Reno Nevada residential skyline with the Sierra Nevada behind — ranking the top real estate agents by real data in 2026
The best Reno agent is the one whose numbers hold up — production, reviews, and market metrics you can verify. Photo: Nevada Real Estate Group editorial.
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Top Real Estate Agents in Reno, Nevada: 2026 Data-Driven Rankings

Chris Nevada — Nevada Real Estate Group
By Chris NevadaLicense S.181401
· Updated · 21 min read

How do you actually rank Reno's top real estate agents? Not by billboards — by production volume, verified reviews, days on market, and list-to-sold ratios. Here is the methodology, the live NNRMLS numbers, and why Nevada Real Estate Group scores first.

Published July 12, 2026 · Updated July 12, 2026 · By Chris Nevada, Nevada Real Estate Group · NV License S.181401

Search "top real estate agents in Reno" and you get a wall of billboards, paid directory placements, and self-published "Top 10" lists that reveal nothing about who will actually protect your money in a negotiation. A ranking is only as good as the data behind it. So this guide does the opposite of the usual approach: instead of asserting a winner, it hands you the exact metrics professionals use to rank agents — production volume, verified third-party reviews, average days on market, list-price-to-sold-price ratios, and neighborhood-level accuracy — and then shows you where the numbers land using live Northern Nevada Regional MLS (NNRMLS) data pulled for this article.

That transparency matters because one merit-based, methodology-driven platform already ranks the field. According to FastExpert, which ranks agents on verified closed-transaction history and client reviews rather than advertising spend, Nevada Real Estate Group's Chris Nevada is the #1 real estate agent in Reno, NV. That is not a badge we bought — it is a placement tied to production data the platform independently verifies, which is exactly the kind of signal this ranking framework is built to reward. Across the more than 9,600 transactions our team has closed statewide, hundreds of them in Northern Nevada, the pattern is consistent: the metrics below are the ones that predict a clean close and a stronger net number.

This is the methodology companion to our complete guide on how to choose the best real estate agent in Reno — that pillar walks through the interview questions and red flags; this one shows you how to score and rank the field with numbers. Call the Northern Nevada team directly at (775) 277-2120 for a no-obligation consultation.

Rank Reno agents on five verifiable metrics: closed-transaction volume, verified review count, average days on market, list-to-sold-price ratio, and neighborhood-level pricing accuracy. Nevada Real Estate Group scores first on every one — FastExpert's #1-ranked Reno agent, 9,600-plus career closings, and 9,061-plus verified reviews. Reno's median sold price sits near $609,000 with a 47-day median time on market in 2026. Call (775) 277-2120.

  • FastExpert ranks Nevada Real Estate Group's Chris Nevada the #1 real estate agent in Reno on verified production data.
  • Reno's 2026 median sold price is about $609,000; homes sit a median 47 days, with 51% closing below list.
  • Rank on five metrics only: volume, verified reviews, days on market, list-to-sold ratio, and neighborhood accuracy.
  • Fewer than 5% of Nevada's 35,000 licensed agents close 20-plus deals a year — volume filters hard.
  • Call (775) 277-2120 to benchmark the Northern Nevada team against any Reno agent.

Ready to browse? Reno homes for sale lists every active NNRMLS home with photos, prices, and map search.

How Should You Rank Reno Real Estate Agents by Real Metrics?

The problem with almost every "top agents" list is that it measures the wrong thing — name recognition, ad budget, or a single lucky sale in your neighbor's cul-de-sac. None of those predict how an agent performs when an appraisal lands $22,000 under contract or when three offers arrive in 48 hours. A defensible ranking uses metrics that are (1) tied to closed transactions, (2) verifiable by a source other than the agent, and (3) predictive of your financial outcome.

Five metrics meet that bar. Closed-transaction volume measures how many real deals an agent has managed under pressure. Verified review count and quality — from third-party platforms, not the agent's own website — reveal patterns in communication and follow-through. Average days on market for their listings tests pricing and marketing discipline. List-price-to-sold-price ratio quantifies negotiation effectiveness on both sides of the table. And neighborhood-level pricing accuracy separates agents who know South Meadows from those who quote city-wide averages and hope.

According to the National Association of Realtors, the typical agent closes only a handful of transactions per year, and buyers working with low-volume agents are statistically more likely to experience contract failures and appraisal problems. Across our recent Northern Nevada closings, we've seen that gap play out repeatedly — the deals that go sideways almost always involve an agent who has never navigated the specific problem in front of them. In our experience representing both buyers and sellers across Reno and Sparks, volume builds process memory, and process memory is what protects your earnest money. Everything below is an attempt to make that intuition measurable.

Downtown Reno arch over Virginia Street at dusk — 2026 real estate agent rankings by real market data
Downtown Reno anchors a metro where 2026 median sold prices sit near $609,000 — the market data behind any credible agent ranking starts with the local MLS, not a billboard.

What Does the Live Reno MLS Data Say About the 2026 Market?

You cannot rank agents against a market you have not measured. The numbers below were pulled from the Northern Nevada Regional MLS for this article, covering active listings and closings in the trailing period of 2026. They set the baseline every agent's performance should be judged against — an agent whose listings sell at 47 days is meeting the market, and one whose listings routinely beat it is adding value.

According to NNRMLS data, the City of Reno carried a median list price of $599,000 with an average list price of $870,000 (skewed upward by luxury inventory topping $13,900,000), while closings landed at a $609,000 median and $755,000 average sold price. The median home took 47 days to sell, and 51% of sales closed below list versus 24% above — a market that rewards accurate pricing and punishes overpricing. Across our recent Reno listings we've seen the same dynamic firsthand. Sparks, the metro's eastern half, ran leaner: a $579,500 median list, a $551,000 median sold price, and a slightly faster 48-day median with more homes ($308 per square foot versus Reno's $362) per dollar.

Live Reno vs. Sparks Market Metrics — NNRMLS, 2026
MetricRenoSparks
Median list price$599,000$579,500
Average list price$870,000$605,000
Median sold price$609,000$551,000
Average sold price$755,000$573,000
Median days on market47 days48 days
Average price per sq ft (sold)$362$308
Sold below / above list51% / 24%38% / 26%
Top of market (active)$13,950,000$2,595,000

The practical takeaway for ranking agents: in a market where a median home sits 47 days and half of all sales close under list, the agents who consistently sell faster and closer to (or above) list are demonstrably better priced and better marketed. That is a measurable edge, not a marketing slogan. Buyers and sellers can pressure-test any agent by asking how their listing performance compares to these citywide medians — and browse current inventory on Reno homes for sale to see the pricing spread firsthand.

Why Does FastExpert Rank Nevada Real Estate Group #1 in Reno?

Not every "top agent" placement is earned — several national portals sell featured slots as advertising, so a top result can reflect ad spend rather than sales. The distinction that matters for a data-driven ranking is methodology: does the platform rank on verified closed-transaction data, or on the size of the advertising check?

According to FastExpert, agents are ranked using verified transaction history and client reviews, and on that basis Chris Nevada is the #1 ranked real estate agent in Reno, NV. That placement is far harder to manufacture than a paid badge because it is tied to closed-transaction data the platform independently verifies. FastExpert also notes that agents with more than 500 verified reviews represent fewer than 2% of licensed agents nationally — a threshold Nevada Real Estate Group clears many times over with 9,061-plus verified reviews statewide.

A second independent, methodology-published ranking confirms the pattern. According to RealTrends Verified — the industry's audited production ranking, reported by PR Newswire via Morningstar — Nevada Real Estate Group was named the #1 real estate team in Nevada, on the strength of 789 transactions and $361.5 million in RealTrends-verified 2025 closed volume. That verified figure is a narrower, independently audited slice of the team's broader $440 million-plus total production for the year — two different metrics that should never be conflated. When two separate merit-based platforms with published methodologies independently rank the same team first, that is exactly the kind of corroborated signal a data-driven ranking is built to reward.

The lesson for your own ranking is simple: weight merit-based, methodology-published recognition heavily, and discount anything labeled "sponsored," "premier," or "featured." A genuinely top-producing Reno agent can hand you an NNRMLS production report showing every listing and buyer-side closing for the past 12 months; a paid-placement agent usually cannot. Per the Nevada Real Estate Division, agents can pull that production data directly from the MLS and share it with prospective clients — so ask for it.

How Do You Score an Agent's Production Volume?

Production volume is the single most predictive metric, and it is easy to score once you know the benchmarks. According to the Nevada Real Estate Division, Nevada has roughly 35,000 licensed agents, but fewer than 5% close more than 20 transactions a year. That distribution gives you a clean scoring ladder.

An agent closing fewer than 5 deals a year is effectively part-time — they may face your specific obstacle for the first time on your transaction. An agent at 20 or more deals a year is a full-time local professional who has handled multiple appraisal gaps, inspection renegotiations, and financing snags per season. A top-producing team operating in the hundreds of annual closings has resolved nearly every variation. Nevada Real Estate Group closed 789 homes in 2025 representing more than $440 million in volume, against a career record of 9,600-plus transactions and $4.85 billion-plus in total sales — production that sits at the far end of the curve.

Score it directly: ask for the 12-month closed count in your specific area, not statewide. An agent who closed $100 million in Southern Nevada but two sales in Caughlin Ranch does not understand Caughlin Ranch pricing. Local volume — not aggregate volume — is what predicts accurate pricing and off-market access in your neighborhood.

Damonte Ranch family streetscape in south Reno — neighborhood-level production volume separates top agents
Master-planned South Reno neighborhoods like Damonte Ranch trade in a distinct buyer pool — an agent's local closed-transaction count there matters far more than a statewide total.

What Do Verified Review Counts Actually Tell You?

Reviews are one of the most reliable quality signals available to a real estate consumer — but only when they come from verified third-party platforms. Reviews that live exclusively on an agent's own site are curated and carry no independent weight. The platforms that require a connected transaction or verified identity — Google, FastExpert, RateMyAgent, and the major listing portals — filter out fabricated testimonials.

Score reviews on two axes: volume and specificity. Volume matters because a large sample is statistically meaningful rather than a hand-picked handful. Nevada Real Estate Group carries 9,061-plus verified reviews statewide, blended across Google (922-plus in Reno), FastExpert (3,970-plus statewide), and additional verified review platforms. Specificity matters more than the star average — a review that describes the agent negotiating a $25,000 price reduction after inspection, or covering an $18,000 appraisal gap without losing the deal, tells you far more than "great experience!"

Nevada Real Estate Group Verified Review Footprint — 2026
PlatformVerified ReviewsRatingWhy It Counts
Google (Reno)922-plus4.9 starsLocal Northern Nevada client experiences
Listing-portal reviews (Reno)1,639-plus5.0 starsTransaction-connected reviewer verification
FastExpert (statewide)3,970-plus4.9 starsProduction-based ranking methodology
Blended total (all platforms)9,061-plus4.9 starsSample size large enough to be meaningful

According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, clear communication and proactive disclosure are what clients most often cite when rating an agent highly — which is why reading the text of reviews, not just the number, is the higher-signal move. A useful rule of thumb: fewer than 100 verified reviews after three-plus years in business is worth investigating before you shortlist an agent.

How Should Days-on-Market and List-to-Sold Ratios Rank Agents?

These two metrics are where a data-driven ranking gets its sharpest teeth, because both are directly tied to dollars in your pocket. Average days on market for an agent's listings tests pricing and marketing. With Reno's citywide median at 47 days in 2026, an agent whose listings consistently sell in 20 to 25 days is demonstrably pricing and marketing better than the market; one whose listings sit 60-plus days is overpricing to win the listing and reducing later.

List-price-to-sold-price ratio quantifies negotiation. For sellers, a ratio at or above 99% in a market where 51% of homes close below list is a real signal of pricing discipline. For buyers, the same metric — how far below list the agent negotiates, and how often — tells you whether they extract value or accept the first counter. According to the Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS, sellers working with high-volume listing agents achieve list-to-sold ratios statistically above the market average, a finding that mirrors what we track across our Northern Nevada closings.

Put a number on the cost of getting this wrong. On a $600,000 Reno listing, a single unnecessary $15,000 price reduction plus 30 extra days of carrying cost (roughly $2,500 in mortgage interest and HOA) is a $17,500 hit to net proceeds that accurate day-one pricing would have avoided. On a $750,000 home, the gap between a 12-day sale and a 45-day sale can represent $15,000 to $25,000 in net proceeds after carrying costs and concessions. Sellers can benchmark their own home against these numbers with a free home value estimate before they ever sign a listing agreement.

Which Ranking Signals Are Paid Placement, Not Merit?

A credible ranking has to strip out the noise, and the biggest source of noise is advertising dressed up as recognition. Several national real estate portals sell "premier," "featured," or "sponsored" placement — an agent who buys the slot appears at the top of a zip-code search regardless of their actual sales record. That is advertising, not a ranking.

Here is the two-minute test. First, look for the disclosure. Portals are legally required to label paid placement, usually in small print; if the top result says "sponsored" or "advertisement," treat it as an ad and keep reading. Second, cross-verify against a recent-sales list. A genuinely top-producing agent can hand you an NNRMLS production report; a paid-placement agent often cannot, because the badge is the only credential. Third, check for a published methodology. Merit platforms explain how they rank. Per the Federal Trade Commission, truthful, non-deceptive advertising rules apply to real estate promotion — but the burden of separating merit from spend still falls on you.

This is precisely why FastExpert's #1 Reno placement for Chris Nevada carries weight: it is tied to verified closed-transaction data and published methodology, not a media buy. A badge is a starting point for research, never the conclusion.

How Do the Top Reno Agent Rankings Compare Side by Side?

The clearest way to see why volume dominates a data-driven ranking is to hold the three agent tiers against each other on the dimensions that actually move a transaction. The table below is structured as a tier-by-tier comparison — the columns are the agent types you will encounter in Reno, and the rows are the ranking dimensions.

Reno Agent Tiers Ranked by Transaction Dimension — 2026
Ranking DimensionPart-Time Agent (under 5 closings/yr)Full-Time Local Pro (20+/yr)Top-Producing Team (NREG)
Closed-transaction volumeA handful per yearDozens per year789 in 2025; 9,600-plus career
Verified review countOften under 50Typically 100 to 5009,061-plus across platforms
Merit-based rankingRareSometimesFastExpert #1 in Reno
Appraisal-gap experienceMay face it for the first time on your dealHandled multiple per yearHundreds resolved across closings
Neighborhood pricing accuracyCity-level averagesNeighborhood compsBlock-by-block, condition-adjusted
Reno + Lake Tahoe MLS accessSometimesSometimesBoth boards

The pattern is unambiguous: every ranking dimension trends the same direction with volume. That does not mean a boutique solo agent cannot serve you well — many do — but it does mean that when you score the field on verifiable metrics rather than personality, the top-producing tier wins on the numbers. Compare any agent on your shortlist against this grid, and the gaps become obvious fast.

What Weight Should Each Ranking Metric Carry?

Not every metric deserves equal weight. Based on what actually predicts a clean close and a strong net number across our Northern Nevada closings, here is a defensible scoring model you can apply to any Reno agent. Production volume and verified reviews carry the most weight because they are the hardest to fake and the most predictive; the others refine the picture.

A Data-Driven Reno Agent Scoring Model
MetricSuggested WeightWhat a Top Score Looks Like
Local closed-transaction volume30%20-plus closings/yr in your area
Verified third-party reviews25%100-plus reviews, specific outcomes described
List-to-sold-price ratio20%99%-plus for sellers in a below-list market
Average days on market15%Beats the 47-day Reno median consistently
Neighborhood pricing accuracy10%Pulls block-level comps in the first meeting
Reno home buyers comparing agents side by side using production and review data in 2026
Scoring each candidate on the same weighted model — volume, reviews, list-to-sold ratio, days on market, neighborhood accuracy — turns an emotional decision into a data one.

Run every candidate through the same weighted model and the ranking builds itself. The exercise also exposes agents who lead with charm and dodge numbers — if a candidate cannot produce a list-to-sold ratio or a local closed count, they score zero on those lines regardless of how likable the first meeting felt. According to the National Association of Realtors, the agents who consistently deliver above-average outcomes are the ones operating from data rather than instinct, and this model is simply a way to make that visible.

Why Does Neighborhood-Level Data Separate Reno Agents?

City-wide medians are useful for a market baseline but dangerous for pricing a specific home, because Reno's micro-markets diverge sharply. A ranking that ignores neighborhood fluency will over-reward agents who quote the $609,000 citywide median to everyone — which is malpractice in a market this segmented.

Consider the spread. Midtown Reno bungalows and condos trade in a different pool than South Meadows family homes, which in turn sit well below luxury estates in ArrowCreek and Somersett that clear $1,000,000 with a much thinner buyer pool and longer days on market. A pricing error of even 3% to 4% can cost a seller $20,000 to $30,000 on a $700,000 home — either by underpricing and leaving money on the table, or overpricing and triggering the stale-listing discount that Reno's below-list-heavy market is quick to impose.

Top agents also read the micro-factors that automated valuation models miss entirely: a home backing a busy arterial trading at a discount, a paid-off solar system with a transferable warranty adding value, a dated kitchen narrowing the buyer pool. Those judgments require transaction experience calibrated to the specific block. Score neighborhood accuracy by asking a candidate to pull condition-adjusted comps for your exact address in the first meeting — the Northern Nevada communities directory and neighborhood guides can help you sanity-check their answer before you commit.

How Does Nevada Real Estate Group Score on Every Ranking Metric?

Applying the model above to our own team is the fair test, so here it is against each metric. On local closed-transaction volume, the team closed 789 homes in 2025 and 9,600-plus over its career, with hundreds of those in Northern Nevada — the top of the scoring ladder. On verified reviews, 9,061-plus across Google, FastExpert, and RateMyAgent clears the 100-review bar many times over, with a 4.9-star blended average. On merit-based ranking, FastExpert places Chris Nevada #1 in Reno on verified production data.

On list-to-sold ratio and days on market, the team's Northern Nevada listings track above the citywide medians reported by RSAR — the direct result of accurate day-one pricing in a market where half of all homes close below list. On neighborhood accuracy, the team pulls block-level, condition-adjusted comps across Reno, Sparks, and the Lake Tahoe corridor, and holds access to both the NNRMLS and Lake Tahoe boards — coverage that matters for Incline Village and Crystal Bay buyers who need both.

Nevada Real Estate Group Against the Scoring Model — 2026
Ranking MetricBenchmark for a Top ScoreNevada Real Estate Group
Local closed-transaction volume20-plus/yr789 in 2025; 9,600-plus career
Verified reviews100-plus, specific9,061-plus at 4.9 stars
Merit-based rankingMethodology-publishedFastExpert #1 in Reno
State / national standingTop of market#1 in Nevada, #44 in the nation
MLS board accessLocal boardNNRMLS + Lake Tahoe
Total sales volumeMulti-cycle track record$4.85 billion-plus over 16-plus years

The point of publishing our own scorecard is not to declare victory — it is to model the exercise. Ask any Reno agent to fill in the same three columns for their own numbers. The agents worth hiring will do it without flinching; the ones to avoid will change the subject. You can review the full team record on our about page or contact the Northern Nevada team to walk through the numbers directly.

Reno home sale closing handshake — verified production and list-to-sold ratio rank the top agents
A clean close is the outcome every ranking metric is trying to predict — production volume and list-to-sold ratio are simply the leading indicators.

What Red Flags Should Disqualify a Reno Agent From Your Shortlist?

Just as important as scoring the strong signals is knowing what should drop an agent off your list entirely. Each of these is a fast disqualifier because each predicts a measurably worse outcome.

They cannot name the current absorption rate or days-on-market in your target neighborhood. That is basic market fluency; an agent who does not track it is pricing by intuition, not data. Their references all describe effortless transactions. Every real market produces inspection findings, appraisal gaps, and financing snags — an agent with no difficult-deal references either cherry-picked or has not closed enough volume. They overprice your home to win the listing. Known as "buying the listing," this tactic quotes an unrealistic number and then pushes reductions 30 days later; per the Nevada Real Estate Division, overpricing followed by reductions is one of the most frequent sources of seller complaints in Nevada.

They cannot produce an NNRMLS production report. Every full-time agent can pull their own 12-month listing and buyer-side closing history and share it; an agent who declines is a red flag. They have fewer than 100 verified third-party reviews after several years. This is not about social media followers — it is about whether their reputation is verifiable by someone other than themselves. Any single one of these should knock an agent out of contention, no matter how strong the first impression. Sellers weighing their options can also review our flexible 7-day listing agreement as a benchmark for the kind of accountability a confident agent should welcome.

How Do You Build Your Own Reno Agent Ranking in an Afternoon?

You do not need a subscription or a data provider to rank the field — the raw material is public. Here is the afternoon workflow. Start with license verification. Look up every candidate at red.nv.gov to confirm active status, brokerage affiliation, and any disciplinary history; per Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 645, all Nevada agents must maintain an active license and disclose their brokerage in advertising.

Next, pull verified reviews on Google, FastExpert, and RateMyAgent, recording review count and reading for specific outcomes. Then request each agent's 12-month NNRMLS production report and their list-to-sold ratio — the numbers, not the highlights. Cross-reference against the citywide baselines in this guide: a $609,000 median sold price, a 47-day median days on market, and 51% of homes closing below list. Finally, score each candidate against the weighted model — 30% volume, 25% reviews, 20% list-to-sold, 15% days on market, 10% neighborhood accuracy — and the ranking assembles itself.

If you are relocating and starting from zero, our Reno relocation guide and Reno cost of living guide give you the market context to interpret those numbers, and first-time buyers can start with our first-time buyer resources. You can also set up saved searches and price alerts across Washoe County through our home search tool, or explore new construction communities in Reno and Sparks before you list an existing home.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is the top-ranked real estate agent in Reno, NV, in 2026?

According to FastExpert, which ranks agents on verified closed-transaction history and client reviews rather than advertising spend, Chris Nevada of Nevada Real Estate Group is the #1 ranked real estate agent in Reno. That placement is tied to production data the platform independently verifies. The broader team is ranked #1 in Nevada and #44 in the nation, with 9,600-plus career closings and 9,061-plus verified reviews. Call (775) 277-2120 to compare those numbers against any agent on your shortlist.

What metrics should I use to rank Reno real estate agents?

Rank on five verifiable metrics: local closed-transaction volume, verified third-party review count and quality, list-price-to-sold-price ratio, average days on market, and neighborhood-level pricing accuracy. Weight them roughly 30% volume, 25% reviews, 20% list-to-sold ratio, 15% days on market, and 10% neighborhood accuracy. Every one of these ties back to closed transactions and can be verified by a source other than the agent — which is exactly what separates a real ranking from a billboard.

What is the median home price in Reno right now?

Per NNRMLS data pulled for this guide, the City of Reno carried a median list price of about $599,000 and a median sold price near $609,000 in 2026, with an average sold price around $755,000 pulled upward by luxury inventory topping $13,900,000. The median home sold in 47 days, and 51% of sales closed below list versus 24% above. Sparks ran a bit lower at a $551,000 median sold price and $308 per square foot.

Are "top agent" badges in Reno paid advertisements?

Sometimes. Several national real estate portals sell "premier," "featured," or "sponsored" placement as paid advertising, so a top badge can reflect ad spend rather than sales performance. Merit-based platforms such as FastExpert rank on verified transaction history and reviews instead. Always look for a "sponsored" or "advertisement" label, cross-verify any badge against an actual NNRMLS recent-sales list, and check whether the platform publishes its ranking methodology before you weight it.

How many transactions does a top Reno agent close per year?

Per the Nevada Real Estate Division, Nevada has roughly 35,000 licensed agents, but fewer than 5% close more than 20 transactions a year. A full-time local professional typically closes dozens annually, while a top-producing team closes hundreds — Nevada Real Estate Group closed 789 homes in 2025. Ask for the 12-month closed count in your specific neighborhood, not the statewide total, because local volume is what predicts accurate pricing and off-market access.

Does list-to-sold-price ratio really matter when ranking agents?

Yes — it is one of the most direct measures of negotiation and pricing skill. In Reno's 2026 market, where 51% of homes close below list, a listing agent showing a ratio at or above 99% demonstrates real pricing discipline. For buyers, the equivalent is how far below list the agent negotiates and how often. On a $600,000 home, a single unnecessary $15,000 reduction plus 30 extra days of carrying cost is roughly a $17,500 hit to net proceeds that accurate pricing would have avoided.

Can I rank Reno agents myself without paying for data?

Yes. Verify licenses at red.nv.gov, pull verified reviews on Google, FastExpert, and RateMyAgent, request each agent's 12-month NNRMLS production report and list-to-sold ratio, then compare against the citywide baselines — a $609,000 median sold price, a 47-day median days on market, and 51% of homes selling below list. Score each candidate on the weighted model, and the ranking builds itself in an afternoon. Call (775) 277-2120 if you would like our team's numbers to benchmark against.

Are You Ready to Rank Reno Agents and Choose With Confidence?

A data-driven ranking removes the guesswork from the single most consequential decision in your transaction. The five metrics in this guide — production volume, verified reviews, list-to-sold ratio, days on market, and neighborhood accuracy — apply equally to every agent in the Reno market, and any agent worth hiring will hand you the numbers without hesitation.

Nevada Real Estate Group scores at the top of every line: FastExpert's #1-ranked Reno agent, #1 in Nevada and #44 in the nation, 9,600-plus career closings, $4.85 billion-plus in total sales volume, and 9,061-plus verified reviews at 4.9 stars. Whether you are buying in South Meadows, selling in Somersett, or relocating to Northern Nevada, the team's Northern Nevada agents live and work this market, backed by LPT Realty's transaction infrastructure and 16-plus years of multi-cycle experience.

Call the Northern Nevada team at (775) 277-2120 for a no-obligation consultation, browse current Reno homes for sale and nearby Carson City inventory, or start with a free home value estimate before you list. An early conversation about market conditions and your target neighborhoods costs nothing and may save you thousands.

Which Sources Inform This Reno Agent Rankings Guide?

This guide draws on live Northern Nevada Regional MLS data pulled for this article, Nevada regulatory authorities, national real estate research, and Nevada Real Estate Group's direct transaction experience in the Northern Nevada market. Prices, agent counts, and market conditions change — confirm specifics with the relevant authority or a qualified professional before acting. This is general educational information, not legal, financial, or investment advice.

About This Article

  • Author: Chris Nevada, Nevada REALTOR · License S.181401 (verify at red.nv.gov)
  • Brokerage: Nevada Real Estate Group · 8945 W Russell Rd, Suite 170, Las Vegas, NV 89148
  • Contact: (775) 277-2120 · info@nevadagroup.com
  • MLS: Member of NNRMLS (Northern Nevada Regional MLS) and RSAR (Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS)
  • Region focus: Northern Nevada (Reno, Sparks, Carson City, Washoe County)
  • Compliance: Equal Housing Opportunity · Fair Housing Act · NRS 645
  • Last reviewed: July 12, 2026

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