How To End A Real Estate Agent Relationship Professionally
When communication breaks down, expectations don't align, or respect disappears, LOs may need to move on — without burning bridges
Loan originators talk all the time about winning the trust of real estate agents. How to prospect them, how to add value, how to earn referrals. But there is another conversation we do not have enough of.
Sometimes, as a loan originator, you need to fire a real estate agent.
Not because one deal got hard or someone had a bad day. But because the relationship is costing you time, energy, reputation, production, and peace.
This is not the same as firing a client. You are ending a business relationship with someone who is supposed to be a partner.
After more than 10 years in the mortgage space, I have learned something important. Every bad real estate agent relationship can cost you three deals:
1. The deal you are working on.
2. The referrals they are never going to send.
3. The opportunity you lost because your energy was tied up with the wrong person.
Too many loan originators think they are being patient, loyal, or playing the long game.
Not Every Relationship Is Worth Saving
There are great real estate agents in this business.
Agents who communicate. Agents who care about the client. Agents who respect the process. Agents who understand that lending requires documentation, strategy, timing, and trust. Those are the agents you fight for.
But then there are others. The agent who only calls when something goes wrong. The agent who sends messy files and unrealistic expectations. The agent who blames the lender for everything. The agent who is disrespectful to your team. The agent who never refers you business, but still expects you to jump every time they call.
At some point, that is not a partnership. That is a distraction. And in this market, distractions are expensive.
Step 1: Decide Before The Call
Do not call to negotiate. Call to inform.
If you have already coached them, set expectations, provided support, and tried to align the relationship, then the final call is not another attempt to be understood. It is a decision being communicated.
Before the call, ask yourself: Am I trying to fix this? Or am I communicating a decision?
Those are two very different conversations.
Step 2: Be Direct And Professional
A good opening is simple: “Hey Sally, I wanted to call you personally because I respect you enough not to send this over text.”
Then state the decision clearly: “I’ve given this a lot of thought, and I don’t think we’re the right fit to continue working together moving forward.”
Do not say: “Maybe we should take a break,” “I think we should slow things down,” “I’m not sure this is working.” Those are invitations to argue.
If the decision has been made, communicate the decision.
Step 3: Give A Clear Reason
You do not need a courtroom presentation.
If the agent simply does not get it, say: “I’ve tried several times to align on communication, expectations, and how we serve clients. I don’t feel we’re getting the consistency we need, and I think it is best that we go separate directions.”
If the agent has been disrespectful or verbally abusive, say: “I’m a big believer in accountability, but I’m also big on respect. Some of our recent interactions crossed a line for me, and that is not how I choose to conduct business.”
The goal is not to win the argument. The goal is to end the relationship with clarity.
Step 4: Keep It Simple, Don’t Take The Bait
This is where many loan originators lose control. Do your best not to engage in rage bait. The agent may try to turn it into a debate.
“What did I do?” “When did I do that?” “That’s not fair.” “You’re being too sensitive.”
Do not take the bait. The more you explain, the more they have to argue with.
Keep it simple: “I understand you may not see it the same way. I’m not calling to debate the decision. I’m simply communicating it.”
If they keep pushing: “I hear you, but I’ve given this a lot of thought and my decision is final.”
That is it. No courtroom. No long list of examples. No emotional back and forth. Just clarity.
Final Thought
This is not about ego. It is not about proving a point. It is about being honest with yourself about who is actually good for your business.
Some agents are worth fighting for. Some need coaching. Some need clearer expectations. But some are just not the right fit. And the longer you keep giving energy to the wrong relationship, the less energy you have for the right ones.
So before you keep trying to save it, ask yourself one simple question: Am I fighting for this relationship because it is valuable, or because I do not want to admit I let it go on too long?