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Realtor Bias: Sabotaging Thoughts

by | June 9, 2025

You’ve walked a thousand clients through negotiations, listings, and mortgage options. You’re no rookie. But here’s the kicker: even the most seasoned real estate pros fall into mental traps—cognitive biases—without realizing it. These biases aren’t about intelligence. They’re about how our brains are wired to shortcut decisions. And while some shortcuts are harmless, others can quietly sabotage your deals, team culture, or growth potential.

In this article, we’re diving into the cognitive biases that creep into the realtor mindset. You’ll see where these sneaky patterns show up in your business, how they distort decision-making, and most importantly—what you can do about them.

Here’s what I’ll cover:

Anchoring Bias: The First Price Sets the Bar

Availability Heuristic: Loud ≠ Likely

Bandwagon Effect: The Danger of Following the Herd

Choice-Supportive Bias: When You Fall in Love With Your Own Decisions

Confirmation Bias: Seeing What You Want to See

Ostrich Bias: Ignoring the Ugly Truth

Outcome Bias: Judging by Results, Not Process

Overconfidence Bias: When Experience Turns Into Ego

Survivorship Bias: Success Stories Aren’t the Whole Story

Selective Perception: Your Brain Filters to Fit Your Beliefs

Blind Spot Bias: The Bias You Don’t Think You Have

Anchoring Bias: The First Price Sets the Bar

That first price you float to a seller or buyer? It sticks—like glue. You could say, “Your home might list for $900,000,” and even if later comps suggest $850,000, their brain is still latched onto that $900K. That’s anchoring bias.

Put it into practice: When presenting numbers, explain that market values shift and that any figure discussed is a starting point, not a promise. Use ranges, not fixed points, especially early on.

Availability Heuristic: Loud ≠ Likely

If a client just saw a scary housing crash documentary on Netflix, they might panic about “the bubble bursting”—even when data suggests otherwise. This is availability bias: our brains overweigh info that’s recent, vivid, or emotional.

Realtor move: Combat emotional storytelling with calm facts. Use local data. Real numbers. Client-tailored comparisons—not headlines.

Bandwagon Effect: The Danger of Following the Herd

Ever seen a neighbourhood suddenly get “hot” and everyone rushes in without vetting fundamentals? That’s the bandwagon effect. Just because “everyone’s doing it” doesn’t mean it’s right for your client—or your business.

Realtor move: Lead with value, not popularity. Push back gently when clients say, “Well, everyone’s bidding 200K over, right?” Ask: “Is that smart for your goals?”

Choice-Supportive Bias: Falling in Love With Your Own Decisions

You picked that CRM platform, that logo, or that referral partner—so now you feel loyal. But sometimes, what worked two years ago just doesn’t cut it anymore. We all want to believe our choices are always right.

Realtor move: Audit your systems quarterly. Ask: “Would I choose this again today?” If not, upgrade without guilt.

Confirmation Bias: Seeing What You Want to See

If you believe “the market’s crashing,” your brain will seek every headline that confirms it—and ignore the ones that challenge it. Same with believing a buyer is “unserious” or that a lender is “slow.” It’s human.

Realtor move: Before forming a conclusion, deliberately seek out data that contradicts it. Keep a devil’s advocate friend on speed dial.

Ostrich Bias: Ignoring the Ugly Truth

You know that one lead source you’re pouring time and money into that hasn’t yielded a single deal in 6 months? That’s ostrich bias in action—burying your head in the sand instead of facing the facts.

Realtor move: Build a habit of quarterly truth audits. What’s actually working? What’s dead weight? Don’t be afraid to cut what’s not serving you—even if it’s “your baby.”

Outcome Bias: Judging by Results, Not Process

You tried something risky, and it worked. That doesn’t mean it was a good decision. It could’ve been luck. Outcome bias is the tendency to evaluate choices based solely on results—not the decision-making process.

Realtor move: When reflecting on a win (or loss), ask: “Would I make the same decision again if I didn’t know how it turned out?”

Overconfidence Bias: When Experience Turns Into Ego

You’ve nailed enough deals to trust your gut—but gut decisions need to be balanced with data. Overconfidence sneaks in when success leads to autopilot.

Realtor move: Invite feedback. Stay humble. When you catch yourself thinking “I already know how this’ll go,” hit pause.

Survivorship Bias: Success Stories Aren’t the Whole Story

You read a book about a top producer who door-knocked 5 hours a day and built a team of 12. Sounds inspiring. But what about the 50 agents who burned out trying to copy them? You’re only seeing the survivors.

Realtor move: Customize your strategy. What worked for someone else might not be right for you, your clients, or your lifestyle.

Selective Perception: Your Brain Filters to Fit Your Beliefs

You’re more likely to notice marketing ideas you already agree with or dismiss data that feels “off-brand.” It’s not intentional—it’s selective perception. But it can trap you in echo chambers.

Realtor move: Diversify your mentors and information sources. Surround yourself with people who challenge your thinking, not just validate it.

Blind Spot Bias: The Bias You Don’t Think You Have

Here’s the kicker: we all believe we’re less biased than average. That belief is, ironically, a bias.

Realtor move: Adopt an attitude of radical curiosity. Ask for outside perspectives. Read things that make you uncomfortable. You might discover blind spots—and unlock massive growth.

Allen’s Final Thoughts: Let’s Think Better, Together

Cognitive biases aren’t flaws—they’re human. But if you want to level up in this market, you’ve got to out-think your own brain. That means checking your assumptions, being open to feedback, and staying curious even when you think you’re right.

And listen—I’m not just here to run debt ratios or send pre-approvals. I’m your thinking partner. I’ll challenge the blind spots you might not see, help you zoom out when emotions run hot, and give you unbiased mortgage insights that keep your clients moving forward.

Need to strategize on a tricky file? Feeling stuck on a deal? Just want someone to shoot straight with you?
Call me at 905-441-0770 or email allen@allenehlert.com.

Together, we’ll spot the biases, bust through the noise, and make the kind of clear, confident decisions that build lasting success.

Let’s go beyond smart. Let’s get wise.

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Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert is a licensed mortgage agent. He has four university degrees, including two Masters degrees, and specializes in real estate finance, development, and investing. Allen Ehlert has decades of independent consulting experience for companies and governments, including the Ontario Real Estate Association, Deloitte, City of Toronto, Enbridge, and the Ministry of Finance.

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