In today’s residential real estate market, 2025 marks a real shift in how agents work. The days when a basic CRM and a smartphone were enough are gone. As we begin 2026, a massive $41.26 billion PropTech industry awaits us, influenced primarily by an industry mandate for efficiency and technology-savvy customers demanding an instantaneous high-tech experience.
For residential agents in Dallas and other competitive markets, staying relevant now means maintaining a PropTech stack that does more than store information. The right tools handle routine tasks, support marketing efforts, and make it easier to work with clients no matter where they are located.
Below is the core toolkit residential agents should be comfortable using in 2025 and 2026.
The Command Center: Next-Gen CRMs

By 2026, a CRM is no longer just a digital contact list. It functions more like an AI-powered assistant that supports daily decision-making. A 2025 JLL report shows that real estate firms running active AI pilots jumped from 5 percent to 92 percent in just three years. Much of that capability now sits inside modern CRM platforms.
A few tools stand out.
- Follow Up Boss continues to be a go-to option for high-performing teams. It integrates smoothly with lead sources such as Zillow and Facebook. Recent updates focus on predictive insights, helping agents prioritize leads that show stronger intent before the first call even happens.
- kvCORE is often a better fit for larger brokerages. It combines a smart CRM, IDX websites, and automated lead nurturing in one platform. Its behavioral automation responds to how leads actually browse listings, triggering follow-ups by text or email at the right time.
Global Buyers and Multilingual Reach
The North American housing market is no longer strictly local. In 2025, many agents are seeing interest from buyers outside the country, even on listings that were once considered neighborhood-only. As that audience grows, clear communication becomes more important.
There’s a very important new tool that has become integral to a truly modern agent’s marketing arsenal, which is Murf.AI. Particularly, utilizing their audio translator, agents are now able to take their videos of property walks and instantly translate them for a worldwide market.
An agent marketing a condo in Uptown Dallas to a buyer in Dubai or working with a relocation client in Mexico City can now produce professional voiceovers in more than 20 languages. The result sounds natural and keeps the tone and pacing of the original presentation intact.
Immersive Marketing: Virtual Tours and 3D Modeling

By 2026, digital twin technology is expected on most homes listed above $500,000. Millennials and Gen Z now account for a large share of buyers, with 65% of today’s buyers already occupying a home with intelligent devices, seeking tech-savvy transparency.
The apps you need for ensuring your bulk buyers are impressed are:
- Matterport has been around for years, but its recent focus on spatial data allows buyers to visualize renovations and layout changes in real time using augmented reality.
- CloudPano appeals to agents who want more control over branding. It offers white-label 360-degree virtual tours and includes live video chat, making it possible to guide clients through a home remotely while keeping the experience personal.
Transaction Management and Compliance
As digital transparency becomes more common, document handling has to be precise. In 2026, efficiency is no longer optional, especially as transaction costs continue to rise.
A few tools help agents stay organized.
- SkySlope remains a popular choice for brokerages focused on compliance. It streamlines the contract-to-close process, tracks every signature, and stores files securely in the cloud.
- Signaturely offers a faster, mobile-friendly e-signature experience. Its simple interface and clear audit trails make it a solid option for agents who spend most of their time away from a desk.
AI-Driven Research and Valuation
Market volatility has made intuition-based pricing riskier. By 2025, most agents rely on data to support pricing decisions and market analysis.
- RPR, Realtors Property Resource, is still a core tool for NAR members. It provides access to school data, flood information, and local market trends through an easy-to-use mobile app.
- Clay is a newer addition to the stack. It enhances lead profiles by pulling recent professional or social updates, giving agents more context before a follow-up call. For many, this makes outreach feel more relevant and less scripted.
The Data Behind the Stack: Why Now
Investment continues to flow into real estate technology. Venture capital funding in AI-driven real estate tools reached roughly $100 billion by February 2025. During the same period, the AI real estate market grew from $222 billion in 2024 to an estimated $303 billion by the end of 2025, with a projected annual growth rate of 36.1 percent.
For agents, the question is no longer whether these tools matter, but which ones actually support the way they work. Many are already refining their stacks based on daily use, not hype.
Which of these tools are already part of your PropTech stack, and which ones have made the biggest difference in your business?