State

Worst Real Estate Agents in New York

Find city-level watchlists, review-risk signals, and investigation routes for real estate agents across New York.

Published cities 43
Indexed agents 430
Ranking mode Bad reviews
Updated May 2026
Evidence snapshot New York coverage signals
Published cities 43
Indexed agents 430
Ranking mode Bad reviews
Freshness May 2026

Review Signals

These categories make bad-review data easier to understand in New York without relying on a single score alone.

Poor communication

Slow replies, unclear updates, missing context, or clients feeling ignored during the transaction.

Misleading advice

Reports that guidance, pricing expectations, or transaction details were presented in a way clients later disputed.

Pressure tactics

Clients describing rushed decisions, uncomfortable urgency, or pressure to move forward before they were ready.

Missed deadlines

Complaints involving late follow-up, missed paperwork, delayed responses, or deadline-sensitive mistakes.

Billing issues

Concerns about commission expectations, fees, payment communication, or transaction cost surprises.

Unprofessional conduct

Review themes involving respect, reliability, conduct, conflict handling, or client care.

Consumer guidance

What to do before choosing an agent

01Compare the risk score with the bad-review count instead of relying on the score alone.

02Look for repeated complaint themes, especially communication, pressure, and missed deadlines.

03Check whether the agent's brokerage, market, and recent profile data match the transaction you need help with.

04Use the investigation form if a record looks fake, misleading, private, or unrelated to a real client experience.

See something that's not right?

If you believe a review or ranking is fake, misleading, from someone who was not a client, contains private information or violates our review policy, you can request an investigation here.

FAQ

Common questions about New York rankings, source records, and community votes.

What does the New York page show?

It groups available city pages for the state and links into city-level watchlists generated from source records.

Are all cities published at once?

No. Cities can be added gradually as source data, review signals, and moderation workflows are ready.

Can state-level data change?

Yes. State pages are rebuilt from source rows, so city counts, copy, and links can change after refreshes.