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Iranian Realtor
Iranian Realtor Directory — Trusted Persian Real Estate Agents in the USA
Buying or selling a home is the largest financial decision most families ever make. You need a realtor who knows the market, communicates clearly, and understands what matters to your family — including cultural factors that often go unnoticed in standard transactions.
The Iranian Business Directory connects you with licensed Iranian realtors and Persian-speaking real estate agents across the U.S. — professionals who hold active state licenses, hold themselves to NAR's Code of Ethics, and bring the cultural fluency that makes complex transactions feel manageable.
What an Iranian Realtor Brings to the Table
A licensed realtor's job is the same regardless of background — represent your interests, follow the law, and close transactions cleanly. What an Iranian or Persian-speaking realtor adds on top is friction removal:
Communication in Your Language
For first-generation immigrants, elderly family members, or anyone navigating English real estate jargon for the first time, a Farsi-speaking agent translates not just words — but escrow concepts, title insurance, contingencies, disclosures, and inspection findings clearly and accurately.
Cultural Understanding of Your Needs
Iranian families often look for specific home features: yards large enough for Nowruz gatherings, kitchens that handle multi-course Persian cooking, layouts that accommodate extended family stays, neighborhoods near Persian groceries and Iranian communities. Iranian realtors recognize these requirements without needing them explained.
Network Access in Iranian Communities
Many homes in Persian-dense areas like Westwood, Glendale, Encino (LA); Great Neck (NY); Tysons Corner (DC area); and Mira Mesa (San Diego) transact off-market through community networks. Iranian realtors often have advance knowledge of listings before they hit the MLS.
Services Iranian Realtors Provide
| Service | What It Includes |
|---|---|
| Buyer Representation | Property search, market analysis, offer strategy, negotiation, inspection coordination, closing |
| Listing / Seller Representation | Pricing strategy, staging guidance, MLS marketing, showings, negotiation, closing |
| Rental Agent Services | Property matching, application support, lease review, move-in coordination |
| Property Management | Tenant screening, rent collection, maintenance coordination, eviction handling |
| Commercial Real Estate | Office, retail, multi-family, investment property transactions |
| Investment Property Specialists | Cash-flow analysis, 1031 exchanges, multi-unit acquisitions |
| Relocation Specialists | Out-of-state moves for Iranian-American families |
| Bilingual Closing Support | Farsi explanation of escrow documents, title reports, settlement statements |
How to Choose the Right Iranian Realtor
Before hiring any real estate agent — Iranian or otherwise — verify these credentials. Every realtor in our directory meets all of them:
| Credential | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Active State Real Estate License | Required by law. Verify on your state's license lookup (e.g., DRE in California, DOS in New York). |
| NAR Membership (Realtor®) | "Realtor" is a trademark only NAR members can use — signals professional accountability under NAR Code of Ethics. |
| Local MLS Access | Active MLS membership means access to current listings and historical data. |
| Brokerage Affiliation | Reputable broker affiliation (Coldwell Banker, Compass, Keller Williams, eXp, independent boutique) signals operational legitimacy. |
| Specialization | Buyer's agent, listing agent, investor specialist, luxury, commercial — match to your need. |
| Track Record | Ask for last 12 months of closed transactions. Reputable agents share this openly. |
| References | At least 3 recent client references you can contact. |
| E&O Insurance | Errors and Omissions insurance protects you against agent mistakes. |
Buying a Home — What to Expect with an Iranian Realtor
The home-buying process generally moves through eight stages. Your realtor guides each one:
- Pre-approval — meet with a lender (your realtor can connect you with Farsi-speaking mortgage brokers if you prefer)
- Needs analysis — neighborhood, budget, size, schools, commute, cultural preferences
- Property search — MLS, off-market listings, community network
- Showings — viewings scheduled around your availability
- Offer & negotiation — your realtor handles back-and-forth with the seller's agent
- Inspections & contingencies — home inspection, pest, sewer, structural, environmental
- Loan finalization & appraisal — coordination with lender and escrow
- Closing & key handover — signing, funding, recording, move-in
A good realtor explains each step before it happens. If yours doesn't, find another.
Selling Your Home — What an Iranian Listing Agent Does
| Stage | What the Listing Agent Handles |
|---|---|
| Pricing Analysis | Comparative market analysis (CMA) using recent sales, current listings, and active competition |
| Staging Consultation | Recommendations for declutter, repairs, paint, and presentation |
| Photography & Marketing | Professional photos, virtual tours, MLS listing, social media, Persian community channels |
| Showings | Scheduling, open houses, agent showings, feedback collection |
| Offer Review | Reviewing terms (price, contingencies, financing, timeline) — not just the dollar amount |
| Negotiation | Counter-offer strategy, repair request handling, credit negotiations |
| Disclosures & Compliance | State-mandated disclosure forms, lead paint, natural hazard, smoke alarm certification |
| Closing Coordination | Working with escrow, title, buyer's lender, and your tax/legal advisors |
Commission rates vary by state and brokerage. Always get a written listing agreement spelling out commission, marketing budget, term length, and cancellation policy.
Renting & Property Management
For tenants and landlords, Iranian property managers and rental agents help with:
- Property matching based on budget, neighborhood, and amenities
- Application support including credit pulls and reference checks
- Lease review translating English legal terms into Farsi when helpful
- Move-in coordination and condition documentation
- Ongoing tenant-landlord communication to avoid disputes
- Security deposit handling under state-specific laws
- Property management for investors — full-service handling of single-family and multi-unit properties
Tenants generally don't pay rental agent fees (paid by the landlord), though some states differ. Verify before signing.
Red Flags: When to Walk Away from a Realtor
Use these warnings regardless of cultural background:
- No verifiable state license number — every U.S. realtor must have one
- Pressure to sign agreements immediately — buyer/listing agreements deserve careful review
- Vague answers about commission structure — must be in writing
- Refusal to provide recent transaction records or references
- Dual agency without clear written disclosure — represents both buyer and seller (legal but conflict-prone)
- Promises about home value or sale price that seem too good to be true — agents can't guarantee market outcomes
- No brokerage affiliation or working independently without licensure
- Requests for direct payment outside escrow
Every realtor in our directory is verified for active licensure, NAR membership where applicable, and brokerage affiliation.
Top U.S. Markets for Iranian Realtors
| City / Region | Persian-Dense Neighborhoods | Common Property Type |
|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles | Westwood, Beverly Hills, Encino, Tarzana, Glendale | Single-family, luxury, condos |
| Orange County | Irvine, Newport Beach, Mission Viejo | Suburban single-family |
| San Diego | Mira Mesa, La Jolla, Carmel Valley | Single-family, townhomes |
| San Francisco | San Jose, San Ramon, Walnut Creek, Saratoga | Tech-corridor suburbia |
| New York | Great Neck, Roslyn, Manhattan, Forest Hills | Single-family, co-ops, luxury |
| Washington D.C. | Vienna, McLean, Falls Church, Fairfax, Potomac | Single-family suburbs |
| Houston | The Galleria, Memorial, Sugar Land | Suburban estate homes |
| Dallas | Plano, Frisco, Richardson | Suburban single-family |
| Atlanta | Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, Johns Creek | Suburban single-family |
| Seattle | Bellevue, Redmond, Mercer Island | Tech-corridor housing |
Why the Iranian Business Center Is Different
- Active License Verification — Every listed realtor's state license is verified before listing and re-verified annually
- NAR Membership Status Displayed — When applicable, Realtor® status is clearly tagged
- Specialization Tagged — Buyer's agent, listing agent, investor, luxury, commercial, rental — filter directly
- Farsi-Speaking Service Confirmed — Every listed realtor speaks Farsi or has Farsi-speaking team support
- Brokerage Affiliation Transparent — See which brokerage each agent works with
- Built for 2026 Search — Schema-optimized for Google Maps, "near me" results, AI Overviews, ChatGPT Search, and Perplexity
- Community-Accountable — Listed agents are accountable to the Persian-American community for service quality
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: What is an Iranian realtor, and how is one different from a regular realtor? An Iranian realtor is a state-licensed real estate agent who is either Iranian-American or speaks Farsi fluently. Their professional duties are identical to any U.S. realtor — they hold the same licenses, follow the same laws, and work under the same NAR Code of Ethics. The difference is cultural and linguistic fluency: clearer communication for Farsi-speaking clients and deeper understanding of community-specific needs.
Q2: Are Iranian realtors licensed the same way as other realtors? Yes. Every legitimate Iranian realtor holds an active state real estate license — exactly the same credential as any other agent. Verify any agent's license through your state's real estate commission (e.g., DRE.ca.gov in California, dos.ny.gov in New York). Every realtor in our directory has a verified active license.
Q3: How do I find an Iranian realtor near me? Browse this directory by city — Los Angeles, San Diego, Bay Area, New York, Washington D.C., Houston, Dallas, and other major U.S. metros with established Iranian communities all have dedicated listings. Filter by specialization (buyer's agent, listing agent, investor specialist, luxury, rental, commercial) to narrow further.
Q4: Do I have to be Iranian to work with an Iranian realtor? No. Iranian realtors serve clients of every background. Their licensing and fiduciary duty applies equally to all clients regardless of cultural background.
Q5: How are realtor commissions paid? In most U.S. transactions, the seller pays a total commission (historically 5–6%) that's split between the listing agent and the buyer's agent. Following 2024 NAR settlement changes, buyers may now need to sign written agreements with their agents about compensation. Discuss commission structure clearly in writing with any realtor before engaging.
Q6: Can an Iranian realtor help me find a Farsi-speaking mortgage lender? Often yes — many Iranian realtors have established working relationships with Farsi-speaking mortgage brokers, lenders, and loan officers. Ask during your initial consultation if this matters to you.
Q7: What's the difference between a realtor, a real estate agent, and a broker?
- Real estate agent: Licensed to facilitate transactions under a broker
- Realtor®: A real estate agent who is also a member of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) and bound by its Code of Ethics
- Broker: A higher-level licensee who can operate independently and supervise agents
All can help you buy or sell — the credential differences mostly affect supervision and ethics accountability.
Q8: Are Iranian realtors helpful for first-time homebuyers? Especially helpful, yes — for first-time buyers from Iranian-American families, the combination of Farsi-language guidance through unfamiliar concepts (escrow, contingencies, title insurance, PMI, closing costs) and patient cultural awareness often makes a major difference. Many listed agents specifically specialize in first-time buyers.
Q9: How do I verify a realtor's license? Every U.S. state has a public real estate license lookup. Common ones:
- California: DRE.ca.gov → eLicense Public Lookup
- New York: dos.ny.gov → Real Estate License Search
- Texas: trec.texas.gov → License Search
- Florida: myfloridalicense.com
Search by the agent's name and confirm "Active" status and no disciplinary actions.
Q10: What questions should I ask before hiring an Iranian realtor?
- How many transactions have you closed in the past 12 months?
- What's your average list-to-sale price ratio?
- What's your typical days-on-market for listings?
- Can I speak with two or three recent clients?
- What's your commission structure, in writing?
- Are you a member of NAR (Realtor®)?
- What brokerage do you work under?
- Are you a buyer's agent, listing agent, or both?
Any reputable realtor answers all of these openly and in writing.
Important Disclosures
The Iranian Business Center is a directory and does not provide real estate, legal, financial, or tax advice. Listings are verified for active state licensure, but all real estate decisions should be made with the guidance of your selected licensed agent, attorney, and tax professional. Past performance of any agent does not guarantee future results. Real estate markets are subject to local and national fluctuations.
Find Your Iranian Realtor
The right realtor changes what could be the most stressful year of your life into one of the proudest. Whether you're buying your first home, upgrading for a growing family, downsizing, investing, or relocating — a Farsi-speaking professional who understands both U.S. real estate law and Iranian family priorities is one click away.