SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Reading: Zillow at 20: Real estate giant leans on AI to make homebuying hurt less
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > News > Zillow at 20: Real estate giant leans on AI to make homebuying hurt less
News

Zillow at 20: Real estate giant leans on AI to make homebuying hurt less

News Room
Last updated: February 10, 2026 1:03 am
News Room
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE
Zillow Group wants to not only help people search for homes, but also facilitate other parts of the homebuying process such as mortgages. (Zillow Image)

When Jeremy Wacksman joined Zillow Group in 2009, his first job was getting the upstart real estate site onto the iPhone. Now, amid a generative AI boom, the CEO says the next platform shift is even bigger for Zillow than mobile — and so are the company’s ambitions.

“It’s going to enable all of our services to just be a lot smarter and a lot more intelligent and a lot more personalized,” Wacksman told GeekWire. “And I think it will help us solve the problem we’ve been after forever: how do we digitize the transaction, and how do we actually integrate and remove all the busy work and the redundant paperwork and the errors and the pain of the transaction?”

Zillow built its brand by letting people window‑shop for homes and by generating advertising revenue from real estate agents. More than 200 million people visit Zillow’s apps and sites on a monthly basis. But now, as Zillow marks its 20th anniversary on Monday, its leaders are pushing toward something bigger: a “remote control” that keeps buyers, agents and lenders inside Zillow for the entire home-buying experience.

Zillow CEO Jeremy Wacksman. (Zillow Photo)

It’s part of a “housing super app” strategy the company first laid out several years ago, following the failed attempt to build Zillow Offers, its “iBuying” home-flipping business. Zillow remains focused on finding ways to streamline how people buy homes beyond search and alleviate what can be a stressful process.

“More than half of buyers report that they cry during the transaction process,” Wacksman noted.

While Zillow’s traditional advertising business still makes up a majority of its revenue, it has made a bigger push into mortgages — which grew 36% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2025 — as well as rentals, which grew 41%. Zillow, which reports fourth quarter results this week, is also piloting closing services.

The shift marks a deliberate move away from a model where Zillow made money when a shopper raised a hand, toward one where it participates in — and tries to simplify — the entire transaction.

Executives see AI as central to the super app play. Zillow CTO David Beitel, who has led technology efforts at the company since 2005, said the new capabilities of large language models feel “pretty monumental.”

He said AI models have improved so much and so quickly that there is no single part of the business where Zillow isn’t exploring how to harness them.

“It’s really starting to change the way we think about presenting information and change the way that we interact with our customers,” Beitel said.

Long before Zillow launched an app within ChatGPT, the company has used AI in some form since its early days. It applied machine learning to create the “Zestimate” home value tool and later built out computer vision tools to enhance listings.

Now the company is using AI to boost CRM tools for real estate agents — summarizing calls, drafting follow‑up messages, prepping next‑step checklists, and reducing repetitive data entry. Zillow says agents have sent millions of AI‑assisted messages, and that those tools are improving conversion.

Inside Zillow’s own walls, the shift may be even more dramatic.

Beitel said software teams are shipping more code with the same headcount thanks to AI‑assisted development — in some cases, up to a 15% improvement in productivity. The company also uses internal copilots that sit on top of documents, Slack conversations and email, letting employees ask natural‑language questions against Zillow’s own data. Recruiters are using AI to help schedule interviews and coordinate with candidates.

Zillow CTO David Beitel. (Zillow Photo)

Just in the past two years, Beitel said, the company has “much higher expectations of our team about embracing these tools and using them in their daily jobs.” Zillow encourages experimentation but stops short of mandating specific tools across every team, letting managers decide how to adapt LLMs to their own workflows.

Both executives stressed that, for all the automation, they don’t see AI replacing real estate professionals. Instead, they framed the technology as the next step in a long evolution that started when agents were gatekeepers of listing books and became guides in a world where buyers already know what’s on the market.

“It’s going to pull away all the busy work, all the back office work, all the coordination, all the data collection — all the stuff that a machine can do — to let the human do a great job of actually being your guide,” said Wacksman, who was named CEO in 2024, taking over for co-founder Rich Barton.

All of this is unfolding against a housing market that Wacksman describes as “bouncing along the bottom.” Existing home sales remain well below pre‑pandemic norms; affordability is still strained in many markets; and even optimistic forecasts call for only modest improvement this year. That puts pressure on Zillow’s bet that it can keep growing revenue at a double‑digit clip by capturing a bigger slice of every transaction, even if there aren’t many more transactions to go around.

At the same time, the company is facing louder questions from regulators and rivals about how much control one platform should have over the digital plumbing of the housing market. Zillow is a defendant in a high-profile antitrust lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission and multiple states over its multifamily rental listings syndication deal with Redfin — a case that alleges the arrangement stifles competition in the rental advertising market. The company is also defending a lawsuit from brokerage Compass challenging Zillow’s private‑listing policies and a separate copyright infringement case from rival CoStar over the use of listing photos.

Wacksman said it hasn’t changed the core roadmap — or Zillow’s room to grow. He said the company still touches a single-digit share of U.S. transactions. “We can grow our business regardless of what happens in [the] macro, and regardless of the clouds from external forces,” he said.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Seattle startup Ambassador raises $7M to help companies analyze customer feedback with help from AI

Washington lawmakers target ‘addictive’ social media feeds in revived push for youth safeguards

AZX lands $6M: Seattle-area tech veterans reunite to build custom AI solutions for energy industry

Tech Moves: Acumatica hires CPO; former Amazon manager named new mayor of Bellevue

Washington proposal to tax startup exits sparks backlash from Seattle tech leaders

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

AI

AI chatbots are worse than search engines for medical advice – Computerworld

February 10, 2026
Software

Global Group ransomware gang running new campaign using Windows shortcut files – Computerworld

February 10, 2026
Games

Todd Howard says Bethesda really didn’t expect people to hate the way Fallout 3 ended with a full stop, and they scrambled together a solution but ‘I’ll give us an average grade on that’

February 10, 2026
Games

‘I genuinely do not know what to do’ says developer of Minecraft-like Allumeria after Microsoft issues a DMCA takedown, forcing it off Steam

February 10, 2026
News

What Ring’s ‘Search Party’ actually does, and why its Super Bowl ad gave people the creeps

February 10, 2026
Games

Hideo Kojima posts a cryptic message about ‘editing’ something and an awful lot of people are convinced it means Death Stranding 2 for PC will be announced later this week

February 10, 2026

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?