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Winning the AI Era: A Playbook for UK Estate Agencies

The AI-Driven Rewiring of UK Estate Agency
Thought Leadership by Andrew Stanton CEO Proptech-PR
Real estate has historically been conservative, fragmented, and inefficient. A surge of startups, is introducing automation, data-driven decision-making, and better customer experiences. This wave is backed by billions in investment and global talent. The bottom line is that technology is forcing real estate to modernise.
Proptech represents massive disruption, but not evenly, the wave, roughly between 2015 and 2020, is seen as a turning point. It is expected to improve or replace traditional business models and affect residential, commercial, and multifamily sectors in different ways. However, many startups will fail, and the industry’s slow-moving nature will delay change.
From 2021 onwards we are of course in the AI arms race, as a result, disruption will be partial rather than immediate or complete. And there is tension between ‘old real estate’ and ‘new tech.’
Having met many Proptech founders, nearly 1,700 in the past nine years, there is a clear divide, where tech founders view real estate as inefficient, while industry veterans see startups as naive. There is also a generational clash, with millennials building companies and baby boomers funding them. This cultural resistance is a major barrier to change.
There is now an added dimension, Data, AI, and platforms will form the core of the future.
The present phase is driven by big data, AI and machine learning, a key threat and opportunity is that that real estate data should move from fragmented silos to shared platforms, which would dramatically improve efficiency and collaboration, but who would own the data gateway?
Which means that data infrastructure will therefore become the backbone of the UK Estate Agency industry.
As with any major technological shift, some incumbents will adapt and thrive, while others will be displaced. At the same time, new entrants such as startups and investors have a window of opportunity right now.
The industry is at a strategic inflection point.
It is becoming more diverse and global, and is at the same time reshaping how real estate businesses are built and operated. And AI is allowing smaller founding teams to cover far greater ground in a smaller span of time. The converse blocker always being that real estate will not change overnight, as despite the hype, real estate remains illiquid, complex, and highly localised. Many processes are customised and not easily standardised. As a result, change will be incremental but cumulative over time.
Technology, particularly data and AI will fundamentally reshape real estate, but progress will be uneven due to industry inertia, regulatory complexity, and immature technologies.
Practical implications for estate agencies in the UK
Here are the practical, operator-level implications specifically for UK estate agencies, focusing on changes to business models, margins, and competitive positioning. When I started in residential estate agency in the UK in the mid 1980’s – agents were the guides, pathfinders and high priests of the property journey, only we held the vital knowledge, what property assets were worth and would lease out for. And the general adoption of cloud computing of 2004 was two decades away, so paper and siloed data were industry watchwords.
Now estate agents, your traditional value, based on listings and access, is eroding, portals such as Rightmove and Zoopla, along with other digital platforms, already control distribution and demand aggregation. Consumers can now self-educate, compare options, and shortlist properties without needing an agent. As a result, acting purely as a middleman with listings is no longer defensible, and fee pressure will continue, creating a risk of a race to the bottom.
Agencies therefore need to shift from providing access to property towards delivering expertise and outcomes, particularly in pricing strategy, negotiation, and chain management.
Automation is already removing administrative work; this trend will quicken.
CRM systems, AI, and workflow tools are increasingly automating tasks such as lead qualification, viewing scheduling, follow-ups, and document handling. This means fewer staff are needed to handle the same volume of work, and traditional branch-heavy models become inefficient.
Agencies should respond by running leaner, tech-enabled teams, investing in CRM and automation systems, adopting AI-assisted lead response, and redeploying staff into revenue-generating roles.
Data becomes a key competitive advantage
Agencies that understand and utilise data effectively will win more instructions, price more accurately, and sell properties faster.
To achieve this, agencies should build data-driven valuation approaches using local micro-market insights and buyer behaviour analytics. They should also use data in their pitches to demonstrate clearly how they can achieve higher sale prices.
AI adoption will enhance top agents and even the field for agents with low market share
AI improves valuations, buyer matching, and marketing optimisation. This will make average agents better, and topflight agents to become more powerful and scalable.
Agencies will AI to pre-qualify buyers, generate targeted marketing, and predict likely movers. The future agent will act as an advisor, data interpreter, and closer.
Platforms will dominate, so agencies must integrate or compete
PropTech is moving toward platform ecosystems, including portals, transaction platforms, and digital conveyancing. This creates a risk that agencies become commoditised suppliers to these platforms.
Agencies therefore have two strategic options. Most will remain platform-dependent, focusing on optimising portal performance and building strong brands within those platforms. A smaller number may attempt to build their own platforms, creating niche ecosystems such as investor-focused or luxury markets.
New revenue models will develop
Technology enables new models such as subscription services, hybrid agency models combining fixed and success fees, and expansion into ancillary services. This makes commission-only income less stable.
Margin compression is unavoidable
Increased competition, transparency, and automation will continue to put downward pressure on fees.
Undifferentiated agents will see margins decline.
Agencies must therefore choose between premium positioning, offering high service and strong branding, or a low-cost, high-efficiency, technology-driven model. The middle ground will be squeezed out.
The winning UK estate agency model
A future-proof UK estate agency will operate with a lean team and low fixed costs, make heavy use of automation and AI, maintain a strong local brand or niche focus, and use data-driven valuations and marketing. It will also generate multiple revenue streams and provide high-touch service where it matters most, such as negotiation and sales progression.
Estate agents will not disappear, but will be leaner, a decade ago residential agency teams were six or seven people, now they are four or five, with AI they could be two or three humans, so tech enabled agency is advancing.
The winners will be those who combine technology with human expertise, to offer client UX, and who operate as modern service businesses rather than traditional brokers, and treat data and customer experience as core assets.
With 32 years experience in corporate and independent agency and nine years scaling proptech companies by working 1:1 with founders many focused on harnising the power ofAI, if you are an estate agency that is wondering how AI could change your operations for the better – please book a free call using this LINK.
Andrew Stanton Executive Editor – moving property and proptech forward. PropTech-X

