Buffalo NY Realtors | Top Real Estate Agents & Home Sales

Welcome to our Buffalo Realtors directory – your go-to spot for finding local agents who actually know the ins and outs of the Queen City! Whether you're hunting for a cozy cottage in Elmwood Village or a family home in the suburbs, we've got the real estate pros who can help make it happen.

📍 Buffalo, NY 🏢 3 businesses listed 🎨 Realtors

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3 businesses
Sean Mattrey - Associate Real Estate Broker at Hunt Real Estate

Sean Mattrey - Associate Real Estate Broker at Hunt Real Estate

Real estate agent
📍720 Elmwood Ave, Buffalo, NY 14222, United States
South Buffalo Realty Company

South Buffalo Realty Company

Real estate agency
📍Lower Front, 973 Abbott Rd, Buffalo, NY 14220, United States
Matt Quagliano - Realtor in Buffalo, New York, 14214

Matt Quagliano - Realtor in Buffalo, New York, 14214

Real estate agent
📍140 Humboldt Pkwy, Buffalo, NY 14214, United States

About Realtors in Buffalo

Buffalo's median home sale price hit $225,000 in early 2025—that's up nearly 31% from 2020's $172,000, and yet Buffalo still ranks among the most affordable mid-sized cities in the entire Northeast. That tension—rising prices in a historically cheap market—is exactly what's driving a boom in real estate agent activity here right now.

The Buffalo-Niagara metropolitan area has somewhere around 2,800+ licensed real estate agents active in Erie County, per New York Department of State records, but only a fraction of those are doing serious volume. The market moved roughly 8,400 residential transactions in 2024, down slightly from 2023's pace but still historically elevated compared to pre-pandemic norms. Who's buying? First-time buyers under 40 make up about 44% of purchasers—drawn partly by Buffalo's relative affordability compared to Rochester or anywhere near NYC. Remote workers from New York City and Philadelphia discovered Buffalo around 2021 and they haven't entirely stopped coming.

What makes Buffalo different from, say, Rochester or Syracuse? The neighborhoods are genuinely distinct in ways that matter to buyers—North Buffalo doesn't feel anything like South Buffalo, and Elmwood Village operates on entirely different market logic than Cheektowaga. A good local realtor knows this granularity. A generic agent who works "the greater WNY area" often doesn't. That neighborhood-by-neighborhood knowledge gap is one reason hyper-local expertise here actually commands a premium.

📍 Elmwood Village

  • Area Profile: Young professionals, artists, academics—heavy University at Buffalo and Canisius spillover. Walkable. Dense with restaurants and independent shops along Elmwood Ave.
  • Realtors Activity: High turnover, competitive bidding on single-family homes and multi-unit properties. Buyers routinely waiving inspection contingencies to win offers.
  • Price Range: $280,000–$480,000 for single-family. Multi-units (2–3 family) pushing toward $500K+.
  • Local Note: Homes here spend an average of just 9 days on market—agents who don't have buyers pre-approved and prepped to move fast are wasting everyone's time.

📍 South Buffalo

  • Area Profile: Working-class, Irish-American heritage, fiercely neighborhood-loyal. Long-time homeowners, generational sellers. Abbott Road corridor defines it.
  • Realtors Activity: More traditional pace, fewer bidding wars than Elmwood. Investors buying and flipping bungalows and Cape Cods at a notable clip.
  • Price Range: $140,000–$240,000. Entry-level buyers find more room to breathe here than almost anywhere close to the city center.
  • Local Note: The Cazenovia Park area pushes prices toward the top end. Old-timers selling homes they've owned 30+ years often prefer agents they've seen around—reputation and face recognition matter more here than online reviews.

📍 North Buffalo / Hertel Ave Corridor

  • Area Profile: Educated, mixed-age, feels like a quieter version of Elmwood with better parking. Strong owner-occupant base, increasingly attracting buyers priced out of Elmwood.
  • Realtors Activity: Steady demand. Inventory is thin—fewer than 20 active listings at any given time in peak months—which creates fast-moving conditions.
  • Price Range: $220,000–$400,000 depending on lot size and updates.
  • Local Note: Delaware Park proximity is a genuine price driver here. Homes within four blocks of the park can pull $30,000–$50,000 more than comparable houses further east.

📊 Current Price Points:

  • Budget: $130,000–$190,000 — South Buffalo bungalows, East Side fixer-uppers, Cheektowaga ranches needing work
  • Mid-range: $200,000–$350,000 — the most competitive bracket. Pre-approval is table stakes, not optional.
  • Premium: $400,000+ — Elmwood Village renovated Victorians, North Buffalo colonials, Amherst or Clarence new construction

📈 Market Trends:

  • Inventory remains about 28% below pre-pandemic levels in Erie County—low supply is the dominant story
  • Mortgage rates holding near 6.8–7.1% have cooled buyer frenzy somewhat, but haven't tanked demand
  • Average days on market citywide: 21 days (up from 11 in the 2022 peak, still historically fast)
  • Investor/cash buyer activity accounts for roughly 19% of transactions—up from 12% in 2019
  • Seasonal dip: January–February sees about 35% fewer listings than May–June

💰 What People Are Spending — Most Common Transactions:

  1. First-time buyers, $185,000–$250,000 — single-family, city or inner-ring suburbs
  2. Move-up buyers, $280,000–$380,000 — more space, better school district
  3. Investor purchases, $100,000–$200,000 — East Side and South Buffalo flip/rental targets
  4. Relocation buyers (remote workers), $300,000–$500,000 — want turnkey, pay over asking

Buffalo's population trend is complicated—the city proper has stabilized around 276,000 residents after decades of decline, while the broader metro region sits near 1.2 million. Technically flat. But household formation is up, and that's what drives home purchases.

Major economic anchors driving buyer confidence:

  • Buffalo General / Kaleida Health system — tens of thousands of healthcare workers
  • University at Buffalo — 30,000+ students, faculty, staff generating constant rental and purchase demand
  • The $6.8 billion Micron semiconductor investment in nearby Clay, NY announced in 2022 continues to ripple through upstate housing sentiment
  • Seneca Niagara Casino operations and Erie County government — stable public sector employment base

Median household income in Buffalo sits around $43,000—below the state average of $75,000—but home prices are calibrated to that reality in ways that NYC or even Albany aren't. That affordability gap is what keeps out-of-market buyers interested. And it's what keeps local first-time buyers in the game despite rising rates.

Buffalo Seasonal Patterns:

  • ☀️ Spring/Summer (April–July): Peak inventory AND peak competition. Most listings, most bidding wars. List price means nothing—expect 5–15% over asking on desirable properties.
  • 🍂 Fall (September–October): Second wave of activity. Motivated sellers who didn't sell in summer. Less competition than spring. Actually a solid window.
  • ❄️ Winter (December–February): Slow. Officially. But Buffalo winters scare off casual buyers, so serious buyers face less competition. Sellers listing in January usually need to move—negotiating leverage exists here that doesn't exist in May.
  • 📅 Peak months to act fast: May and June. Homes listed Friday evening are often under contract by Sunday afternoon in popular neighborhoods.

Smart Timing Tips:

  • ✓ Get pre-approved in February so you're ready when March inventory starts appearing
  • ✓ If you're flexible on timing, November showings often yield better negotiating room—sellers have been waiting since summer
  • ✓ Watch for relocation listings—corporate transferees who need to sell fast often price below market to move quickly
  • ✓ Tax refund season (February–April) brings more first-time buyers into the market, pushing entry-level prices up briefly

New York State licenses all real estate salespersons and brokers through the NY Department of State, Division of Licensing Services. You can search any agent's license status at dos.ny.gov—takes about 45 seconds and tells you if they're current, if there have been disciplinary actions, everything. Do this. Every time.

Credentials worth caring about:

  • Active NY real estate salesperson or broker license (non-negotiable)
  • Membership in the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors (BNAR) — signals MLS access and NAR Code of Ethics compliance
  • CRS (Certified Residential Specialist) or ABR (Accredited Buyer's Representative) designations — not required, but indicate someone who bothered investing in their craft

⚠️ Red Flags Specific to Buffalo Realtors:

  1. Agents who quote "average days on market" without neighborhood specifics — citywide averages are meaningless in a market where Elmwood moves in 9 days and some East Side listings sit for 90+
  2. Pressure to waive all contingencies on properties with deferred maintenance — Buffalo's older housing stock (many homes pre-date 1940) hides expensive problems. Sewers, knob-and-tube wiring, lead paint. An agent pushing you to skip inspection on a 90-year-old house is not your advocate.
  3. Out-of-market agents parachuting in — Buffalo has seen agents from downstate and Ohio poaching listings after the market got attention. They don't know Lovejoy from Larkinville and it shows.
  4. Vague commission structures or dual agency without clear disclosure — NY requires disclosure, and any agent who gets cagey about representing both buyer and seller in the same transaction is a problem.

Where to verify: NY DOS license lookup → BBB Buffalo chapter → Google reviews filtered for recent (within 18 months) → BNAR member directory

✓ Consistent presence in Buffalo—not an agent who dabbles here between Rochester deals

✓ Verifiable closed transactions on Zillow or Realtor.com showing actual local sales history

✓ Written buyer's agency agreement that clearly spells out compensation terms

✓ Someone who pushes back on you when your offer strategy is wrong—yes-men lose bidding wars

✓ Response time under 2 hours during business days—in this market, slow communication costs you houses

No verifiable NY license or expired license on DOS lookup

Can't name recent comparable sales in your target neighborhood off the top of their head

Refuses to provide client references or gets defensive when asked

Pushes you toward properties above your stated budget without a clear, data-backed reason

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does a Realtor in Buffalo actually charge — like what percentage am I looking at? +
Here's the thing, Buffalo commissions have been shifting since the 2024 NAR settlement changed how buyer's agent compensation works. Traditionally you'd see 5-6% total split between buyer and seller agents, but now in the Buffalo NY market you're seeing more negotiated arrangements — some listing agents going as low as 2.5-3% on their side alone. On a typical Buffalo home priced around $220,000-$280,000, that's roughly $5,500-$8,400 per side, so it adds up fast. Always ask upfront what the commission structure is and get it spelled out in your listing agreement before signing anything.
How do I actually check if a Realtor in Buffalo is licensed and not just pretending to be one? +
Look, New York State makes this pretty easy — just go to the NY Department of State's eAccessNY license verification portal and search by name or license number directly. Every legitimate Realtor operating in Buffalo must hold an active NY real estate salesperson or broker license, and you can see if it's current, suspended, or expired right there online. Beyond the state license, actual Realtors (capital R) are also members of the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors (BNAR), which you can cross-check on their member directory. If someone can't give you their NY license number on the spot, that's your cue to walk away.
When's the best time of year to buy a house in Buffalo — does timing really matter that much? +
Timing absolutely matters in the Buffalo NY market, and spring is when things get brutal for buyers — April through June inventory goes up but so does competition, and bidding wars on anything under $300,000 in neighborhoods like Elmwood Village or South Buffalo are common. If you want less competition and more negotiating power, late October through January is your window — sellers listing in a Buffalo winter are usually motivated, and you can sometimes get $10,000-$20,000 off asking price that you'd never see in May. The tradeoff is fewer choices on the market, so you need a sharp buyer's agent who knows what's coming up before it's listed. Your Realtor's local network in Buffalo is honestly worth more than any Zillow alert during the off-season.
What should I ask a Realtor before I agree to work with them in Buffalo? +
Ask them specifically how many transactions they closed in Buffalo in the last 12 months and in which neighborhoods — a Realtor who's crushing it in Amherst might not know the South Buffalo or North Buffalo market the same way. Find out their average days-on-market for listings they've represented versus the Buffalo NY average (which has been hovering around 30-45 days depending on price point). Also ask directly: 'Do you represent buyers and sellers simultaneously, and how do you handle dual agency?' — because in NY dual agency is legal but it's a real conflict of interest you deserve to understand upfront. And honestly, just ask for three recent client references from deals in your target Buffalo neighborhoods.
How long does it realistically take to buy a house in Buffalo from start to finish? +
Here's the thing — in Buffalo NY you're typically looking at 60-90 days total from when you get serious to when you close, assuming your financing is in order. Finding a home actively can take 2-8 weeks depending on your price range and neighborhood preferences, then once you're under contract in NY you've got inspections, attorney review (NY requires real estate attorneys at closing, not just your Realtor), appraisal, and mortgage commitment — that process usually runs 45-60 days. Buffalo's market under $250,000 has been particularly tight, so some buyers are losing 3-5 offers before landing something, which stretches that timeline considerably. Make sure your Realtor is setting realistic expectations with you, not just telling you what you want to hear.
What credentials should a good Buffalo Realtor actually have beyond just being licensed? +
In NY, the base requirement is a state real estate license, but credentials that actually signal competence include the ABR (Accredited Buyer's Representative) if they're working the buyer side, or the SRS (Seller Representative Specialist) for listing agents. The CRS (Certified Residential Specialist) is genuinely hard to earn and means they've closed serious volume — less than 3% of Realtors nationally hold it, so if your Buffalo agent has it, that's meaningful. Membership in the Buffalo Niagara Association of Realtors and access to the local MLS is non-negotiable — without local MLS access they're operating half-blind in this market. Fancy out-of-state certifications mean almost nothing if they don't know why Hertel Avenue condos are pricing differently than Cheektowaga right now.
Are there scams or shady practices I should watch out for in the Buffalo real estate market? +
Buffalo NY has seen a real uptick in wholesaler activity where people claim to be 'investors' or 'cash buyers' and pressure homeowners — especially in the East Side and older neighborhoods — into signing over their homes for well below market value, sometimes without even using a licensed Realtor. Another red flag is unlicensed agents operating under a licensed broker's name without proper supervision — always verify the individual's license, not just the brokerage. Wire fraud is also a serious issue in Buffalo closings right now; your legitimate Realtor and real estate attorney will NEVER change wire instructions via email last minute, so if that happens assume it's a scam. Be skeptical of any agent who discourages you from getting an independent home inspection on a Buffalo property — older housing stock here (lots of pre-1950 homes) makes inspections non-negotiable.
Why should I bother with a local Buffalo Realtor instead of using one of those big national online brokerages? +
Look, a national online brokerage agent might cover twelve metro areas and have no idea that Allentown in Buffalo commands a premium over a nearly identical house three blocks away, or that certain streets in Kenmore have sewer assessment issues that'll bite you at closing. Local Buffalo Realtors have relationships with the listing agents, know which neighborhoods are appreciating (the Elmwood Village and Grant-Ferry areas have seen consistent 8-12% annual appreciation recently), and they've built connections with local inspectors, real estate attorneys, and mortgage lenders who close deals efficiently here. Buffalo NY's housing inventory is hyper-local and moves fast — you need someone whose phone rings when a property is about to hit the market, not someone who's refreshing the same public MLS you can see yourself.

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