The average real estate agent grosses six figures. Some clear $200K, $400K, sometimes a million in a great year. And yet a striking number of those same agents reach 55 with almost nothing on the balance sheet.
How does that happen? It's not about discipline or hustle. It's about a missing system.
The Income Trap
Real estate is a great income business and a terrible wealth business — if you only run it as a sales practice. Every dollar that arrives is earned by you, doing transactions this year, on commission rates that aren't getting better. There's no compounding. There's no ownership. When you stop selling, the income stops.
The MREA framework solves the income side beautifully — it's the proven playbook for scaling production. But there's a quieter problem hiding in the model. Even at peak production, agents who only run MREA build a great income business and a thin balance sheet.
The Two Models That Have to Work Together
Here's where Gary Keller's two books connect — and most agents miss it.
MREI gives you the Net Worth Model — the equation that converts net income into income-producing assets that compound on their own.
Run only MREA, and you become a high-income agent with a fragile balance sheet.
Run only MREI, and you don't have the cash flow to fund the asset acquisition in the first place.
Run both, and the business funds the assets while the assets quietly de-risk the business.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Concretely: every quarter, when you review your MREA Economic Model numbers, you should also ask:
- How much of last quarter's net income got routed into investment assets?
- What's my investment net worth today, and what's the trajectory?
- Am I one deal closer to "income from assets" being meaningful?
That's it. Two questions on top of the MREA review you should already be doing. But those two questions, asked every 90 days for 10 years, change the trajectory entirely.
A Simple First Step
If you're an agent reading this and you don't have a clear answer to "what's my investment net worth?" — start here:
- Download the free Investor Net Worth Tracker (PDF).
- Fill in today's number. Be honest. Most agents discover the gap is bigger than they think.
- Set a 5-year target. Write it down with a specific date.
- Pick one investment property type you'll learn to underwrite this year. Use the free calculators on this site to start practicing.
That alone — done seriously — puts you ahead of 90% of agents in your office. The other 10% are already doing it, and they're the ones quietly retiring in their 50s.
The Bigger Point
The MREA isn't a wealth book. It's an income book. The MREI is the wealth book. Most agents read one and not the other. The ones who scale meaningfully read both, and run them both, simultaneously, every quarter, for decades.
That's the entire premise of the coaching I do at Wealth Building Broker — connecting the two frameworks so the business funds the wealth and the wealth de-risks the business. If that resonates, book a free 30-min consult and we'll talk through where you are.
About the author: Lance Hulsey is a California real estate broker (DRE# 01724888), co-investor in the KW Thrive SC Keller Williams franchise in Capitola, CA, and host of Keeping it Real Estate with Lance Hulsey. He coaches agents and small business owners using the MREA and MREI frameworks.