Editor’s note: Technology is the driving force behind real estate. From startups to established companies, technology companies are constantly innovating, growing, and building partnerships. Here are some of the latest news about companies that are helping advance the industry.
Lofty launches autonomous AI platform for securities firms
Proptech company Lofty has launched Lofty AOS, an agent AI operating system designed to autonomously manage brokerage and agent workflows.
The Phoenix-based company said Lofty AOS goes beyond task-based artificial intelligence by planning and executing entire processes without having agents dictate next steps. The system aims to reduce friction in AI adoption by shifting responsibility for day-to-day actions such as lead follow-up, marketing, and deal coordination from agents to software.
“The future of real estate belongs to organizations that go beyond simple AI tools and embrace agent systems that act as a force for productivity, consistency, and performance,” CEO Joe Chen said in a news release.
The platform uses multiple specialized AI agents that handle various functions such as lead engagement, social media posting, website creation, search optimization, and transaction management. The system is designed to prioritize tasks, attract leads and automate marketing while allowing agents to focus on customer relationships and transactions, the company said.
Breezy debuts agent-centric AI platform
Breezy, an AI operating system built specifically for residential real estate agents, officially debuted this week with a $10 million pre-seed funding round.
The Los Angeles-based company said its platform is designed to centralize workflows and automate the daily tasks of agents who often rely on a patchwork of tools to manage deals, marketing and customer relationships.
“Thinking like me, I wanted a tool that would allow me to adjust compensation, track client needs, and automate repetitive tasks so I could focus on providing the best experience for my clients and growing my business,” Breezy co-founder James Harris said in the announcement. “That desire became Breezy’s mission,” he added.
Breezy’s platform includes tools for lead nurturing, real estate analysis, and client presentations, as well as a proprietary data product called Underbuilt that analyzes residential properties for redevelopment potential. The company says the software was shaped by feedback from more than 200 active agents.
Breezy’s funding round was led by Ribbit Capital with participation from Fifth Wall, DST Global, Liquid 2 Ventures, OG Venture Partners, Lightspark co-founder and CEO David Marcus, and OpenAI executive Fidji Simo. Breezy said it plans to use the funding to expand its product and engineering teams and prepare for a broader U.S. rollout in the first half of 2026.
NAVICA brings AI-powered listing intelligence directly to the MLS
NAVICA and Restb.ai have partnered to embed AI-powered listing tools directly into the NAVICA MLS platform. The partnership aims to improve data accuracy, compliance and operational efficiency for MLS, according to a news release.
This integration brings Restb.ai’s computer vision technology into native NAVICA workflows, allowing MLSs to deploy AI-driven automation without adding third-party tools or disrupting existing systems. The companies say the technology is designed for production-scale MLS environments and runs primarily in the background for agents and staff.
AI tools include autofilling list fields from photos, image captions, and labels to support accessibility, generated property descriptions, and automated photo and document compliance checks. The companies say the feature is intended to reduce manual data entry, flag rule violations and standardize listings across marketplaces.
Dominick Pogorzelski, MLS President at Restb.ai, said the integration is designed to allow MLSs to improve data quality without burdening members.
“NAVICA is showing our members that both can be achieved by incorporating AI into the systems they already use every day,” added Pogorzelski.
Loft47 aims to reduce manual contract review time with new AI tools
Loft47 has expanded its AI-powered back-office platform with new tools designed to automate transaction management and compliance review processes for real estate agents.
The Vancouver-based company said the new feature set goes beyond commission management to include AI-driven deal creation from PDF contracts, automated data extraction, signature review and configurable workflow controls. The goal of these tools is to reduce manual contract review and data entry and allow agents to continue using their preferred contract and e-signature tools.
“Brokerage firms aren’t struggling because they don’t have enough tools; they’re struggling because they have too many tweaks,” Sasha Hrychuk, founder and CEO of Loft47, said in a statement.
The new automation feature set will reduce contract review and data entry time by more than 50% for brokerage staff, the company said, noting that these staff often spend hours manually reviewing documents for compliance. The system extracts key details such as address, date, party, and deposit information, flags missing signatures, and tracks deal requirements from contract to closing.
Shea Olsten, office manager at Maxwell Progressive, said the brokerage firm has “already reduced its workload directly related to data entry and contract compliance by 25%” by using Loft47’s new tools.
“For a team that spends hours every day reviewing contracts, bringing that efficiency to Loft47 is a huge step forward,” Olsten added.
Editor’s note: This content was first drafted using AI and then thoroughly reviewed, fact-checked, and revised by Real Estate News editors.
