Login
Branding 5 - Find your brand identity | Product Hunt
Capterra Reviews
For Agents, Teams & Brokerages

Brand Guidelines for Real Estate

Real estate brand guidelines do something most templates never address: balance the brokerage's brand with the agent's personal brand, ship every surface with Fair Housing compliance baked in, and lock down the photography and listing rules that decide whether a buyer scrolls past or schedules a showing.

Dan ⚡️sandra djajicYossi SegevPhilipp Keller - backl.ioDmytro KrasunFlorian VatesStefcodesRafal
4k+

Trusted by over 4032 startups, marketing teams & creative agencies

Why it matters

Why real estate brand guidelines look different

Most brand guidelines templates were written for a single brand on a single website. Real estate brand guidelines have to govern a personal brand, a brokerage brand, third-party listing platforms, and physical-world surfaces — all while staying inside Fair Housing rules.

1

Compliance is a brand decision, not a footer afterthought.

Fair Housing logo, brokerage name, license number and Equal Housing Opportunity wording have to appear on every brand-bearing surface — ads, postcards, signage, listings. A clear placement spec in your brand guidelines is what stops fines and re-prints.

2

You're managing two brands, not one.

The brokerage owns the master brand; the agent owns a personal brand inside it. Without explicit rules — lockup hierarchy, colour split, when to lead with which — every flyer becomes a fresh negotiation.

3

Listings live where you don't control the chrome.

Zillow, Redfin and realtor.com strip your colours and fonts. Your brand has to survive that — through a recognisable photography style, headline format and copy voice that read as yours even on a third-party shell.

4

Hyperlocal proof is the conversion lever.

Buyers and sellers pick agents who look like the obvious expert in their neighbourhood. Brand guidelines should specify how you present sold comps, market reports and neighbourhood-specific content so it always feels like the same authority talking.

Priorities

What real estate brand guidelines must contain

Reordered from a generic template. Compliance and dual-brand rules move up; logo lockup minutiae move down. Branding5 generates the strategic, voice and visual layer; the listing-platform and compliance pieces below you author on top of it.

  • Must-have

    Fair Housing & disclosure block

    The exact wording, logo size and placement rules for Equal Housing Opportunity, your brokerage name, address and license number(s). Used unchanged on every ad, postcard, signboard and listing. Branding5 doesn't generate this — your brokerage compliance officer does — but it belongs at the top of your guidelines.

  • Must-have

    Brokerage × agent lockup rules

    Three lockups: brokerage-only, agent-only, co-branded. With clear-space, hierarchy and "which goes where". Most brokerage style guides ignore the personal-brand layer; most agent guides ignore the brokerage requirement. Yours has to cover both.

  • Must-have

    Print-ready colour & typography

    For yard signs, postcards, open-house flyers and bus benches — not just the website. Branding5 generates HEX, CMYK, HSL and PMS Coated/Uncoated codes plus typography with reasoning, ready for print vendors.

  • High priority

    Listing photography style guide

    Twilight or daytime, HDR ceiling, exterior wide-angle, drone yes/no, staging vs vacant rules. The single highest-leverage section of any real estate brand book — it's what survives third-party listing platforms.

  • High priority

    Listing copy voice & format

    Headline structure, bullet pattern, neighbourhood-mention rules, words your brand never uses (“charming”, “cozy” as code for small, etc.). Branding5's marketing copy section is your starting voice; this is the listing-specific dialect.

  • High priority

    Hyperlocal asset templates

    Just-listed, just-sold, neighbourhood market report, open-house invite. Same template every time so cumulative recognition compounds.

  • Nice to have

    Yard signs & physical signage

    Critical — but downstream of the lockup rules and compliance block above.

Pitfalls

Common real estate brand mistakes

Patterns we see across teams from solo agents to 200-agent brokerages. Each one quietly costs listings, leads or compliance fines.

Mistake

Treating Fair Housing compliance as a footer afterthought instead of part of the brand system.

Fix

Document the exact compliance block — logo size, brokerage name, license number, Equal Housing Opportunity wording — in the first chapter of your guidelines. Every ad, postcard and listing copies it verbatim.

Mistake

Personal brand colours and typography that fight the brokerage brand.

Fix

Decide the lockup hierarchy upfront. If the brokerage leads, the agent layer uses neutrals; if the agent leads (e.g. teams with their own brand), the brokerage layer is locked to a small badge. No third option.

Mistake

Listing photography that drifts from one shoot to the next.

Fix

Lock a photography spec: time of day, angles, HDR rules, drone use, staging guidance. Reference images for every property type. Send to every photographer you hire — they will thank you.

Mistake

Just-sold posts that look completely different every time.

Fix

One template per asset type — just-listed, just-sold, market report, open house. Same template, swap the property and number. Cumulative recognition is what makes you the obvious local expert.

Example

A real estate brand-guidelines outline

The structure that holds up across solo agents, teams and small brokerages. Compliance and dual-brand rules first; visual identity second; surface-specific guidance last.

Brand guidelines (excerpt)

01 — Compliance & disclosure block

Used verbatim on every brand-bearing surface:

  • Brokerage name, address, phone, broker license number
  • Agent license number(s) and any team-specific compliance text
  • Equal Housing Opportunity logo — minimum size, placement, monochrome variant
  • Required disclaimers per state (e.g. Texas TREC IABS, California DRE § 2785)

02 — Brokerage × agent lockup

Three locked variants. Brokerage-led for general advertising; agent-led for personal-brand campaigns; co-branded for listings. Hierarchy decided once, applied everywhere.

03 — Visual identity (Branding5 output)

Print-ready palette in HEX, CMYK, HSL and PMS Coated/Uncoated. Typography: primary and secondary fonts with weights, usage rules and the reasoning behind each choice. Layer your own size scale on top for yard signs and signage (typically legible from 30 ft).

04 — Listing photography spec

  • Exterior: wide-angle (16–24mm equivalent), shot during golden hour or twilight
  • Interior: HDR for windows, neutral white-balance, doors open, lights on
  • Drone: only for >0.25 acre lots or distinctive lot lines; never on dense urban
  • Staging: virtually staged photos clearly labelled; never on listing hero images

05 — Listing copy voice

Headline format: [Distinctive feature], [Neighbourhood] — $[Price]. Three-bullet body: location, condition, opportunity. Words we never use: “charming”, “cozy”, “handyman special”, “must see”.

06 — Hyperlocal asset templates

Just-listed, just-sold, monthly neighbourhood market report, open-house invite. Each is a single Canva or Figma template; only the property and numbers change. The brand and compliance block stay locked.

Three formats from one source

Every Branding5 brand book ships as a presentation-ready PDF and a shareable web report for clients, designers and stakeholders. We also generate a machine-readable brand-guidelines.md so AI tools like Cursor, Claude, v0 and Stitch stay on-brand from the first prompt.

See an example report

Generate brand guidelines for your real estate brand

Drop your URL. Branding5 builds the complete brand book in minutes. PDF, web report and brand-guidelines.md included.

More than a guidelines tool

Brand guidelines are one output. Branding5 builds the whole brand system.

Every Branding5 report includes positioning, archetype with peer brand examples, ICPs, SWOT, per-competitor SWOTs, marketing copy, content strategy, AIDA campaigns and a landing page + Lighthouse audit, alongside your brand-guidelines.md. One generation, one source of truth, every artefact in sync.

All of this ships in every Branding5 report, not as an add-on, not as a separate product. Your brand-guidelines.md is the team-facing summary; the full PDF report adds executive summary, competitor SWOTs, landing page analysis and Lighthouse Core Web Vitals.

FAQ - Brand guidelines for real estate brand FAQ

Questions teams ask before they ship their first real estate brand brand book.

Ready for brand guidelines that fit your real estate brand?

Start free.