Multigenerational families

The real estate industry is reshuffling at the top — here's what that actually means for Denver families making housing decisions right now

Kevin Lundy · The HomeBridge Group Brokered by eXp Realty
Reviewed May 14, 2026
CPR™ Reviewed
CIR-20260514-5CDDCB

The real estate industry is reshuffling at the top — here's what that actually means for Denver families making housing decisions right now

A lot is moving at the industry level right now — eXp acquiring NextHome, HomeServices reshuffling leadership, Zillow suing Compass over private listings, debates about where listing data belongs. It can sound like noise if you're not inside it. But here's my honest read: these aren't just corporate moves. They're signals about who controls access to homes, and that directly affects the choices available to buyers and sellers in Denver. The clearest takeaway? The brokerage and network behind your agent is no longer just a logo on a business card — it's a practical factor in what listings you see, how fast paperwork moves, and whether your plan holds together when something unexpected happens. That has always mattered for families dealing with inherited property or aging-related housing decisions. It matters even more now. The agents who stay steady during industry disruption are the ones who already had a clear process — not ones who were coasting on data access and brand recognition. If your family is making a real estate decision in Denver this year, build your plan around someone with a consistent process, not just a familiar name. One question I'm sitting with this week: if listing data starts flowing through brokerages before it ever hits the MLS, does a Denver buyer working with an independent agent still have a level playing field — or is that already changing? — Kevin Lundy | The HomeBridge Group at eXp Realty