Nevada’s Buy-Side Real Estate Market: Q1 2026 Analysis
Agent Pronto/CINC Q1 2026 Buy-Side Rankings and Analysis
6 minute read ·
Nevada Market Snapshot: Q1 2026
Nevada’s single-family market opened the first quarter of 2026 above the prior year’s supply pace and tightened sharply through March to close below it. Active inventory held relatively stable, declining from 9,022 homes in January to 8,977 in March, a modest 0.5 percent decrease. Months of supply started at 4.5 in January and fell to 4.0 in February before dropping to 2.9 in March. Although all three readings remained well below the 6-month balanced-market benchmark, the pattern shifted direction mid-quarter, with Q1 2026 running looser than Q1 2025 in January and February before crossing below the prior year by March.
Median sale prices remained near the $500,000 level throughout the quarter. The median opened at $486,000 in January, moved to $499,100 in February, and closed at $500,700 in March, a 3.0 percent gain across the three months. Days on market showed more movement: 75 days in January, rising to 78 in February, then compressing sharply to 60 in March. The drop in both supply and days on market in March points to an acceleration of buyer activity as the quarter ended.
Year-over-year comparisons confirm that Nevada’s Q1 2026 ended tighter than the prior year despite starting looser. January 2026 supply of 4.5 months ran 0.6 months above January 2025’s 3.9, and February followed the same pattern at 0.5 months looser. By March, the gap had reversed: Q1 2026 ended at 2.9 months, 0.2 months below March 2025’s 3.1. Inventory was only 1.7 percent higher year-over-year by March, while the median sale price held nearly flat, up just 0.2 percent from $499,900. Days on market were 9 days longer year-over-year in March, suggesting more time on the market even as supply tightened.
Nevada · Market Snapshot
Supply tightened past last year’s pace
Months of supply, Q1 2026 vs Q1 2025
March 2026 · Year-over-year
Nevada’s Top 25 Buyer’s Agents and Teams: Q1 2026 Rankings
Agent Pronto/CINC has ranked Nevada’s top 25 buyer’s agents and teams based on total transaction volume in Q1 2026. This proprietary buy-side data reveals both high-volume operators and luxury specialists who dominate Nevada’s diverse real estate market.
Rank | Agent/Team Name | Closings Q1 2026 | Total Sold Q1 2026 | Median Price Q1 2026 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Randall J. Char | 7 | $33.3M | $900K |
2 | Alexis Cerretti | 2 | $25.6M | $12.8M |
3 | Zar A. Zanganeh | 4 | $20.8M | $3.3M |
4 | Georgia Chase | 3 | $20.0M | $7.1M |
5 | Ivan G. Sher | 4 | $19.9M | $3.2M |
6 | Gavin Ernstone | 3 | $19.6M | $3.7M |
7 | Kristen Routh Silberman | 3 | $17.6M | $2.8M |
8 | Matthew D. Brimhall | 1 | $17.0M | $17.0M |
9 | Frank Napoli | 19 | $15.3M | $535K |
10 | Carmel Allego-Fithian | 1 | $15.0M | $15.0M |
11 | Jack Greenberg | 32 | $14.8M | $408K |
12 | Brian Edwards | 1 | $12.9M | $13.0M |
13 | Craig Zager | 7 | $12.8M | $1.6M |
14 | Kerry J. Kretchmer | 30 | $12.4M | $409K |
15 | Jillian M. Batchelor | 29 | $12.1M | $385K |
16 | Joshua F Galindo | 8 | $12.1M | $825K |
17 | Timothy Anter | 11 | $10.6M | $900K |
18 | Ryan Crighton | 18 | $10.6M | $450K |
19 | Kristina Aguila | 3 | $10.4M | $4.4M |
20 | Noah F. Herrera | 25 | $9.8M | $350K |
21 | Ryan Kane | 5 | $9.6M | $900K |
22 | Falisha Rexford | 16 | $9.6M | $450K |
23 | Jessica Cordero | 18 | $9.2M | $443K |
24 | Brandon Reyes | 8 | $8.6M | $430K |
25 | John Sullivan | 9 | $8.5M | $594K |
What the Data Shows
Nevada’s top 25 splits across a wide range of price points, reflecting the state’s dual character as both a high-volume mid-market and an active ultra-luxury destination. Eight agents and teams carry median prices under $500,000, six fall between $500,000 and $1 million, one sits in the $1 million to $2 million range, and ten operate at $2 million and above. Closing counts span from 1 to 32, with the high-volume operators concentrated in the lower price tiers. Jack Greenberg leads the volume path with 32 closings at a $408,000 median for $14.8 million in total volume. Kerry J. Kretchmer (rank 14, 30 closings, $409,000 median) and Jillian M. Batchelor (rank 15, 29 closings, $385,000 median) follow the same high-frequency approach, demonstrating how consistent transaction volume at accessible price points reaches the upper rankings in Nevada’s competitive market.
A contrasting path defines the top of the list. Randall J. Char ranks first with 7 closings at a $900,000 median for $33.3 million in total volume. Alexis Cerretti (rank 2, 2 closings, $12.8 million median, $25.6 million total) and Matthew D. Brimhall (rank 8, 1 closing, $17.0 million median) demonstrate how a small number of ultra-luxury transactions generates totals that outrank agents with dozens of closings at market-rate prices. Carmel Allego-Fithian (rank 10, 1 closing, $15.0 million median) and Brian Edwards (rank 12, 1 closing, $13.0 million median) follow the same single-transaction pattern, illustrating how Nevada’s luxury tier produces outsized dollar volume from minimal transaction counts.
The breadth of Nevada’s top 25 is among the widest in the country. Median prices range from $350,000 to $17.0 million, and closing counts span from 1 to 32. Because the rankings are based on total dollar volume, luxury specialists naturally occupy the top positions despite low transaction counts, while high-volume agents at lower price points fill the middle and lower rungs. The list reflects a market where two distinct go-to-market strategies, volume-driven production and luxury specialization, both reach the top 25 through entirely different operating models.
Conclusion
Nevada’s first quarter of 2026 began above Q1 2025’s supply pace and closed below it, with months of supply falling to 2.9 by March and median prices holding near $501,000. The top 25 buyer’s agents and teams closed 267 transactions across median prices ranging from $350,000 to $17.0 million. The list captures the full range of Nevada’s buy-side market, from high-frequency operators closing dozens of mid-market transactions to luxury specialists generating outsized totals from a handful of premium closings, reflecting one of the most operationally diverse top-25 fields in the country.
Data Sources:
Market Data: Provided by Redfin, a national real estate brokerage.
Buy-Side Transaction Data: Provided exclusively by Agent Pronto/CINC, the industry's leading source for buyer's agent and team performance intelligence. Agent Pronto/CINC aggregates buy-side transaction data nationwide to deliver comprehensive rankings and performance metrics.
Disclaimer: While Agent Pronto/CINC makes every effort to ensure data accuracy, rankings are based on available transaction records and may not capture all buy-side activity. Agents or teams not included in these rankings may have comparable or superior performance not reflected in our data sources.
Analysis Period: January 2026 - March 2026