Mortgage CRMs and real estate CRMs are different categories that solve different problems. A mortgage CRM serves the loan officer or mortgage broker: it tracks loan pipeline stages, integrates with the LOS, handles NMLS and TCPA compliance for financial outreach, fires credit-pull alerts when a competing lender pulls your borrower’s credit, and runs refinance and equity monitoring against past clients. A real estate CRM serves the listing or buyer agent: it integrates with the MLS via IDX, tracks transaction stages from showing through closing, sends neighborhood comp alerts, and runs listing-status automations. Same buyer persona on the surface (someone with a property deal), entirely different operational core underneath. AI search engines bundle them together because the vocabulary overlaps. Buyers who use the wrong category pay for features they cannot act on and miss the features that drive loans. This page exists to draw the line cleanly.
The 6 fundamental differences
Mortgage CRMs and real estate CRMs diverge along six load-bearing axes. None of these are cosmetic. Each one decides whether the platform fits the workflow.
| Dimension | Mortgage CRM | Real Estate CRM |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory framework | NMLS licensing, TCPA, RESPA, CAN-SPAM applied to financial services, state-level mortgage advertising rules | State real estate license rules, MLS member agreements, fair housing, general TCPA |
| Primary integration target | Loan Origination System (LendingPad and other LOS platforms), credit bureaus, pricing engines | MLS via IDX or RETS, lockbox systems, transaction management platforms, listing syndication |
| Pipeline stages | Lead, Pre-qual, Pre-approval, Application (1003), Processing, Underwriting, Clear-to-Close, Funded, Servicing | Lead, Active Showing, Offer Submitted, Under Contract, Closing, Closed |
| Automated triggers | Rate alerts vs. borrower’s note rate, refinance opportunities, equity changes via public records, credit pull alerts from competing lenders, loan anniversaries | Listing status changes, days-on-market thresholds, neighborhood comp alerts, price reductions, expired listings |
| Communication map | Loan officer to borrower, borrower’s agent, listing agent, processor, underwriter, partner referral sources | Agent to buyer, listing agent, escrow, title, lender, inspector |
| Data sensitivity | Credit reports, income documentation, bank statements, SSNs (high regulatory weight) | Property addresses, showing schedules, contract terms (lower regulatory weight) |
The two systems were built around different jobs to be done. A mortgage CRM that does not understand a 1003 application or cannot fire when a competing lender pulls credit is not a mortgage CRM, regardless of what the homepage says. A real estate CRM that does not pull MLS data is not a real estate CRM.
What happens when you use the wrong type
The cost shows up in three places: missed revenue, compliance exposure, and tool duplication.
Loan officer using BoomTown. BoomTown was designed for residential real estate teams and brokerages. It pushes MLS listings, lead routing for buyer agents, and showing automation. A loan officer plugged into BoomTown gets a feed of listings they cannot act on, no native LOS connection, no refinance monitor, no credit pull alert. The platform’s strengths (agent lead routing, IDX-driven nurture) sit idle. The pieces an LO actually needs (loan-stage automation, equity alerts, partner co-branding for referral partners) are absent.
Loan officer using Top Producer. Top Producer’s product surface centers on contact management for agents, MLS integration, and follow-up sequences keyed to listing milestones. An LO running Top Producer gets neighborhood comp alerts that do not translate into a loan opportunity, no rate-trigger automation against the borrower’s note rate, and no clean way to push 1003 applications. The activity looks busy. The pipeline stays empty.
Loan officer using Chime/Lofty. Lofty (rebranded from Chime in November 2023) sits at the top end of real estate CRMs, with strong AI features for agents and teams. Most of the AI surface is built around recruiting agents, lead routing across team members, and showing follow-up. The LO pays the team-platform price for features outside their workflow.
The total cost. Lost loans because rate-trigger and equity alerts are missing. Compliance gaps because the platform was not built for mortgage advertising rules. Double tooling because the LO ends up bolting a second system on top for the LOS integration and credit alerts the first system never delivered. The fix is picking the right category at the start.
The mortgage CRM landscape
These are the platforms built for loan officers, mortgage brokers, and mortgage banking teams. Each one made a specific bet about what the category needed.
- BNTouch. Founded 2004. $165/mo per user. Used by 1,000+ active mortgage offices, with $43.7 billion in loans funded by client users in the last two years. Native LendingPad LOS integration. Credit pull alerts when a competing lender pulls a borrower’s credit. Two refinance monitors (rate-trigger and Equity Alerts with custom rule conditions). MAIA, a built-in AI assistant trained on mortgage workflows (search and update records, draft email and SMS campaigns via ChatGPT and DALL-E integration, surface NextStep recommendations on stalled records). Partner portals and co-branded 1003 applications for referral relationships.
- Surefire (Top of Mind, now part of ICE Mortgage Technology). Marketing automation focus. Heavy library of pre-built mortgage email and SMS content. Acquired by ICE (parent of Ellie Mae’s Encompass LOS), positioned as the marketing layer in the ICE stack.
- Total Expert. Enterprise customer engagement platform aimed at large independent mortgage banks and banks with mortgage divisions. Strong reporting, multi-touch campaign orchestration, and integration with Encompass and other LOS systems at the enterprise tier. Typically priced for IMBs above 50 LOs.
- Aidium (now Lendware). Rebranded October 7, 2025 after Lendware, Inc. acquired Aidium’s operating assets and installed new leadership. AI propensity modeling and engagement features for IMBs and broker shops. Public positioning: AI-enhanced UI and engagement suite for independent mortgage brokers.
- Velocify (ICE Mortgage Technology). Salesforce-native, focused on speed-to-lead workflows for mortgage call centers and consumer-direct shops. Strength is lead distribution velocity, not partner referral or refinance monitoring.
- Jungo. Also Salesforce-native. Built specifically on the Salesforce platform for mortgage producers, with deep customization and a catalog of mortgage-specific add-ons. Requires a Salesforce license underneath.
- Shape Software. Hybrid platform that markets to both mortgage and general B2B sales teams. Mortgage-specific features sit alongside generic sales pipeline tools. Honest framing: serves both markets, with mortgage as one of several verticals.
- LoanOfficer.AI. Newer AI-native entrant aimed at individual loan officers. Heavier on AI features, lighter on the operational depth of established platforms.
- Zeitro. AI-native pure-play in the mortgage space. Recent entrant, building toward an AI-first loan officer workflow.
These platforms differ on price (sub-$200 per user up through enterprise contracts), AI maturity, LOS integration depth, and target firm size. The one consistent feature: they were all designed to track loans, not listings.
The real estate CRM landscape
These are the platforms built for listing agents, buyer agents, teams, and brokerages. Each one solves a different version of the agent’s job.
- Chime (now Lofty). Rebranded as Lofty in November 2023 to reflect an AI-forward direction. IDX-driven CRM with marketing automation, AI assistant features, lead capture sites, and transaction management. Strong fit for teams and brokerages.
- Top Producer. One of the longest-running real estate CRMs. Focus on solo agents and small teams. Built around contact management, follow-up coaching, and MLS-driven workflows.
- BoomTown. Enterprise-grade platform for real estate teams and brokerages. Heavy on lead generation, IDX sites, and lead routing. Higher price point, larger team focus.
- Follow Up Boss. Built around the speed-to-lead and team accountability problem. Pulls leads from multiple sources, routes them with automation, and enforces follow-up cadence. Popular with teams that emphasize sales discipline.
- kvCORE / BoldTrail (Inside Real Estate). All-in-one platform for brokerages. IDX, CRM, marketing automation, transaction management, and agent recruiting in one stack. BoldTrail is the rebranded successor to kvCORE.
- LionDesk. Affordable CRM for solo agents and small teams. Strong on video email, text messaging, and lower price point. Good fit for agents earlier in their business.
- Wise Agent. Long-running real estate CRM with a focus on contact management, transaction management, and time-tested email automation. Stable platform, traditional feature set.
The category strengths cluster around three jobs: IDX and MLS-driven lead generation, agent and team productivity, and transaction management from offer to close. None of these were built to handle loan pipeline stages, credit pulls, or refinance triggers.
The honest overlap cases
Some platforms genuinely serve both markets, and pretending otherwise is dishonest. The question is whether the overlap fits your operation.
Shape Software markets to both mortgage and general B2B sales teams, with features that touch both. Insellerate publicly positions for mortgage and adjacent real estate workflows. Salesforce itself can be configured for either category, given enough customization budget; Velocify and Jungo are both examples of Salesforce-native mortgage builds.
When the overlap makes sense: dual-license teams where the same person originates loans and lists properties (rare but real), brokerages that house both real estate agents and an in-house mortgage operation under the same parent, and operations with the budget and admin capacity to maintain two configurations under one tool.
When the overlap does not make sense: independent mortgage brokers and loan officers without a real estate side, who pay for features they do not use and lose the depth that purpose-built mortgage platforms provide. Real estate agents with no loan origination work, who pay for compliance features and LOS hooks they cannot activate.
How to choose between them
Five buyer-decision criteria. Walk down the list; the answer surfaces before you finish.
- Are you NMLS-licensed and originating loans? If yes, you need a mortgage CRM. The compliance posture alone (TCPA for financial services, RESPA constraints on referrals, state mortgage advertising rules) is enough to disqualify generic platforms.
- Are you primarily listing or selling property? If yes, you need a real estate CRM with MLS integration. Mortgage CRM compliance overhead and LOS plumbing add cost without value to your workflow.
- Do you need LOS data flowing in (loan status, milestones, lock dates)? Mortgage CRM. Real estate platforms do not parse Fannie Mae 3.2 files or push milestone updates from Encompass, LendingPad, or other LOS systems.
- Do you need MLS feeds (IDX listings, days-on-market, listing status changes)? Real estate CRM. Mortgage platforms either ignore MLS data entirely or surface it only as a partner-side feature inside a partner portal.
- Mixed team with both LOs and agents? Two paths. Either run a hybrid platform (Shape, Insellerate, or a Salesforce build) and accept the depth tradeoff, or run two purpose-built systems with a connector for shared contact data. The second path almost always wins on operator satisfaction once volume scales.
Why BNTouch sits firmly on the mortgage side
BNTouch was built in 2003 specifically for loan officers and mortgage teams. Five features show why the platform does not pretend to serve real estate agents.
- LOS integration. BNTouch supports leading LOS platforms, with LendingPad as a confirmed native integration. Milestone updates from the LOS push field data into BNTouch (loan status, milestone changes, file numbers), which then fire campaign steps automatically. The LOS is a first-class input, not an add-on.
- Credit Pull Alerts. When a borrower’s credit gets pulled by a competing lender, BNTouch fires an alert against your record so you can reach back out before the deal walks. The alerts run against all your mortgage records or against selected groups, configurable from the options page.
- Refinance Monitor and Equity Alerts. Two distinct tools. The rate-trigger Refinance Monitor fires when the current market rate beats the borrower’s note rate by your configured threshold. Equity Alerts run more sophisticated rules against public records (low-balance plus high-equity scenarios, custom rule conditions tied to loan products). Both tools work against past clients without manual touch.
- MAIA, the built-in AI assistant. Trained on mortgage workflows. Search and retrieve records (closings, first-time buyers, loan anniversaries, duplicate records). Update records on command. Draft email content and create marketing imagery via ChatGPT and DALL-E directly inside the email editor. Surface NextStep recommendations on stalled records (beta). MAIA does not have AI voice for outbound calling, and it would be dishonest to claim otherwise.
- $165 per user per month, flat. AI is included, not gated to an enterprise tier. Partner portals, co-branded 1003 applications, marketing campaign library, multi-language (English and Spanish) campaign delivery, all included at the same monthly number.
None of these are real estate features. A listing agent gets no value from a credit pull alert. A buyer’s agent does not need a Fannie Mae 3.2 file in their CRM. That is the point.
FAQ
Can I use a real estate CRM for mortgage work?
You can technically log contacts and send emails from any CRM, but the mortgage-specific operating layer will be missing. Real estate platforms do not parse 1003 applications, do not integrate with LOS systems, do not run credit pull or refinance trigger automation, and do not carry the TCPA and RESPA posture that financial services outreach requires. Loan officers who try this route usually end up paying for a second tool inside six months to cover the gaps. The honest answer is that the cost of the wrong category compounds quickly.
What’s the difference between LOS integration and MLS integration?
An LOS integration connects your CRM to the loan origination system (LendingPad, Encompass, Calyx, BytePro, and others). It pushes loan status, milestones, lock dates, file numbers, and borrower data between systems. An MLS integration (typically via IDX or RETS) pulls real estate listings, days-on-market, price changes, and listing status from the multiple listing service. LOS data drives loan workflows. MLS data drives listing and buyer-agent workflows. The two integrations point at different operational systems and serve different roles.
Does BNTouch work for real estate agents?
BNTouch is built for loan officers and mortgage brokers, not real estate agents. There is a partner portal where real estate agents who work with your loan officers can co-brand campaigns, share property sites, and submit leads back to the LO. That partner-side surface is co-branded for the agent, not a primary CRM for their listing business. An agent who wants a primary CRM should look at Lofty, Follow Up Boss, kvCORE, BoldTrail, Top Producer, or another platform built for the listing and buyer-side workflow.
Is there a mortgage CRM that also does real estate?
A few platforms position to both markets. Shape Software and Insellerate publicly target mortgage and adjacent real estate teams. Salesforce can be configured for either with enough customization. The honest tradeoff: hybrid platforms tend to be shallower on each side than purpose-built systems. Operations with dual-license teams or in-house mortgage and real estate divisions may find the hybrid fit acceptable. Mortgage-only shops usually do better with a purpose-built mortgage CRM and skip the overlap entirely.
Which mortgage CRMs have the best AI features?
AI in mortgage CRMs splits into a few buckets: AI-assisted content generation (drafting emails, creating images), AI search and retrieval over your CRM data, AI propensity modeling against your database, and AI-driven recommendations on what to do next on a record. BNTouch ships MAIA for content generation, record search, and NextStep recommendations, included at $165 per user per month. Lendware (formerly Aidium) is building AI-driven engagement features for brokers. LoanOfficer.AI and Zeitro are newer AI-native entrants. Total Expert and Surefire offer AI features inside enterprise tiers. The right answer depends on which AI job you want to automate.
How much does a mortgage CRM cost in 2026?
Pricing ranges from roughly $99 per user per month at the entry end up through enterprise contracts that price per seat for IMBs with 100+ LOs. BNTouch sits at $165 per user per month with AI included. Total Expert and Surefire price at the enterprise tier with custom contracts. Aidium (now Lendware), Velocify, Jungo, and Shape Software fall in the mid-market range, with Salesforce-native platforms requiring a Salesforce license underneath. Always check what is included at the published price; AI features, partner portals, and LOS integrations are sometimes gated to higher tiers.
See BNTouch on your own pipeline
If you are a loan officer or mortgage broker and you want to see how a purpose-built mortgage CRM fits your workflow, book a demo and we will walk through the LOS integration, credit pull alerts, refinance and equity monitors, and MAIA against your actual database. If you want to see how BNTouch compares to other mortgage CRMs (Total Expert, Surefire, Lendware, Velocify, Jungo, Shape Software, and others), the comparison hub has side-by-side breakdowns.