Agents and brokerages need a site that captures leads, shows listings and books showings. None of these are dedicated real estate platforms, so listing feeds usually come through apps or embeds. We weighted lead capture, listing support, booking and design.
Reviewed by M. HALLORAN·Updated JUNE 2026·How we vet
Tools compared5
Criteria weighted5
Last reviewedJune 2026
Paid placements0
How we ranked the field
For real estate we weight lead capture and forms, how well each tool handles listing feeds through apps, and built in booking, then judge design and value. See the full rubric →
Lead capture and forms25%
Listings and IDX support20%
Booking and scheduling20%
Design and templates20%
Value15%
01
RANK
★ Editor’s Choice
Squarespace
Best for polished agent sites
Squarespace makes an agent or small brokerage look established with little effort, and its Acuity scheduling handles showings and calls. Listing feeds need a third party embed, so it suits brand and lead capture more than a full MLS portal.
Wix has the widest app market of the group, so IDX widgets, lead forms and bookings can all live in one place. The editor takes patience and templates lock once chosen, but it covers the most ground for a solo agent.
For a brokerage that wants a distinctive site and a CMS to model listings by hand, Webflow gives the most design control and clean output. The learning curve is steep and live MLS feeds still need an integration.
If your strategy leans on neighborhood guides and market blogs, WordPress is built for content and SEO, and real estate plugins exist on the Business plan. It is more to manage than a closed builder.
GoDaddy gets a simple agent brochure online quickly, with booking on the Premium plan and a domain in the box. It is the least flexible here and renewal pricing is not published, so check the bill before committing.