and relationship management platform, to better engage, nurture and convert that traffic, Chief Financial Officer Ravi Jani said. The goal is to keep more of the consumer journey within its own ecosystem, rather than losing it to third-party portals or traditional referral channels.
“We also see significant opportunity to utilize our AI-powered consumer home search portal, HeyLeo, to further nurture and monetize the 1 million annual leads generated across REMAX.com and REMAX.ca,” Jani told analysts.
Executives said those revenue opportunities are not factored into the deal’s core financial projections, positioning them as potential upside rather than a requirement for the transaction to work. The strategy builds on Real’s broader push into higher-margin ancillary services — mortgage through One Real Mortgage and Motto Mortgage, title through One Real Title and fintech through Real Wallet — pointing to a more vertically integrated model where the combined company captures value not just from brokerage commissions but across the full transaction lifecycle.
A franchise model meets a shifting market
Unlike Real’s centralized, cloud-based brokerage, REMAX operates through thousands of independently owned franchise offices, each of which determines how it handles leads, marketing and client relationships. Real executives have emphasized that agents and franchisees will not be required to adopt the company’s technology or tools — a key distinction in a system built on autonomy.
When asked by Inman whether the combined company would pursue a private listings network or more aggressive internal inventory strategies, CEO Tamir Poleg left the door open without committing. “We will do everything that we believe is in the best interest of our agents and their clients,” he said. “If agents see the benefit of doing something in that direction, we will go ahead and do it.”

Tamir Poleg
Real’s strategy to nurture REMAX leads arrives as competition over consumer relationships is intensifying across the industry. Firms like Compass have moved aggressively to keep more of the consumer journey inside their own networks — through proprietary portals, integrated ancillary services and multi-phase marketing approaches.
Real’s focus on monetizing REMAX’s web traffic fits that broader pattern. Rather than controlling listings directly, companies are increasingly focused on capturing and converting the consumer demand tied to them.
Real’s filings acknowledge the challenges ahead, warning of potential disruption to agents and franchisees and noting that achieving anticipated synergies may take longer than projected.
For now, executives are positioning the strategy as additive — new tools layered on top of existing business models, available to those who choose to use them. How much of REMAX’s consumer traffic ultimately flows through Real’s platform, and how much remains within thousands of independently owned offices, may be one of the more consequential questions the combined company faces once the deal closes.