If you manage three or more agents, you already know. The paperwork never stops. It grows. And every hour your agents spend on admin is an hour they’re not in front of a buyer. We tracked 47 real estate teams over 90 days. The number that kept coming back: 47%. That’s how much of their week goes to tasks a trained VA could handle by Tuesday.
Here’s the breakdown. Ten tasks. What they cost. What happens when you hand them off.
1. MLS Data Entry and Listing Updates
Every listing needs photos uploaded, descriptions written, price changes reflected, and status updates pushed. Miss one and the listing goes stale. Zillow pulls it. Buyers move on.
The average agent spends 4.2 hours per week on MLS maintenance alone. A trained VA does it in 2.5. Same quality. No missed updates.
“We handed MLS to our VA on a Monday. By Friday, our listing accuracy went from 91% to 99.6%. The agents didn’t even notice it happened.”
Brokerage owner, Orange County, CA
2. Transaction Coordination
From accepted offer to closing, there are 87 individual touchpoints. Inspections. Appraisals. Title checks. Lender follow-ups. Signature chasing. One missed deadline can kill a deal worth six figures.
Most agents try to handle this themselves. The top producers don’t. They hand it to someone whose only job is making sure nothing falls through the cracks.
In-house TC cost/year
Rivco VA cost/year
Cost savings
3. Lead Follow-Up and Nurture Sequences
Speed to lead matters. The MIT Real Estate Study found that responding within 5 minutes makes you 21x more likely to qualify a lead than waiting 30 minutes. But your agents are in showings. They’re driving. They’re in closings.
A VA monitors your CRM. New lead comes in, they respond in under 3 minutes. Every time. They qualify, they schedule, they hand off warm prospects to your agents. Your agents show up to appointments instead of chasing cold callbacks.
Respond in 5 minutes and you’re 21x more likely to qualify the lead. Your agents are in showings. Your VA is not.
4. Social Media Management
Consistent posting drives inbound leads. Everyone knows this. Nobody does it. Because after a 10-hour day showing properties, the last thing your agents want to do is write an Instagram caption.
- Schedule 15-20 posts per week across platforms
- Respond to comments and DMs within 30 minutes
- Create market update graphics from MLS data
- Monitor competitor activity and local hashtags
- Track engagement metrics weekly
A VA does all of this for the cost of one promoted post per month.
5. CRM Hygiene and Database Management
Your CRM is only as good as the data inside it. Dead emails. Wrong phone numbers. Leads sitting in “New” status for 90 days. Every dirty record is a missed opportunity and a wasted ad dollar.
A VA scrubs your database weekly. Merges duplicates. Updates contact info. Tags leads by source, temperature, and timeline. When your agents open Follow Up Boss or KvCORE, they see a clean pipeline. Not a graveyard.
6. Showing Coordination and Calendar Management
Booking showings sounds simple until you’re juggling 14 listings, 8 buyer tours, and 3 inspection windows in the same week. Add in lockbox codes, showing instructions, and feedback requests, and you’re looking at 6-8 hours of pure logistics.
Hand it off. Your VA manages ShowingTime, coordinates access, sends reminders, and collects feedback. Your agents drive from showing to showing with a clean schedule on their phone. Nothing else.
7. Document Preparation and Filing
Purchase agreements. Disclosure packets. Addendums. Amendments. Every deal generates 30-50 documents that need to be prepared, sent, signed, filed, and tracked. One missing signature can delay a closing by two weeks.
Your VA preps the docs before your agent even asks. They track what’s signed, what’s pending, and what’s overdue. They chase the signatures so your agents don’t have to send awkward “just following up” emails to clients.
30-50 documents per deal. One missing signature delays closing by two weeks. A VA tracks every page so your agents never have to.
8. Client Communication and Milestone Updates
Buyers want updates. Sellers want updates. Lenders want updates. Title wants updates. Everyone wants to know what’s happening, and silence is the number one complaint in real estate transactions.
Teams that send weekly milestone updates to all parties see 3.4x more referrals than teams that only communicate when there’s a problem.
A VA sends structured updates at every milestone. Offer accepted. Inspection scheduled. Appraisal complete. Clear to close. Clients feel informed. Agents look professional. Referrals follow.
9. Marketing Collateral and Open House Prep
Flyers. Property brochures. Sign riders. Email blasts. Open house registration forms. These are necessary. They’re also mind-numbing for a $100/hr agent to produce.
- VA creates flyer template in Canva using listing photos
- VA writes property description from MLS notes and agent input
- VA formats email blast and schedules send
- VA prepares sign-in sheet and follow-up sequence
- VA sends thank-you emails to every attendee within 2 hours
All of this for $7.49/hour. That’s the math. It doesn’t require a sales pitch.
10. Vendor and Referral Partner Coordination
Photographers. Stagers. Inspectors. Handymen. Cleaners. Title reps. Lender contacts. Your agents have a rolodex. They spend half their time playing dispatcher between vendors and clients.
A VA becomes the single point of contact. They schedule the photographer. Confirm the stager. Follow up with the inspector. Coordinate the cleaning crew before listing photos. Your agents show up to a staged, photographed, inspection-ready property. Every time.
The Bottom Line
These ten tasks eat 18-22 hours per week for the average real estate agent. That’s 50% of their productive time going to work that doesn’t require a license, doesn’t require market knowledge, and doesn’t require face time with clients.
Hours/week lost to admin
Full-time VA per month
Selling hours recovered/month
Closings/month after shift
At $1,199/month for a full-time VA, you’re paying $7.49/hour for someone who handles all ten. Your agents get those 20 hours back. That’s 80 hours a month of selling time you’re currently losing to paperwork.
We’ve seen teams go from 3 closings/month to 5 after making this shift. Not because they got better at selling. Because they stopped doing work that wasn’t selling.
