The real estate industry uses several titles that can be confusing. Here is a clear breakdown of what each one means and how it affects your experience as a buyer or seller.
The three titles explained
| Title | What It Means | Licensing | MLS Access |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real estate agent / salesperson | Licensed individual who helps buy or sell property | Provincial real estate license | Through their brokerage (if CREA member) |
| Real estate broker | Licensed individual with additional education who can operate a brokerage | Broker-level license (provincial) | Through their brokerage |
| REALTOR® | Agent or broker who is a member of CREA | Provincial license + CREA membership | Yes — through local real estate board |
Real estate agent (salesperson)
What they do
- List properties for sale on behalf of sellers
- Show properties to buyers and facilitate offers
- Prepare Comparative Market Analyses (CMAs)
- Negotiate purchase prices and terms
- Guide clients through the transaction process
- Coordinate with lawyers, lenders, inspectors, and other professionals
Licensing requirements by province
| Province | Regulatory Body | Education Program | Exam |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | RECO (Real Estate Council of Ontario) | Humber College Real Estate program (5 courses) | Provincial exam |
| British Columbia | BCFSA (BC Financial Services Authority) | UBC Sauder School of Business (pre-licensing courses) | Provincial exam |
| Alberta | RECA (Real Estate Council of Alberta) | RECA-approved education (various providers) | Provincial exam |
| Quebec | OACIQ (Organisme d’autoréglementation du courtage immobilier du Québec) | Collège de l’immobilier / approved programs | OACIQ exam |
| Manitoba | Manitoba Securities Commission (Real Estate Division) | Approved education program | Provincial exam |
| Saskatchewan | SREC (Saskatchewan Real Estate Commission) | SREC-approved courses | Provincial exam |
What agents cannot do
- Operate independently without a brokerage
- Manage trust accounts holding client deposits
- Supervise other agents (that is the broker’s role)
- Provide legal or financial advice (beyond general guidance)
Real estate broker
Types of brokers
| Type | Role | What They Can Do |
|---|---|---|
| Broker of record | The designated individual responsible for the brokerage | Manage the brokerage, supervise agents, handle trust accounts, ensure compliance |
| Managing broker | Day-to-day management of the office | Oversee agents, handle disputes, ensure training compliance |
| Associate broker | Has broker license but works as an agent | Same as a salesperson day-to-day, but has the option to open their own brokerage |
What brokers do that agents cannot
| Function | Agent | Broker |
|---|---|---|
| Operate a brokerage | ❌ | ✅ |
| Supervise agents | ❌ | ✅ |
| Manage trust accounts | ❌ | ✅ |
| Bear regulatory responsibility | For their own transactions | For all transactions in the brokerage |
| Handle client complaints | Directed to broker | Must investigate and resolve |
| Teach real estate courses | Varies | Often qualified |
How to become a broker
| Step | Details |
|---|---|
| 1. Get agent license | Complete standard licensing requirements |
| 2. Gain experience | Most provinces require 2–3 years as an active agent |
| 3. Complete broker education | Additional courses covering brokerage management, trust accounting, and regulatory compliance |
| 4. Pass broker exam | Provincial broker-level examination |
| 5. Register as a broker | Apply with the provincial regulator |
REALTOR® designation
What CREA membership provides
| Benefit | Description |
|---|---|
| MLS® access | Ability to list and search properties on MLS |
| Realtor.ca | Listings appear on Canada’s largest real estate search site |
| CREA Code of Ethics | Members must follow ethical standards beyond provincial licensing requirements |
| Professional development | Access to CREA courses, designations, and conferences |
| Insurance | Errors and omissions insurance through CREA programs |
| Advocacy | CREA lobbies government on real estate issues on behalf of members |
REALTOR® vs non-REALTOR® agents
| Feature | REALTOR® | Non-Member Agent |
|---|---|---|
| MLS access | Yes | No |
| Realtor.ca listings | Yes | No |
| CREA Code of Ethics | Must follow | Not bound by CREA code (still bound by provincial regulations) |
| Public perception | More recognized | Less mainstream visibility |
| Licensing | Same provincial requirements | Same provincial requirements |
| Competence | Varies | Varies |
Most Canadian real estate agents are CREA members because MLS access is essential for competitive practice. Non-member agents typically work in private sales, commercial real estate, or alternative models.
Professional designations
| Designation | Full Name | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| FRI | Fellow of the Real Estate Institute | Advanced real estate designation (REIC) |
| ABR | Accredited Buyer’s Representative | Specialized buyer representation |
| SRES | Seniors Real Estate Specialist | Serving clients 55+ |
| CNE | Certified Negotiation Expert | Advanced negotiation skills |
| CCIM | Certified Commercial Investment Member | Commercial real estate |
| ASA | Accredited Senior Appraiser | Property appraisal |
| SRS | Seller Representative Specialist | Specialized seller representation |
How to choose the right professional
What matters more than the title
| Factor | Why It Matters | How to Evaluate |
|---|---|---|
| Transaction volume | More experience in recent market conditions | Ask how many deals they closed in the last 12 months |
| Neighbourhood knowledge | Local expertise drives better pricing and strategy | Ask about recent sales in your target area |
| Communication style | You need to be comfortable and informed | Notice their response time and clarity during initial contact |
| Client reviews | Past client satisfaction predicts future performance | Check Google reviews, realtor.ca reviews, ask for references |
| Marketing plan (sellers) | How they will attract buyers | Ask for their specific marketing plan for your property |
| Negotiation track record | Affects your final sale or purchase price | Ask about their average sold-to-list price ratio |
| Availability | Your agent should be responsive and accessible | Ask about their current workload and availability |
Red flags when choosing an agent
- Cannot provide recent comparable sales data — they should know market conditions
- Pushes you to sign a long representation agreement immediately — a confident agent offers short terms
- Refuses to provide references — established agents have satisfied clients willing to recommend them
- Overpromises on price — listing agents who suggest unrealistic prices may be “buying” your listing
- Poor communication — if they take days to respond before you hire them, it will not improve after
- No online presence or reviews — most active agents have a digital footprint
Quebec distinction: courtier vs agent
Quebec uses different terminology:
| Title | Quebec Equivalent |
|---|---|
| Real estate broker | Courtier immobilier |
| Real estate agent | Courtier immobilier (no separate “salesperson” category in Quebec) |
| Brokerage | Agence immobilière |
| Regulatory body | OACIQ |
In Quebec, all practitioners are licensed as courtiers (brokers) by OACIQ. There is no separate salesperson category as in Ontario and most other provinces. The agency director (dirigeant d’agence) has responsibilities similar to a broker of record.