If you’ve been thinking about hiring a real estate virtual assistant but you’re stuck on what you’d actually hand off, you’re not alone. Most agents I talk to have a vague sense that “I need help” but freeze when it’s time to make a list.
Here’s the full list of what real estate VAs handle, broken down by category, with a sense of how many hours each typically takes.
The rule of thumb: hand off anything that doesn’t require a license
The cleanest way to decide what’s delegatable is to ask one question: does this task legally require my real estate license?
If the answer is no, it can probably be done by a VA. If the answer is yes (showings, listing presentations, contract negotiation, signing documents) you do it yourself.
That single filter handles 90% of decisions. Below is the full breakdown.
1. Lead generation and follow-up
This is where most agents bleed the most time and money. Lead follow-up is hours of repetitive work that a VA can run end to end.
Tasks to delegate:
- Calling internet leads within 5 minutes (the #1 conversion lever in real estate)
- Sending the 7-touch follow-up cadence (call, text, email, value-add, repeat)
- Logging every contact attempt in your CRM
- Tagging leads by status (new, warm, dead, nurture)
- Sending past-client referral asks on a quarterly schedule
- Cold outreach: just-listed/just-sold to surrounding properties
- Database scrubbing: removing dead leads, merging duplicates
Typical time required: 15 to 25 hours per month for a solo agent.
2. Listing support
From the day you sign a listing agreement to the day you go live on MLS, there are 15+ tasks. Almost none require your physical presence.
Tasks to delegate:
- MLS data entry from your intake form (you sign off, VA enters)
- Photo and video scheduling
- Asset upload to MLS and your website after the shoot
- Listing flyer design in Canva or your template
- Property description writing (you review and approve)
- Social posts: just-listed, just-priced-reduced, just-sold
- Open house scheduling and brochures
- Showing feedback follow-up calls to other agents
- Closing-day follow-up to seller (testimonial ask, review request)
Typical time required: 8 to 12 hours per listing.
3. Transaction coordination
This is where deals die or get saved. A trained TC is one of the highest-leverage VA roles.
Tasks to delegate:
- Contract review (every blank, every initial, every contingency)
- Earnest money deposit tracking and receipt collection
- Inspection scheduling within 5 days of acceptance
- Inspection negotiation tracking on a 48-hour clock
- Appraisal coordination
- Weekly check-ins with title and lender by phone
- Document collection and storage in your transaction system (Dotloop, SkySlope, etc.)
- Final walkthrough scheduling 24 to 48 hours before close
- Closing day coordination: keys, wire instructions, gift
Typical time required: 6 to 10 hours per transaction.
4. Marketing and content
Most agents have a vague intention to “post more” or “send a newsletter.” A VA turns that into a calendar.
Tasks to delegate:
- Social posting schedule (3 to 5 posts per week across platforms)
- Monthly newsletter drafting
- Video script outlines from your talking points
- Reels and TikTok captions plus hashtag research
- Email blast to sphere on local market updates
- Repurposing video content into reels, blog posts, and email
- Google Business Profile updates and review responses
Typical time required: 8 to 15 hours per month.
5. Admin and operations
The death by a thousand cuts category. None of these tasks are hard. All of them eat time.
Tasks to delegate:
- Calendar management: confirming, rescheduling, blocking focus time
- Email triage: handling FYI emails, flagging the rest
- Expense tracking and receipt scanning
- Vendor coordination: handyman, stagers, photographers
- Monthly closed-deal reports for your broker
- Travel and showing logistics on a busy day
Typical time required: 5 to 10 hours per month.
What NOT to delegate
There are also things a VA should never do for you, even if technically they could. Keep these in-house:
- Anything that requires a real estate license (per your state)
- The first 30 seconds of a buyer or seller relationship: that’s your magic, not theirs
- Final pricing decisions on listings
- Negotiating offers or counters
- Anything involving your client’s wire instructions or financial details
- Login credentials for anything banking-related
How to actually start delegating
Reading a list of delegatable tasks is the easy part. Actually handing them off is harder. Here’s the approach that works.
Week 1: Hand off the lowest-stakes admin (calendar, email triage, basic data entry).
Week 2: Add CRM hygiene (tagging, logging, follow-up tasks).
Week 3: Hand off lead intake and first-touch follow-up.
Week 4: Specialized work: listing input, marketing, TC.
The agents who skip this order and try to hand off transaction coordination on day 1 are the same ones who give up by month 2. Take the time to build trust on small wins first.
Want to start? Try it free.
Pick 3 tasks from this list and hand them to us. Your first 5 hours are free. No card, no contract.
