Real estate’s ongoing digital transformation accelerates with artificial intelligence affecting property valuation, buyer matching, transaction processing, and property management. This transformation affects workers from agents to appraisers to property managers, changing a sector that traditionally relied heavily on human relationships and local knowledge.
Research shows 60% of jobs in wealthy nations and 40% globally will be affected by AI. Real estate positions span this range depending on specific roles, with some real estate professionals appearing among the approximately 10% using AI for property analysis and client matching, while others face displacement from AI-driven automation.
Young workers entering real estate face changing requirements as AI handles tasks like property research and initial client screening. Entry-level positions supporting senior agents may diminish as AI performs these functions. However, relationship-building aspects of real estate may provide some employment stability.
Experienced real estate professionals must adapt to AI tools that provide property valuations, match buyers with properties, and streamline transactions. Local knowledge and relationship skills remain valuable but represent smaller portions of the work as AI handles analytical tasks. This requires adaptation from professionals who built careers on comprehensive service.
Governance of real estate AI involves consumer protection, fair housing concerns with algorithmic matching, and accuracy in AI valuations. Labor impacts receive less regulatory attention despite employment effects. International cooperation on real estate AI faces challenges from vastly different property markets and regulations globally.