iBuyer Market Share Soars in 2021

 
 

2021 was a transformative and record-breaking year for iBuyers. More houses were bought and sold by iBuyers than ever before.

Why it matters: iBuyers are one of the leading disruptive models in real estate. Their ability to grow, in all types of markets, is an important signal as to what degree the traditional real estate transaction can be disrupted.

  • But while 2021 saw record-high iBuyer transactions, it also saw the implosion of Zillow Offers after the business grew too quickly.

Big picture: iBuyer national market share of home purchases hit an all-time high of 1.3 percent -- around 70,000 houses -- in 2021.

 
 

iBuyer purchases remained robust as 2021 came to a close.

  • Even though Zillow stopped new purchases, it was on the hook to complete purchases that were already under contract.

  • Seasonality kicked in for Opendoor as it smartly slowed purchases after a massive acquisition spree in Q3.

 

Note: Q4 numbers are preliminary and subject to change.

 

iBuyer sales set new records in Q4, with more houses sold than ever before.

  • Opendoor consistently sold more houses each month, demonstrating an expanding operational capacity to repair and sell houses at scale.

  • This is a critical metric to watch. Buying houses is the (comparatively) easy part; selling at scale is difficult.

 

Note: Q4 numbers are preliminary and subject to change.

 

What's next: 2022 is all about profitability. Opendoor and Offerpad need to demonstrate that they can achieve consistently positive unit economics at scale.

  • With Zillow out of the picture, there will be less competitive pressure on fees and acquisition prices.

  • But Opendoor faces increasing competition from big incumbents, Power Buyers, and smaller brokerages, which have all launched similar products.

The bottom line: 2021 was a massive year for iBuyers. In particular, Opendoor is approaching the scale it promised during its IPO. If its economics fall into line, the company is poised to be a significant force in real estate.