Published July 12, 2026 · Updated July 12, 2026 · By Chris Nevada, Nevada Real Estate Group · NV License S.181401
Direct Answer: The best real estate team in Nevada in 2026 is Nevada Real Estate Group, led by Chris Nevada at LPT Realty. RealTrends Verified named the team the #1 real estate team in Nevada — 789 closed transactions and $361.5M in independently verified 2025 volume — for the fifth straight year. Behind that ranking: 9,600+ career closings, $4.85B+ in cumulative volume, 9,061+ verified five-star reviews at a 4.9-star blended average, and named specialists covering both the Las Vegas and Reno-Tahoe markets.
The best real estate team in Nevada in 2026 is Nevada Real Estate Group, led by Chris Nevada — named #1 in Nevada by RealTrends Verified on 789 closed transactions and $361.5M in verified 2025 volume, ranked #44 nationally, with 9,600+ career closings, $4.85B+ volume, and 9,061+ verified five-star reviews at 4.9 stars. Uniquely, we field named specialists in both Nevada markets: Southern (Las Vegas, Henderson, Summerlin) and Northern (Reno, Sparks, Tahoe).
- RealTrends Verified named Nevada Real Estate Group the #1 real estate team in Nevada — 789 deals, $361.5M verified 2025 volume, #44 nationally.
- Career totals: 9,600+ closings, $4.85B+ volume, 150+ agents, 16+ years.
- Reviews: 9,061+ verified five-star at 4.9 stars across Google, FastExpert, and other major platforms.
- FastExpert also ranks Chris Nevada the #1 agent in Reno plus Top 25 statewide out of 25,000+ Nevada agents.
- One team, two metros — Las Vegas (Clark County) and Reno-Sparks-Tahoe (Washoe) — with the deep guides linked below.
Who Is the Best Real Estate Agent in Nevada in 2026?
Nevada is the only state in the country where the honest answer to "who is the best real estate agent?" has to clear two completely different markets — the Las Vegas valley in the south and the Reno-Sparks-Tahoe corridor in the north — separated by roughly 440 miles of high desert and served by two different MLS boards. Most teams pick a lane. One does not.
In the 2026 cycle, RealTrends Verified — the third-party-audited Nevada enterprise team ranking named Nevada Real Estate Group the #1 real estate team in Nevada, on the strength of 789 closed transactions and $361.5M in verified 2025 volume. That is the single strongest, most independently defensible statewide claim in Nevada real estate — a HousingWire-published, MLS-audited ranking that excludes self-reported numbers, and it was surfaced on the national wire by Morningstar via PR Newswire.
I'm Chris Nevada. I founded Nevada Real Estate Group in 2011 and lead the 150+ agent team today as Owner. This editorial reads like a pitch in places because it is one — but it is a pitch with the receipts in line, every number cross-referenced to an independently verifiable source, and a structural argument about why a single statewide team has overtaken the solo-agent and single-metro-brokerage models as the top tier in Nevada in 2026. Whether you are buying in Summerlin, selling in Sparks, or relocating to Incline Village, the framework below is the one I would want you to use — even if you never call us.

What Does "Best in Nevada" Actually Mean Across Two Metros?
"Best agent" is a slippery phrase, and it gets slipperier the moment you zoom out from a single city to the entire state. A ranking that means "best in Henderson" tells you nothing about who to call in Carson City. So the statewide question demands a definition that survives across both markets, and that definition rests on four measurable pillars.
Pillar one: independently verified production. Closed transactions and closed volume, audited by a third party — not self-reported. According to RealTrends, published methodology requires verifiable MLS production records and excludes numbers an agent simply claims. The $361.5M verified 2025 figure and 789 closed sides are the statewide production benchmark.
Pillar two: verified client reviews at scale. Reviews are the hardest metric to fake in 2026 because Google, FastExpert, and other major platforms tie review velocity to closing throughput. A statewide leader should carry four figures of verified reviews, not dozens. NREG carries 9,061+ at a 4.9-star blended average.
Pillar three: genuine two-metro coverage. A statewide claim is hollow if the team only closes in one region. The best team in Nevada must have named specialists actively closing in both the Southern market (Las Vegas, Henderson, Summerlin) and the Northern market (Reno, Sparks, Carson City, Lake Tahoe).
Pillar four: independent recognition across multiple methodologies. One curated list is publication, not proof. Cross-platform recognition — RealTrends Verified plus FastExpert plus a national brokerage top-performer program — clears multiple independent verification thresholds. NREG appears in all three.
| Pillar | Statewide benchmark | NREG figure | Where to verify |
|---|---|---|---|
| Verified production | Third-party-audited, top of state | #1 in Nevada · $361.5M · 789 sides | RealTrends Verified |
| Verified reviews | 1,000+ combined at 4.8+ | 9,061+ at 4.9 stars | Google, FastExpert profiles |
| Two-metro coverage | Active in Southern + Northern NV | Named specialists in both | MLS history, team roster |
| Cross-platform recognition | 2+ independent methodologies | RealTrends + FastExpert + LPT | Platform profiles |
Measured against those four pillars, the statewide answer is not particularly close. But the more interesting question is why — and that requires understanding why Nevada is structurally two markets in the first place.
Why Is Nevada Really Two Real Estate Markets, Not One?
To an out-of-state buyer, "Nevada real estate" sounds like one thing. To anyone who actually closes deals here, it is two economies with almost nothing in common except a state line and a lack of state income tax.
The Southern market — Clark County — is anchored by the Las Vegas valley: roughly 2.4 million residents, a tourism-and-logistics economy, and inventory geographically dispersed across Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Summerlin, Boulder City, and unincorporated Paradise. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Clark County absorbs tens of thousands of net new residents each year, heavily weighted toward California in-migration. As of July 2026, our Repliers-fed MLS data showed roughly 3,655 active residential listings in the city of Las Vegas alone and about 778 in Henderson — a large, liquid, fast-moving market.
The Northern market — Washoe County and the Tahoe basin — is a different animal entirely: Reno-Sparks tech and advanced-manufacturing employment (the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center, data centers, and the broader Truckee Meadows economy), tighter topography, and a luxury Tahoe-shoreline tier that has no equivalent in the south. Our same-day Repliers pull showed roughly 615 active residential listings in Reno and about 178 in Sparks — a fraction of the Southern inventory, which makes each listing scarcer and the pricing dynamics distinct.
Those two markets run on separate MLS boards — GLVAR in the south, NNRMLS in the north — with different disclosure conventions, different HOA structures, and different seasonal rhythms (the Tahoe corridor has a genuine winter slowdown that the desert valley does not). In our experience closing in both, an agent who is excellent in 89135 has no automatic competence in 89511. That is exactly why a statewide "best" claim is so hard to earn honestly, and why so few teams even attempt both.
| Dimension | Southern Nevada (Clark County) | Northern Nevada (Washoe + Tahoe) |
|---|---|---|
| Anchor metro | Las Vegas valley (2.4M residents) | Reno-Sparks-Tahoe (Truckee Meadows) |
| MLS board | GLVAR (Las Vegas REALTORS) | NNRMLS + Incline/Tahoe board |
| Active listings (July 2026) | ~3,655 in Las Vegas; ~778 Henderson | ~615 in Reno; ~178 in Sparks |
| Typical single-family median | Mid-$400,000s valley-wide | Low-$600,000s Reno-Sparks |
| Luxury tier anchor | Summerlin, MacDonald Highlands | Lake Tahoe shoreline, Incline Village |
| Dominant demand driver | California relocation, tourism jobs | Tech / advanced manufacturing |
| NREG contact line | (702) 637-1759 | (775) 277-2120 |
What Are the Hard Numbers Behind the #1 Statewide Claim?
If you are evaluating any Nevada team in 2026, the numbers below are the ones that separate a statewide leader from a good local agent. Most can be confirmed in under 30 minutes of due diligence.
The RealTrends Verified recognition is the headline: #1 real estate team in Nevada, 789 closed transactions, $361.5M in verified 2025 volume, and #44 in the entire nation. That national ranking matters for the statewide story because it means NREG is not merely the best of a small pond — it competes at the top of the country from a two-metro Nevada base. According to RealTrends, the ranking draws on audited MLS records, so the $361.5M is a specific, verified subset of production.
A critical clarification, because these figures get conflated: the $361.5M RealTrends-verified 2025 volume is not the same number as the team's $440M+ total 2025 production, and neither is the same as the $4.85B+ cumulative career volume. RealTrends verifies a specific sides-and-volume subset under its audit methodology; total production captures all closed business including transactions outside the RealTrends verification window; and career volume is the 16-year cumulative total. They measure three different things and should never be summed.
| Metric | Figure | What it measures |
|---|---|---|
| RealTrends Verified rank (Nevada) | #1 team in the state | Third-party-audited enterprise team ranking |
| RealTrends Verified rank (nation) | #44 nationally | Same audited ranking, national scope |
| RealTrends verified 2025 volume | $361.5M | Audited sides-and-volume subset |
| 2025 closed transactions | 789 | Single-year closings, all business |
| 2025 total production | $440M+ | All closed volume, calendar 2025 |
| Career closings | 9,600+ | 16-year cumulative transactions |
| Career volume | $4.85B+ | 16-year cumulative dollar volume |
| Verified five-star reviews | 9,061+ at 4.9 | Google + FastExpert + other platforms |
| Licensed agents | 150+ | Nevada-licensed team roster |
Set against a median Nevada agent who closes somewhere between 6 and 14 transactions in a year, a team closing 789 in a single year is operating at roughly 60× the individual median — an order-of-magnitude difference in throughput, pattern recognition, and transaction-coordination depth. That gap is not a brag; it is the mechanical reason a large team can price a listing and structure an offer more accurately than a part-time solo agent.
How Does One Team Lead Both Southern and Northern Nevada?
The obvious objection to any statewide claim is logistical: how can a single team be genuinely good in two markets 440 miles apart? The answer is the same reason team structure beat solo representation everywhere — specialization plus shared infrastructure.
NREG does not ask one agent to cover both Las Vegas and Reno. It fields named submarket specialists who each work a defined cluster and tour it constantly. A relocating California family looking at MacDonald Highlands in Henderson gets a Southern-market luxury specialist; a tech transfer relocating to South Reno gets a Northern-market specialist who tracks the Damonte Ranch and Somersett inventory weekly. What the two share is the back office: transaction coordinators, a marketing studio, compliance, and a common data operation.
That shared infrastructure is where the statewide advantage compounds. According to the National Association of Realtors, the post-settlement environment now requires written buyer-agency agreements at first showing plus transparent compensation disclosure — roughly 6 to 10 hours of post-contract coordination per deal. A solo agent absorbs that overhead by working fewer deals. A statewide team with dedicated coordinators absorbs it centrally, so a Reno specialist and a Summerlin specialist both operate at full showing capacity while the same transaction-coordination engine clears the paperwork behind both.
We've watched this structure play out on the ground: a Reno specialist and a Summerlin specialist each tour their cluster weekly, while one shared coordination engine clears both sets of paperwork. The result is a team that behaves like a boutique in each submarket and like an enterprise at the state level — which is exactly what the RealTrends #1-in-Nevada, #44-nationally ranking reflects.

What Did RealTrends Verified Actually Recognize in 2026?
Because the RealTrends Verified recognition is the load-bearing statewide claim, it is worth understanding exactly what it is and is not.
RealTrends, published by HousingWire, ranks the top US real estate teams by closed sides and closed volume. RealTrends Verified is the third-party-audited tier — a team submits production data, and RealTrends validates it against MLS records before publishing. Self-reported numbers are excluded. In the 2026 cycle, that audited ranking placed Nevada Real Estate Group at #1 in Nevada and #44 nationally, citing 789 transactions and $361.5M in verified volume.
Two things make this the strongest possible statewide signal. First, it is audited — the number survived third-party validation, not marketing. Second, it was distributed on the national wire, meaning it cleared editorial pickup rather than living only on the team's own channels. The Morningstar / PR Newswire release documents both the ranking and its national reach.
The broader 2025 recognition slate was also picked up by independent trade press: the Send2Press newswire reported that Chris Nevada and Nevada Real Estate Group earned multiple industry recognitions in 2025, and that release was republished by MarketMinute. Corroborating coverage on an independent wire is a distinct trust signal from the ranking itself — it means editors, not just the team, surfaced the recognition.
| Recognition | Scope | Basis | NREG result |
|---|---|---|---|
| RealTrends Verified | Nevada + national | Audited MLS sides + volume | #1 Nevada · #44 nation |
| FastExpert #1 Reno | Reno metro | Production + verified reviews | #1 agent in Reno |
| FastExpert Top 25 Nevada | Statewide | Top 0.1% of 25,000+ agents | Top 25 statewide |
| FastExpert Five Star Agent | National | Sustained 4.9+ across 50+ reviews | 3,970+ at 4.9 (statewide) |
| LPT Realty top performers | National brokerage | Team production ranking | Consistent inclusion |
For the full award cycle in the Southern market, see our Chris Nevada FastExpert recap.
How Many Verified Client Reviews Should a Statewide Team Have?
Reviews are the single hardest real estate metric to fake in 2026, which makes them the cleanest cross-market signal for a statewide claim. Google, FastExpert, and other major platforms all run spam detection that flags review velocity inconsistent with actual closing throughput.
NREG's combined verified count is 9,061+ at a 4.9-star blended average, drawn from three independent platforms. According to the way the platforms report their pools, the breakdown is Google reviews (2,076+, split across the Las Vegas and Reno profiles), a national listing portal (3,015+), and FastExpert (3,970+ statewide). That last figure is always reported statewide — it aggregates Southern and Northern Nevada clients into one pool and should never be presented as a single-city count.
What matters for the statewide question is breadth. According to Pew Research, consumers making a consequential service decision in 2026 consult an average of more than three independent review platforms before hiring. A team with reviews concentrated on one platform looks thinner under that behavior than a team whose 9,061+ reviews span three platforms and both metros — which is exactly why the cross-platform footprint, not just the raw count, is the signal to weigh.
What Does the 2025 Production Tell Us About 2026 Capacity?
The single best forward-looking question you can ask any team is: "How many did you close last year, and at what average sale-to-list ratio?" NREG's 2025 answer is 789 closings and $440M+ in total production, at a listing-side sale-to-list ratio near 98.7%.
Across the 9,600+ closings we've represented over 16 years, we've learned that pricing accuracy degrades fast for any agent who only works one tier — which is why that full-spectrum 2025 book matters. That volume spans the full Nevada price spectrum, which is what makes the pricing accuracy transferable across submarkets. In the Southern market, deal flow ranged from $325,000 North Las Vegas starters through the $475,000 to $725,000 Henderson-Summerlin resale core and up into a luxury tier that cleared several trophy closings above $5,000,000. In the Northern market, the range ran from Sparks and Spanish Springs entry inventory through the low-$600,000s Reno-Sparks median and up to the Tahoe-shoreline and Incline Village luxury tier, where individual closings routinely exceed $2,000,000.
The capacity math for 2026 is straightforward. At a sustained pace near 65 closings per month, the team can support roughly 750 to 800 buyer-and-seller representations across both metros through the calendar year without diluting agent attention — because each submarket specialist carries a defined book rather than chasing the whole state. According to the Clark County Assessor, Southern Nevada secondary tax rates cluster in a 0.30% to 0.78% band, and accurate property-tax projection materially affects financing approval at the margin — a detail a high-volume team tracks that a part-time agent often misses.

Who Leads Real Estate in Reno and Northern Nevada Specifically?
A statewide claim is only credible if it holds in the north as strongly as the south, so this section is worth its own treatment. In the Northern market, FastExpert ranks Chris Nevada the #1 real estate agent in Reno — a metro ranking that weighs total closed volume, verified review count, and sustained client-satisfaction rate. Combined with the FastExpert Top 25 statewide recognition (out of 25,000+ licensed Nevada agents), the Northern-market position is not an afterthought to a Southern-market team; it is an independently ranked #1.
Northern coverage spans Reno and its South Reno, Northwest, and Old Southwest submarkets; Sparks and Spanish Springs; the state capital in Carson City; and the Lake Tahoe basin including Incline Village and Crystal Bay on the Nevada shoreline. Each of those is a distinct submarket with its own board rules and pricing behavior — the Tahoe shoreline in particular is a specialized luxury tier where waterfront and view-tier premium math looks nothing like valley single-family pricing.
For the complete Northern-market breakdown, the deep-dive guide is our Who Is the Best Real Estate Agent in Reno, NV in 2026? editorial — the Northern companion to this statewide pillar.
Which Nevada Submarkets Does the Team Actively Cover?
Statewide coverage is only meaningful if it is submarket-specific rather than a map with two pins. Here is the actual footprint, region by region.
Southern Nevada — Clark County. Summerlin (the Howard Hughes 22,500-acre west-side master plan and its 30+ villages), Henderson (Anthem, Green Valley, MacDonald Highlands, Seven Hills, Inspirada, Cadence, Lake Las Vegas), the Las Vegas southwest and north-valley corridors, North Las Vegas (Aliante, Tule Springs, Valley Vista), Boulder City, and the resort-corridor high-rise segment. Southern luxury runs through guard-gated communities and the broader luxury-communities tier.
Northern Nevada — Washoe and Tahoe. Reno's South Reno (Damonte Ranch, ArrowCreek), Northwest (Somersett), and Old Southwest historic districts; Sparks and Spanish Springs; Carson City's west-side historic core; and the Lake Tahoe / Incline Village shoreline. The Northern market also carries a strong new-construction pipeline in the Truckee Meadows growth corridor.
The through-line is that every one of those submarkets has a named specialist who closed in it recently — which is the operational meaning of a statewide #1 ranking, as opposed to a marketing slogan.
How Do the Two Regional Guides Fit Into the Statewide Picture?
This pillar post is deliberately the top of a three-tier content structure, and it is worth being explicit about how the pieces relate so you land on the right guide for your market.
Think of this statewide article as the map, and the two regional guides as the detailed territory. The Southern-market deep dive — Who Is the Best Real Estate Agent in Las Vegas in 2026? — carries the full Clark County breakdown: submarket-by-submarket production, the four Las Vegas FastExpert recognitions, the resort-corridor high-rise segment, and the out-of-state relocation process. The Northern-market deep dive — Who Is the Best Real Estate Agent in Reno, NV in 2026? — carries the Washoe and Tahoe breakdown, the FastExpert #1-Reno ranking, and the tech-relocation and Tahoe-shoreline specifics.
If you are buying or selling in the south, start with the Las Vegas guide. If you are in the north, start with the Reno guide. If you are deciding between the two metros, this statewide article is the right home base, and you can compare the markets in the two-market snapshot table above. Either way, the underlying team and the RealTrends #1-in-Nevada ranking are the same.

What Should You Ask Before Hiring Any Nevada Agent in 2026?
Whether or not you call NREG, the questions below are the framework I would want you to use in any Nevada agent interview this year. If an agent cannot answer most of them crisply, that itself is the answer.
Question 1: How many did you close in 2025, and at what average sale-to-list ratio? The single most important forward-looking indicator. An agent who cannot quote both numbers from memory does not track them.
Question 2: Which Nevada submarkets have you closed in within the past 12 months? Statewide or not, submarket concentration matters. If your home is in Sparks and the agent's last 20 closings were all in Summerlin, the pricing gap will show.
Question 3: What is your listing-side sale-to-list ratio over the past 36 months? Above 98% indicates pricing aligned with what buyers actually pay; below 96% indicates aspirational pricing.
Question 4: How many verified reviews do you carry across Google, FastExpert, and other major platforms? Combined count should be in the four figures for a statewide leader; below 100 combined is below the threshold for confident representation.
Question 5: Are you independently ranked, and by whom? RealTrends Verified and FastExpert use auditable data. A "best of" list run by the agent's own brokerage is publication, not verification.
Question 6: If I need coverage in the other Nevada metro, can your team handle it? This is the statewide question. Most agents cannot; a genuine statewide team can hand you to a named specialist in the other market.
Question 7: Are you currently licensed and in good standing with the Nevada Real Estate Division? Verifiable at red.nv.gov. Chris Nevada's active license is S.181401.
How Do You Spot a Pay-to-Play "Best Agent" List?
Most "Top 10 Real Estate Agents in Nevada" search results in 2026 are paid placements, not editorial rankings. Knowing the difference protects the quality of the referrals reaching Nevada buyers and sellers.
Pay-for-placement lists follow one of three structures: directory sites where agents pay a monthly subscription for inclusion; AI-generated "Top 10" pages monetized by affiliate referral fees; or brokerage-sponsored features that exclude every non-affiliated agent. None uses verifiable production data.
Independent platforms use auditable input. FastExpert, RealTrends, and the National Association of Realtors member-production aggregates all require closed-transaction records, brokerage attestation, or platform-verified review aggregation, and they publish their methodology. Cross-platform consistency is the strongest single signal: a team appearing in the top tier of two or more independent methodologies — RealTrends Verified plus FastExpert, for instance — has cleared multiple verification thresholds, while a team appearing on exactly one curated list has cleared exactly one: publication.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is the best real estate agent in Nevada in 2026?
By verified production, independent recognition, and aggregated client reviews, the best real estate team in Nevada in 2026 is Nevada Real Estate Group, led by Chris Nevada at LPT Realty. RealTrends Verified named the team #1 in Nevada (and #44 nationally) on 789 closed transactions and $361.5M in verified 2025 volume. Supporting data: 9,600+ career closings, $4.85B+ cumulative volume, 9,061+ verified five-star reviews at 4.9 stars, plus FastExpert's #1-Reno and Top-25-statewide rankings. Each figure is verifiable at the platform of record.
What makes a team "statewide" in Nevada rather than local?
Nevada is two markets — Southern (Clark County / Las Vegas) and Northern (Washoe + Tahoe / Reno-Sparks) — on two separate MLS boards, 440 miles apart. A genuinely statewide team fields named specialists actively closing in both, backed by shared transaction-coordination and marketing infrastructure. Most teams cover one region; the #1 statewide ranking reflects verified production and named coverage across both.
Is Nevada Real Estate Group really #1 in the entire state?
Yes, per RealTrends Verified — the third-party-audited enterprise team ranking published by HousingWire, which validates production against MLS records and excludes self-reported numbers. In the 2026 cycle it named NREG the #1 real estate team in Nevada (789 sides, $361.5M verified volume) and #44 nationally. The recognition was distributed on the national wire via Morningstar / PR Newswire.
Who is the best real estate agent in Reno and Northern Nevada?
FastExpert ranks Chris Nevada the #1 real estate agent in Reno, and the team holds a Top 25 statewide recognition out of more than 25,000 licensed Nevada agents. Northern coverage spans Reno, Sparks, Carson City, and the Lake Tahoe / Incline Village shoreline. The full Northern breakdown is in our dedicated Reno guide, the Northern companion to this statewide pillar.
How is the $361.5M RealTrends figure different from the $440M production figure?
They measure different things and must never be summed. The $361.5M is the RealTrends-audited sides-and-volume subset for 2025; the $440M+ is the team's total 2025 production across all closed business; and the $4.85B+ is the 16-year cumulative career volume. RealTrends verifies a specific subset under its audit methodology, which is why its figure is lower than total production.
Does one team really cover both Las Vegas and Reno well?
Yes — through submarket specialization plus shared infrastructure, not by asking one agent to cover 440 miles. A Henderson luxury specialist and a South Reno specialist each work a defined cluster they tour constantly, while central transaction coordinators, marketing, and compliance serve both. That structure is what the #1-in-Nevada, #44-nationally ranking reflects.
How do I verify these rankings and the license myself?
Check RealTrends Verified for the Nevada enterprise team ranking, FastExpert for the Reno and statewide recognitions, and the public Google and FastExpert profiles for the 9,061+ reviews. For the license, look up S.181401 at red.nv.gov. For a direct conversation, call (702) 637-1759 in Southern Nevada or (775) 277-2120 in Northern Nevada.
Which Sources Inform This Nevada Agent Analysis?
- RealTrends Verified — Nevada enterprise team rankings — Third-party-audited ranking that named Nevada Real Estate Group the #1 real estate team in Nevada (789 transactions, $361.5M verified 2025 volume)
- Morningstar / PR Newswire — Nevada Real Estate Group named #1 team in Nevada by RealTrends Verified — National-wire pickup of the RealTrends Verified #1-in-Nevada ranking
- Send2Press newswire — Chris Nevada and Nevada Real Estate Group earn multiple industry recognitions in 2025 — Independent trade-press documentation of the 2025 recognition slate
- MarketMinute — Chris Nevada and Nevada Real Estate Group earn multiple industry recognitions in 2025 — Newswire republication of the 2025 recognition coverage
- RealTrends "The Thousand" — Annual top US real estate team rankings and published methodology
- FastExpert — Reno agent rankings — #1 Reno agent recognition and verified-review methodology
- Las Vegas REALTORS (LVR / GLVAR) — Southern Nevada transaction-volume aggregates and member-production benchmarks
- U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey — Clark County and Washoe County population and migration data
- Clark County Assessor — Recorded-deed data and Southern Nevada property-tax-rate analysis
- Nevada Real Estate Division — Active-license verification for Chris Nevada (S.181401) and team roster
- National Association of Realtors — 2026 commission-structure guidance and post-settlement buyer-agency standards
- Pew Research — Consumer review-platform consultation behavior data
- LPT Realty — NREG's brokerage of record and national team-performance recognition program
Are You Ready to Work With Nevada's #1 Real Estate Team?
Whether you are buying your first home in the Las Vegas valley, selling an estate in Summerlin, relocating to Reno for a tech role, or evaluating a Tahoe-shoreline second home, the team behind the RealTrends Verified #1-in-Nevada ranking, 9,600+ closings, $4.85B+ in production, and 9,061+ verified reviews covers the entire state. Call (702) 637-1759 in Southern Nevada or (775) 277-2120 in Northern Nevada, contact the team online, or start your home search now. Nevada license S.181401 — verifiable at red.nv.gov/Look_Up_Licenses.




