The homebuying process has entered a new era.
For decades, buyers relied primarily on agents, lenders, and online listings to help with their search. AI has changed that dynamic entirely. Buyers now have access to tools that provide more information, including market trends, neighborhood comparisons, home value estimates, and instant answers to questions.
As a result, consumers are entering the housing market more informed than ever before. This shift raises an important question: If AI can handle so much of the research traditionally associated with homebuying, will it eventually replace real estate agents?
According to Laura Adams, Senior Real Estate Analyst at AceableAgent, an online education platform for real estate agents, the answer is no.
“Buyers are embracing AI, but they trust humans to guide their most important financial decisions more,” says Adams. “AI can help buyers research and compare options, but when it comes to negotiations, understanding local markets, and making major financial decisions, the expertise of a trusted agent remains essential.”
The distinction is important: AI delivers information, but agents provide interpretation.
AI Creating A More Informed Buyer
The adoption of AI in real estate has accelerated rapidly. According to AceableAgent’s 2026 Housing Market Optimism Report, 85% of homebuyers now use AI tools to research homes, while 97% say AI helps increase their confidence during the buying process. Information that once required extensive searching can now be accessed in seconds.
This accessibility to information allows buyers to move faster and narrow their options more efficiently. In a competitive housing market, that can be a significant advantage.
The result is a buyer who shows up at the table prepared, armed with data, and ready to ask more informed questions. For both buyers and agents, that’s largely a positive development. More knowledgeable consumers can have more productive conversations and a clearer understanding of their goals before they begin the buying process.
Information Doesn’t Make You An Expert
One of the biggest misconceptions surrounding AI is that more information automatically leads to better decisions.
Buying real estate is complicated and involves far more than property info, price histories, and neighborhood stats. Every market is unique, and every transaction presents different challenges. Factors that affect a property’s value or resale potential are often difficult to understand through AI.
This is where experienced real estate professionals continue to play a critical role. The same AceableAgent study found that 81% of buyers still consider real estate agents essential during the homebuying process. While consumers value the research capabilities AI provides, they continue to seek professional guidance when making final decisions.
Buying a home comes with evaluating risks, navigating inspections, and negotiating contracts. These situations often involve judgment calls that cannot be reduced to a simple recommendation. An AI tool can estimate a home’s value, but an experienced agent can explain why that estimate may not tell the full story by putting actual eyes on the home and spotting issues. They can identify factors that affect long-term desirability, point out risks that buyers may overlook, and provide local context that doesn’t appear in a database.
Adams recalls reading about a case where a buyer’s agent visited a property that had been professionally photographed to look move-in ready, only to find a very different reality. Marks on the walls, clutter throughout, conditions the listing photos had carefully hidden. “Without that in-person visit,” she says, “the buyer would have had no way of knowing what they were actually walking into.”
The Dangers Of False Confidence
AI tools are designed to provide fast, clear answers, and for most buyers, that feels empowering. But confidence isn’t the same as accuracy, and the gap between the two can be costly.
A study by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), led by the BBC, highlighted a growing concern known as “cognitive surrender.” It’s when people accept AI-generated responses without adequately questioning or verifying them.
A recent survey from my company, Prosper Insights & Analytics, shows that 33% of Millennials believe AI can produce incorrect information, with 36% of Gen-Z saying the same. Adams says, “Buyers might use AI to estimate what they can afford or compare neighborhoods and get confident-sounding answers, but the tech may miss key local factors like school zoning or neighborhood-level pricing differences, which can significantly change what a buyer can actually afford or compete for.”
Housing decisions often involve substantial financial commitments, emotional considerations, and long-term implications. Buyers who rely too heavily on AI-generated recommendations may overlook important factors that deserve closer scrutiny.
Having a trusted real estate advisor can make a meaningful difference for homebuyers. An AI platform may reinforce a buyer’s assumptions or preferences, but a skilled agent is responsible for working in a buyer’s best interests. That may mean advising a client against overpaying for a property, highlighting concerns about a home’s condition, or identifying risks that aren’t immediately obvious. Avoiding expensive mistakes is a huge part of an agent’s value for their clients.
The Future Is Collaboration, Not Replacement
AI will not fully replace real estate agents; however, it’s becoming a valuable tool throughout the homebuying journey, improving efficiency, and helping buyers better understand their options. Parts of the process that require judgment, negotiation, and local expertise still depend on agents. Rather than replacing, AI is reshaping.
As technology takes over more routine work, agents can spend less time gathering information and more time helping clients interpret it and make informed decisions. Their role is shifting from information provider to advisor and guide.
The most effective agents will use AI to handle routine tasks and research, allowing them to focus on higher-value work like advising clients and solving complex problems. Rather than being a threat, AI should become an efficiency tool for real estate professionals to move the industry forward.
Disclosure: The consumer sentiment study referenced above was conducted by my company, Prosper Insights & Analytics. This is the same dataset used by the National Retail Federation, and available from Amazon Web Services, Bloomberg, and the London Stock Exchange Group for economic benchmarking.











