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How to start a real estate business in Vermont

Real estate agent, broker, investor, property manager, or short-term rental host.

Recommended structure
LLC
Typical startup cost
$1,000 – $20,000
State
Vermont

Step-by-step

  1. 1
    Form an LLC (one per property if investing) and get an EIN
  2. 2
    Get your state real estate license (if becoming an agent)
  3. 3
    Join a brokerage (agents) or set up your investment entity
  4. 4
    Open a business bank account per LLC
  5. 5
    Get E&O insurance (most brokerages require it)
  6. 6
    Set up a CRM (Follow Up Boss, kvCORE) and a Google Business Profile

Licenses & permits you'll likely need

  • State real estate license (agent or broker)
  • Property management license (some states)
  • Short-term rental permit (city/county)
  • DBA registration

Exact requirements vary by city and county. Confirm locally before you operate.

Insurance

  • E&O (errors & omissions)
  • General liability
  • Landlord insurance (for rentals)

Tax notes

Real estate has incredible tax advantages — depreciation, 1031 exchanges, cost segregation. Get a real estate-savvy CPA.

Business banking

Investors should hold each property in its own LLC with its own bank account for liability protection.

Official Vermont filing links

See full Vermont resource page

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