Updated June 2026 · Reviewed by Adams, Cameron & Co.
A Daytona Beach Shores real estate agent's income is commission-based: estimate it as deals per year × average sale price × commission rate × your side of the deal × your brokerage split. At the local Volusia County median of about $343,000, 12 deals a year at 5% total, a 50% side, and a 70% split is roughly $72,000 gross. Use the calculator below for your own numbers.
- Real estate income is commission-based: there’s no salary and no ceiling.
- Your annual income ≈ deals × average price × commission rate × your side × your split.
- The Volusia County median runs about $343,000; Daytona Beach Shores’ oceanfront condo listings tend to sell above that countywide figure, though this tool uses the sourced county median rather than a made-up local number.
- Your gross is before brokerage fees, marketing, taxes, and self-employment costs.
- A new agent’s real first-year number depends heavily on training and lead support, not just the split.
How much do real estate agents make in Daytona Beach Shores?
There’s no salary. Agents earn a commission on each sale, so income scales with how much you sell. The math: each deal pays the sale price × the commission rate × your side of the deal (usually 50%) × your brokerage split. Multiply by the number of deals you close in a year and you have your gross. The calculator above uses the Volusia County median as a starting default and assumes a 50% side; adjust every number to your situation.
What moves the number most in Daytona Beach Shores?
Two levers dominate: volume (more closings) and price point (higher-value listings). The Volusia County median, which the calculator above defaults to, is about $343,000. Daytona Beach Shores itself is a small, dense barrier-island town of oceanfront condos, and honestly, condo and oceanfront pricing here tends to run above that countywide figure. We don’t have a clean, sourced local median to put a specific number on, so the calculator uses the real, sourced Volusia County figure rather than guess at a local one. Plug in a higher sale price above if you’re pricing a specific oceanfront listing.
What the estimate doesn’t include
This is a gross figure. Out of it come brokerage fees, the marketing you pay for, MLS and board dues, and self-employment taxes. That’s exactly why a new agent’s real take-home depends so much on the brokerage: one that includes marketing and tools and helps you get clients faster can mean more closings and lower costs than a higher split where you fund everything. See how to become a real estate agent in Daytona Beach Shores.
This estimator is a simplified gross projection and not a guarantee of income. It ignores fees, taxes, and market variation. Educational only, not financial advice.
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