Playbook · Realtors · 6-min read
The realtor headshot playbook: trustworthy on Zillow, modern on Compass, polished on LinkedIn — same face
A short, opinionated playbook for real-estate agents who are tired of looking 15 years older than they are on their listing photos.
Tell me you're a realtor without telling me you're a realtor: post a tightly-framed studio headshot with you in a navy blazer, arms crossed, against a brand-colored gradient, gold lettering on the brokerage logo.
There is a reason every realtor headshot looks like this. The reason is that for two decades the brokerages handed out a list of "approved photographers" and the photographers handed back a single template. The template is now visually ancient. The buyers and sellers under 35 — which is to say, the buyers and sellers who actually scroll Compass on their phones at 11pm — read that template as "out of touch."
What's actually going on with the listing-page photo
When someone is browsing listings, the listing-agent headshot is doing two jobs simultaneously:
1. Trust at a glance. They want to know you're not going to ghost them. 2. Era signal. They want to know you're current — that you'll text back, that you understand the digital paperwork, that you don't print everything.
The 2009 brokerage-template headshot fails the era signal even when it succeeds at the trust signal. So the buyer scrolls past.
The 2009 'arms-crossed, smiling for the camera, gold-and-blazer' realtor photo is the single largest reason real-estate consumers under 35 don't click your listing.




Same person. Four prompts. One selfie. ArcFace likeness 0.913 — measured, published, reproducible.
The three-surface rule for realtors
Each surface has different visual conventions and different audiences. Use a different style for each. Same face, four prompts.
- Zillow / Realtor.com listing headshot: Formal Corporate. Polished, traditional, trustworthy. This is where the trust-at-a-glance job dominates.
- Compass / agent personal site: LinkedIn Friendly or Tech Founder. The Compass audience trends younger and trends iPhone-native. Lead with approachable, not authoritative.
- LinkedIn personal page: LinkedIn Friendly. Most buyer leads on LinkedIn come from the personal connection, not the brokerage brand. The friendly window-light shot converts better than the studio.
- Brokerage marketing / press: Executive Boardroom. For when you're being quoted in a market-trends piece in the local paper. Senior energy for the senior surfaces.
Credit applied to any upgrade. No free-tier tease, no watermark.
What to avoid
A few things that always read as dated, in any market:
- Heavy retouching that makes you look 8 years younger than you actually do. The buyer is going to meet you in person within a week. Don't set up the disappointment.
- The "tightly-cropped against a wall" headshot. Every brokerage uses this. It's now visual noise.
- Gold-on-black brokerage logos burned into the bottom of the photo. Crop them out.
- Photos older than 2 years. If your kid is in middle school in real life but in a Christmas card photo in your headshot, the photo is fighting you.
Why identity matters here more than most fields
Real-estate is a relationship business. The first in-person meeting is, by tradition, the deciding moment. If your photo doesn't look like you, the first thirty seconds of the meeting are spent recalibrating, and recalibration costs you trust.
This is why we publish the likeness number — 0.913 ArcFace similarity, against the studio-photo ceiling of 1.000. If the AI-generated headshot looks like a smoothed, generic, recruitable version of you, the buyer's first thirty seconds are going to recalibrate against the photo. That's the worst possible opening to a relationship-business meeting.
The play
- $2.99 entry preview. Decide whether the AI version actually looks like you. (Most realtor headshots fail this test, even the studio ones.)
- $35 pack, $2.99 credited back. Four styles, 50 images. Use them across Zillow, Compass, LinkedIn, brokerage marketing, and email signature.
- Re-shoot annually. The "I look like an out-of-date version of myself" problem compounds every quarter. The AI workflow makes the annual refresh cost a coffee, not a Saturday.
The whole listing-presence overhaul lands under $40 and 10 minutes of work.
Pay $2.99. See your preview. Decide.
One selfie in. One to three real previews out, identity-locked to your face, in under a minute. If you upgrade, the $2.99 is credited back.
Try HeadshotMax