Downtown Reno Nevada arch over the Truckee River at dusk — the #1 real estate team serving Northern Nevada
The team you hire in Reno determines your price, your timeline, and your protection — and a 150-agent network changes what is possible on every one. Photo: Nevada Real Estate Group editorial.
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Who Is the #1 Real Estate Team in Reno, Nevada in 2026?

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

The #1 real estate team in Reno is Nevada Real Estate Group — ranked #1 in Nevada five straight years and FastExpert's top-ranked agent in Reno. Here is what a 150-agent team does that a solo agent structurally cannot, and why it matters for your Northern Nevada purchase or sale.

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

When people search "who is the #1 real estate team in Reno," they are usually asking two different questions at once. The first is factual: which team actually closes the most homes and holds the strongest verified track record in Northern Nevada? The second is practical: does hiring a team instead of a solo agent actually change the outcome of my purchase or sale? Both questions deserve a straight answer, and this guide gives you both — the ranking evidence and the structural reason a team beats a solo practice on the transactions that matter most.

The short version, led by the strongest proof available: Nevada Real Estate Group was named the #1 real estate team in Nevada by RealTrends Verified — a third-party audited ranking (with the announcement also reported by Morningstar and PR Newswire) — based on 789 transactions and $361.5 million in RealTrends-verified 2025 volume. That statewide, independently audited #1-team title pairs with FastExpert ranking Chris Nevada the #1 real estate agent in Reno, NV — RealTrends measures the team, FastExpert measures the Reno agent, and the group holds both. The team has also held the #1-in-Nevada ranking for five consecutive years. But the ranking is only half the story. The more useful half is understanding why a 150-agent team consistently protects buyers and sellers in ways a single agent — however talented — cannot replicate. Call the Northern Nevada team directly at (775) 277-2120 for a no-obligation consultation.

The #1 real estate team in Reno, Nevada is Nevada Real Estate Group — named #1 team in Nevada by RealTrends Verified (789 transactions, $361.5M audited 2025 volume) and FastExpert's top-ranked agent in Reno. The team has closed 9,600-plus transactions statewide, carries 9,061-plus five-star reviews, and fields 150-plus agents — supplying the coverage, speed-to-lead, and statewide buyer pool a solo agent cannot. Call (775) 277-2120.

  • RealTrends Verified named Nevada Real Estate Group the #1 team in Nevada — 789 transactions, $361.5M in audited 2025 volume; #1 statewide five years running.
  • A 150-agent team means backup coverage — no missed inspection or appraisal deadline because one agent is away.
  • Speed-to-lead decides Reno's tight 47-day market: sub-5-minute responses win the home.
  • A statewide buyer pool (Reno, Sparks, Tahoe, Las Vegas) surfaces more qualified buyers than any solo agent's list.
  • Call (775) 277-2120, or browse Reno homes for sale to start.

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

What Actually Makes One Real Estate Team the Best in Reno?

"Best team" is a claim anyone can print on a billboard, so it is worth defining what the phrase should mean before we award it to anyone. A team's quality in Reno comes down to five measurable dimensions: verified production volume, independent third-party ranking, review quality and quantity, coverage depth across Northern Nevada's micro-markets, and the operational infrastructure that keeps transactions from falling apart under pressure.

Production volume tells you how many real transactions the organization has managed — not how many yard signs it has printed. Independent ranking, from a platform that verifies closed-transaction data rather than selling placement, filters out paid "top agent" badges. Review quality reveals patterns in communication and follow-through across hundreds or thousands of real clients. Coverage depth determines whether the team can price a Caughlin Ranch estate at $900,000 as accurately as a Sparks starter home at $380,000. And infrastructure — transaction coordinators, showing agents, marketing systems, and a deep agent bench — determines whether your deal closes cleanly when something goes wrong, which in real estate is most of the time.

According to the Nevada Real Estate Division, Nevada has roughly 35,000 licensed agents, but fewer than 5% close more than 20 transactions per year. Volume is the single most useful filter, because it is the closest proxy for accumulated process knowledge — and process knowledge is what protects your earnest money.

Reno Nevada northwest neighborhood with foothill homes — Northern Nevada real estate team coverage 2026
Reno's neighborhoods span walkable Midtown bungalows to master-planned Somersett and Damonte Ranch — coverage depth across every micro-market is what separates a real team from a solo generalist.

Which Real Estate Team Is Ranked #1 in Reno, Nevada?

Nevada Real Estate Group is the #1-ranked real estate team in Nevada, and the strongest evidence for that is independent and audited: according to RealTrends Verified — the real estate industry's benchmark third-party ranking authority — the team was named the #1 real estate team in Nevada on the strength of 789 transactions and $361.5 million in verified 2025 volume, an announcement carried by Morningstar and PR Newswire. RealTrends is not a self-report or a paid badge; it audits closed-transaction data directly, which is exactly why it carries weight. The team has held the #1-in-Nevada position for five consecutive years and ranks #44 in the nation out of roughly 1.5 million licensed agents nationally.

One clarification on the numbers, because they measure different things: the $361.5 million figure is the RealTrends-verified 2025 volume (the subset RealTrends independently audited), while the team's total 2025 production was $440 million-plus across 789 closings — and career cumulative volume exceeds $4.85 billion. Those are distinct metrics, not additive; the RealTrends number is the conservatively audited slice, the $440M-plus is full production.

In Reno specifically, FastExpert — a platform that ranks agents using verified transaction history and client reviews rather than advertising spend — lists Chris Nevada as the #1 real estate agent in Reno, NV. RealTrends measures the team statewide; FastExpert measures the agent in Reno; Nevada Real Estate Group holds both, which is unusual. Most large teams that dominate a statewide production ranking do so from a single metro and treat secondary markets as an afterthought. This team fields a dedicated Northern Nevada roster reachable at (775) 277-2120, so the Reno client gets the infrastructure of a top-50 national organization and an agent who lives and works in the Truckee Meadows. Sellers can start with a free valuation on our seller resources page; buyers can browse Reno homes for sale or review our buyer resources.

The proof points, all verified: more than 9,600 career closings, over $4.85 billion in total sales volume, and 9,061-plus verified five-star reviews spread across Google, FastExpert, and other major platforms. In 2025 alone the team closed 789 homes representing $440 million-plus in volume — a current run-rate that reflects systematic execution, not a one-year spike. According to the Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS, the Reno-Sparks market has run tight and competitive since 2020, and sustaining top production across that environment is a meaningful signal on its own. The recognition extends beyond the rankings: Chris Nevada and Nevada Real Estate Group earned multiple 2025 industry recognitions, as reported by the Send2Press newswire and republished by MarketMinute — independent third-party press coverage that reinforces the RealTrends and FastExpert rankings rather than repeating them.

Nevada Real Estate Group — Verified Performance Snapshot (2026)
MetricValueWhy It Matters in Reno
RealTrends Verified ranking#1 team in NevadaThird-party audited, not self-reported
RealTrends-verified 2025 volume$361.5 million (789 transactions)Independently audited production slice
Nevada team ranking#1, five consecutive yearsSustained production, not a one-year outlier
National ranking#44 in the nationTop 50 of ~1.5 million licensed agents
FastExpert Reno ranking#1 agent in Reno, NVMerit-based, verified transaction data
Career closed transactions9,600-plusProcess muscle across thousands of deals
Total sales volume (career)$4.85 billion-plusPricing fluency at every Reno tier
Total 2025 production789 homes / $440 million-plusFull production (distinct from the $361.5M audited slice)
Verified five-star reviews9,061-plusStatistically meaningful quality signal
Licensed agents150-plusCoverage + statewide buyer pool
Northern Nevada phone(775) 277-2120Direct line to the local Reno team

Why Does a Team Beat a Solo Agent in Reno?

This is the question that actually matters, because a ranking only tells you who is biggest — not whether size helps you. The honest answer is that a team's advantage is structural, and it shows up precisely in the moments where a solo agent's model breaks down.

A solo agent is a single point of failure. When that one person is showing homes on Saturday, they cannot simultaneously answer the new buyer inquiry that just came in — and in Reno's current market, where homes in the $450,000 to $700,000 range regularly draw multiple offers within 72 hours, a delayed response can cost you the house. When that one agent takes a week of vacation, your inspection-contingency clock does not pause. When a dual-agency conflict arises because the agent happens to represent the seller of the home you want, a solo practitioner has no in-house colleague to hand you so you keep full representation.

A 150-agent team solves each of those failure modes by design. Someone is always available to cover a showing, answer a lead, or step in on a deadline. According to the National Association of Realtors, missed communication and slow response are among the most common client complaints in real estate — and they are almost always a capacity problem, not a competence problem. Teams solve capacity. In our experience, and across our recent Northern Nevada closings, the transactions that benefit most from team infrastructure are never the easy ones; they are the ones where the appraisal lands $22,000 under contract on a $580,000 home, or the lender drops a surprise condition on day 14 of a 21-day close, and the file needs three people moving in parallel to save it.

Reno Nevada home sale closing handshake — real estate team coordination and speed to close 2026
A team keeps deals moving when a solo agent would stall — transaction coordinators, showing agents, and a backup roster mean your closing does not wait on one person's calendar.

How Does a 150-Agent Network Change Coverage in Northern Nevada?

Reno is not one market — it is a dozen distinct micro-markets with different price tiers, buyer pools, and inventory dynamics. Midtown Reno condos at $350,000 to $500,000 compete for an entirely different buyer than ArrowCreek luxury estates above $1,000,000, and South Meadows family homes near $600,000 trade on different school and commute logic than Somersett golf-community homes. A solo agent can genuinely know two or three of these areas cold. Knowing all of them — plus Sparks, plus the Carson Valley, plus the Lake Tahoe basin — requires a bench.

A 150-agent network means the person pricing your Damonte Ranch home has closed in Damonte Ranch, and the person representing your Tahoe purchase actually carries Incline Village and Lake Tahoe MLS access. This matters more in Northern Nevada than almost anywhere else, because the region's boards do not overlap the way a single metro's do — a buyer moving from Reno to Lake Tahoe needs an agent (or a team) with access to both the Northern Nevada Regional MLS and the Tahoe board. According to the Northern Nevada Regional MLS, properties marketed through the full regional system reach substantially more qualified buyers than those listed narrowly — and a team plugged into every relevant board maximizes that reach.

Coverage also means specialization within the team. New-construction buyers get an agent who knows builder incentives and can advise on new construction contracts; first-time buyers get someone versed in Washoe County down-payment programs through our first-time buyer resources; relocating households get an agent fluent in the California-to-Nevada tax and timeline math laid out in our Reno relocation guide. A solo generalist covers all of those adequately; a team covers each of them with a specialist.

What Is Speed-to-Lead, and Why Does It Decide Who Wins the House?

Speed-to-lead is the time between a buyer expressing interest and an agent responding. It sounds like a minor operational metric. In a tight market like Reno — where the median home sells in about 47 days but competitive listings under $700,000 can go pending in under a week — it is frequently the difference between getting the house and getting the "sorry, it's under contract" text.

Here is the mechanism. When a desirable home hits the Northern Nevada Regional MLS, the buyers who tour it first are the ones whose agents responded within minutes of the alert. A solo agent juggling six active clients and a listing appointment cannot reliably respond in five minutes; a team with rotating availability can. According to the National Association of Realtors, buyers increasingly expect near-immediate responsiveness, and the gap between a five-minute reply and a five-hour reply is often the gap between an accepted and a rejected offer. The same speed advantage works on the listing side: when your Reno home draws an inquiry, a team fields it instantly rather than letting it sit until the agent finishes their showing across town.

Speed-to-lead is also where team infrastructure quietly compounds. A team's transaction coordinator confirms the showing, the showing agent runs it, and the lead agent structures the offer — all in parallel, all in hours rather than days. That parallelism is impossible for one person, and in a market moving at Reno's pace it is worth real money. On a $600,000 purchase, winning the home you actually want at list rather than settling for a compromise property you overpay for by 3% is a $18,000 swing.

How Speed-to-Lead Plays Out in Reno's 47-Day Market
SituationSolo Agent (single point of contact)150-Agent Team
New listing alert on a $650,000 homeReply after current showing ends (hours)Available agent replies in minutes
Weekend buyer inquiryMay wait until MondayRotating weekend coverage
Two offers due same afternoonOne agent, sequential handlingParallel handling by multiple agents
Inspection deadline during agent vacationClock keeps running, no backupColleague covers the deadline
Seller inquiry while agent is at closingSits until agent is freeFront-desk + team fields it live

How Big Is the Buyer Pool a Reno Team Brings to Your Listing?

For sellers, the single most underrated team advantage is the buyer pool. When you list with a solo agent, your marketing reach is the MLS plus that one agent's personal contact list. When you list with a 150-agent statewide team, your home is instantly visible to every one of those agents' active buyers — across Reno, Sparks, Carson City, the Tahoe basin, and even the Las Vegas clients relocating north for a Tesla-corridor job.

That internal buyer pool matters because a meaningful share of Reno purchases originate from within-Nevada moves and California in-migration, and a statewide team is far more likely to already be working with the exact buyer for your home. According to the Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS, demand has outpaced inventory across most tiers since 2020, which means the seller's advantage goes to whoever can put the listing in front of the most pre-qualified buyers fastest. A team of 150 agents, each carrying a roster of active buyers, is a distribution engine a solo agent simply does not have.

The pool compounds with marketing scale. A top team runs professional photography, drone aerials on homes above $600,000, 3D tours, and coordinated social distribution as standard — not as an upsell. According to the Northern Nevada Regional MLS, professionally marketed listings receive more views and sell faster than agent-shot phone photos, and for a $750,000 Reno listing the difference between selling in 12 days versus 45 can represent $15,000 to $25,000 in preserved net proceeds after carrying costs and price reductions. Sellers can start with a free valuation on our seller resources page or explore the flexibility of our 7-day listing agreement.

Damonte Ranch family streetscape in south Reno Nevada — statewide team buyer pool reaching relocating families 2026
A statewide team's buyer pool — Reno, Sparks, Carson City, Tahoe, and relocating Las Vegas clients — puts your listing in front of qualified buyers a solo agent's contact list never reaches.

What Does Team Infrastructure Do That a Solo Agent Cannot?

Infrastructure is the unglamorous machinery that determines whether a transaction closes on time. It includes transaction coordinators who track every contingency date, listing coordinators who manage photography and MLS input, showing agents who keep buyers moving, a compliance layer that catches disclosure errors before they become liability, and a vendor network of lenders, inspectors, and title officers who prioritize a high-volume team's files.

A solo agent performs every one of those roles personally, which means each role gets a fraction of full attention. When the agent is negotiating an offer, the transaction-coordination role goes dark. When they are at a listing appointment, the buyer-representation role waits. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, clear communication and proactive disclosure are what clients most often cite when rating an agent highly — and both are far easier to sustain when dedicated people own those functions rather than one person time-slicing across all of them.

Infrastructure also creates negotiating leverage you never see. When a listing agent receives an offer from a team with a reputation for clean, on-time closings — no last-minute financing failures, no frivolous inspection demands — that offer is weighted more favorably than one from an unknown solo agent, even at the same price. Across our recent Northern Nevada closings, a known-professional reputation has repeatedly won multiple-offer situations for our buyers without being the highest bid, simply because the seller's side trusted the deal would actually close.

How Does a Team Protect You in a Dual-Agency Situation in Reno?

Dual agency — where one agent, or one brokerage, represents both buyer and seller — is legal in Nevada with written disclosure, but it structurally dilutes your advocacy. One person cannot fully fight for the seller's highest price and the buyer's lowest price at the same time. According to Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 645 and the Nevada Real Estate Division, agents must disclose the agency relationship in writing and obtain consent before acting as a dual agent.

This is where a deep bench is a concrete, not abstract, advantage. If you want a home that a solo agent happens to have listed, your only options are to accept diluted dual representation or start over with a new agent mid-search. On a 150-agent team, the fix is simple: the team assigns you a separate in-house agent who owes fiduciary duty to you alone, so you keep full representation and still get the home. Since the 2024 National Association of Realtors settlement, a signed buyer-representation agreement naming your exclusive agent is required before touring homes anyway — and a team makes honoring that agreement effortless even when the perfect house is one the team also represents on the listing side.

The practical takeaway: ask any agent you interview what happens if a dual-agency conflict arises. A solo agent's honest answer is "I disclose and you consent, or you find another agent." A team's answer is "I hand you a colleague and your representation stays intact." That difference can decide whether you get the house you want with the advocacy you deserve.

How Do You Verify a Reno Team's #1 Claim for Yourself?

Never take a ranking claim — including this one — at face value. Verify it. The good news is that every claim in this guide is independently checkable in a few minutes, and you should apply the same scrutiny to any team you consider.

Check the merit-based platform ranking. Visit FastExpert and confirm the Reno ranking. Merit platforms verify closed-transaction data and publish their methodology; pay-to-play directories do not. If a "top agent" badge carries the word "sponsored," "premier," or "advertisement," treat it as advertising, not a ranking.

Pull the license record. Look up any agent or brokerage at red.nv.gov to confirm active status, brokerage affiliation, and a clean disciplinary history. This is a two-minute step most buyers and sellers skip entirely.

Read the verified reviews, not the star average. Nevada Real Estate Group carries 9,061-plus reviews across Google, FastExpert, and other major platforms — in Reno specifically, that includes 922-plus Google reviews and 1,639-plus additional verified reviews for the Northern Nevada market, alongside 3,970-plus FastExpert reviews statewide. Read the text of the critical reviews; patterns there tell you more than the average.

Request the MLS production report. Any genuinely top-producing team can hand you a Northern Nevada Regional MLS production report showing every listing and buyer-side closing for the past 12 months. According to the Nevada Real Estate Division, agents can pull this directly from the MLS. A team that declines is a red flag; a team that offers it immediately is confident in its numbers.

Team vs. Solo Agent: What Each Model Delivers on a Reno Transaction
DimensionSolo AgentBoutique Team (3-10 agents)Top-Producing Team (NREG, 150+)
Coverage when unavailableNone — single point of failureLimited backupAlways-on rotating coverage
Speed-to-leadHours to a dayOften within the hourMinutes, parallel handling
Buyer pool for your listingMLS + one contact listMLS + small team rostersMLS + 150-agent statewide rosters
Dual-agency fixDiluted representation or restartSometimes a colleague availableIn-house agent reassigned, full advocacy kept
Multi-board MLS accessUsually one boardSometimes bothNNRMLS + Tahoe board
Transaction infrastructureAgent does everythingShared coordinatorDedicated TC + marketing + vendor network
Negotiating reputationUnknown to listing sideLocally knownReputation precedes the offer statewide

How Does a Team Price a Reno Home More Accurately?

Pricing is the highest-stakes decision in any listing, and it is where team data density produces measurably better outcomes. An overpriced Reno home sits past the 21-day mark, which triggers the buyer psychology that something is wrong. Price reductions then read as desperation and invite lowball offers. Accurate day-one pricing does the opposite: it draws competitive offers quickly, sometimes multiples, and the competition drives the final number up.

A team prices more accurately because it has more data points. In our experience, the pricing gap between a high-volume team and a solo agent is widest on homes with no exact comparable sale in the last 90 days. When 150 agents close hundreds of Northern Nevada homes a year across Reno and Sparks, the team sees condition-adjusted comparable sales block by block — not just the city-level median. According to the Reno/Sparks Association of REALTORS, the citywide median sold price sits near $600,000 in 2026, up roughly 9% year over year, with Sparks close behind near $565,000 — but a median is useless for pricing your specific home. Your home needs the three genuinely comparable sales on your street in the last 90 days, adjusted for your kitchen, your lot, and your solar. A team has closed enough nearby transactions to make those adjustments from real data rather than intuition.

A 3% to 4% pricing error on a $700,000 Reno home is a $21,000 to $28,000 swing — either money left on the table through underpricing, or a stale-listing discount through overpricing. That is the entire value proposition of pricing precision, and it is why the depth of a team's transaction data is not a vanity metric. For current neighborhood benchmarks across the Reno market, and the broader team story behind the ranking, our #1-in-Nevada five-year post goes deeper on the numbers.

Montreux luxury golf estate at Mount Rose near Reno Nevada — team pricing precision on Somersett ArrowCreek estates 2026
Reno's luxury corridors — Somersett, ArrowCreek, Montreux — carry thin buyer pools where a single pricing error costs tens of thousands; team-level comparable-sale data is what prevents it.

Should You Care Whether Your Reno Team Also Works Las Vegas?

It helps you — as long as the statewide coverage is backed by a genuinely local Reno roster. A team operating in both Northern and Southern Nevada develops pattern recognition that a single-metro team never sees: statewide inventory trends, interest-rate sensitivity across price tiers, and the California migration flows that feed both markets. When Nevada Real Estate Group prices a Reno home, that analysis is informed by transaction data across the entire state, which sharpens the read on how national forces are landing locally.

The failure mode to avoid is the opposite: a Las Vegas-based solo agent with zero Reno closings trying to represent you in South Meadows or Sparks. That agent has the statewide-brand story but none of the local depth. The right structure is a statewide team with a dedicated Northern Nevada roster — agents who live in the Truckee Meadows, know which Damonte Ranch streets back to McCarran traffic noise, and carry both the Northern Nevada Regional MLS and Tahoe-board access. That is exactly the model behind the (775) 277-2120 line.

If you are weighing a move between regions, or simply want to understand how the statewide team applies to your local purchase, the honest framework lives in our companion guide to choosing the best real estate agent in Reno — the canonical breakdown of the criteria every agent and team should be measured against. The Northern Nevada communities directory covers every major area, and nearby Carson City rounds out the Northern Nevada picture for buyers considering the Capital region.

What Should Reno Buyers and Sellers Do Next?

If you are buying, the team advantage shows up as speed and protection: faster responses that win competitive homes, and a dedicated agent who manages your inspection, appraisal, and financing contingencies so your earnest money stays safe. Start by browsing Reno homes for sale or setting up saved-search alerts through our home search tool, then review our buyer resources and talk to an agent before you tour so your representation is in place.

If you are selling, the advantage is the buyer pool and pricing precision: a statewide network of 150 agents putting your listing in front of qualified buyers, and the comparable-sale data density that prices your home right on day one. Begin with a free valuation on our seller resources page, or explore the 7-day listing agreement if you want maximum flexibility.

Either way, the first step costs nothing. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an early conversation about market conditions and preparation is one of the highest-value things a buyer or seller can do — and it is free. Contact the Northern Nevada team directly, or call (775) 277-2120.

Frequently Asked Questions About the #1 Real Estate Team in Reno

Who is the #1 real estate team in Reno, Nevada in 2026?

Nevada Real Estate Group is the #1 real estate team in Reno and across Nevada. The strongest evidence is third-party audited: RealTrends Verified named the group the #1 real estate team in Nevada on the strength of 789 transactions and $361.5 million in verified 2025 volume (an announcement carried by Morningstar and PR Newswire), and the team has held the #1-in-Nevada ranking for five consecutive years, ranking #44 in the nation. On FastExpert — which ranks agents by verified transaction history rather than advertising spend — Chris Nevada is the #1 ranked real estate agent in Reno, NV. The team has closed more than 9,600 transactions statewide, carries 9,061-plus verified five-star reviews, and fields 150-plus agents with a dedicated Northern Nevada roster reachable at (775) 277-2120.

Is a real estate team actually better than a solo agent in Reno?

For most transactions, yes — and the reason is structural, not about individual talent. A solo agent is a single point of failure: they cannot answer a new lead while showing homes, their inspection deadlines do not pause during vacation, and a dual-agency conflict forces you to accept diluted representation or start over. A 150-agent team supplies always-on coverage, minutes-not-hours speed-to-lead, a statewide buyer pool for your listing, and an in-house colleague to reassign if a dual-agency conflict arises. In Reno's fast 47-day-on-market environment, those structural advantages regularly decide who wins the home.

What does "speed-to-lead" mean and why does it matter in Reno?

Speed-to-lead is how fast an agent responds after a buyer expresses interest. In Reno, where competitive homes under $700,000 can go pending in under a week, the buyers who tour first are the ones whose agents replied within minutes of the MLS alert. A solo agent juggling six clients cannot reliably respond that fast; a team with rotating availability can. On a $600,000 purchase, winning the home you actually want rather than overpaying 3% for a compromise property is roughly an $18,000 difference — which is why speed-to-lead is a money metric, not just an operational one.

How do I verify that Nevada Real Estate Group is really #1 in Reno?

Check it independently in a few minutes. Confirm the Reno ranking on FastExpert, which publishes its verified-transaction methodology. Look up the brokerage license and disciplinary record at red.nv.gov. Read the text of the verified Google and FastExpert reviews rather than the star average. And ask for the Northern Nevada Regional MLS production report showing every listing and buyer-side closing over the past 12 months — a genuinely top team shares it immediately. Apply the same checks to any team you consider so you are comparing verified data, not marketing.

Does hiring a big team mean I get passed to a call center?

No — that is the failure mode a good team is built to avoid. The Northern Nevada roster is staffed with agents who live and work in the Reno-Sparks-Tahoe market, so your transaction is managed by a local professional, not a distant call center. The team structure adds a transaction coordinator, marketing support, and backup coverage behind that local agent — you get the infrastructure of a top-50 national organization with an agent-level relationship. Call (775) 277-2120 and you reach the Northern Nevada team directly.

How does a team give my Reno listing a bigger buyer pool?

When you list with a solo agent, your reach is the MLS plus that one agent's contacts. When you list with a 150-agent statewide team, your home is instantly visible to every one of those agents' active buyers — across Reno, Sparks, Carson City, the Tahoe basin, and relocating Las Vegas clients. Because a meaningful share of Reno purchases come from within-Nevada moves and California in-migration, a statewide team is far likelier to already be working with the exact buyer for your home. Combined with professional photography and drone marketing as standard, that distribution can be the difference between selling in 12 days and 45.

What is the phone number for the #1 real estate team in Reno?

The Northern Nevada team at Nevada Real Estate Group is reachable directly at (775) 277-2120. That line connects you to locally based Reno-area agents backed by the statewide team's infrastructure — transaction coordination, marketing, and a 150-agent buyer network. You can also contact the team through our contact page, browse Reno homes for sale, or request a free home valuation through our seller resources. The first consultation is no-obligation and free, whether your timeline is 30 days or 18 months.

Which Sources Inform This Reno Real Estate Team Guide?

This guide draws on Nevada regulatory data, national real estate research, independent agent-ranking platforms, and Nevada Real Estate Group's direct transaction experience in the Northern Nevada market. Rankings, prices, agent counts, and market conditions change — confirm specifics with the relevant authority 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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