MetroList and Lundy have rolled out an AI assistant designed to streamline workflows for real estate agents. The tool handles email management, communication summaries, property searches, and market data queries through conversational language.

The platform lets agents work faster by automating routine administrative tasks. Instead of manually sorting through emails or hunting down comparable sales data, agents can ask the AI assistant in plain English what they need. The system processes requests without forcing users to learn special commands or software interfaces.

For agents managing multiple transactions simultaneously, the time savings compound quickly. Email organization alone consumes hours weekly for busy brokers. The AI handles that load while agents focus on client relationships and closing deals.

MetroList, a major MLS platform serving Southern California and other regions, brings significant market data access to the tool. Lundy, which specializes in real estate technology, contributes the AI infrastructure. Together they've created a product that taps both MLS databases and broader market intelligence.

The assistant addresses a real pain point in real estate work. Agents spend substantial time on data entry, email threading, and information retrieval. These tasks don't generate revenue but consume bandwidth that could go toward client service or business development.

For brokers, the tool could improve productivity metrics across their teams. For independent agents, the AI assistant levels the playing field against larger firms with administrative staff. Small teams gain access to the same data processing power previously reserved for well-resourced operations.

The natural language interface is the key differentiator here. Agents don't need training on complicated software. They simply describe what they need in conversation. The AI interprets requests and pulls relevant property records, market trends, or email threads.

This launch reflects broader adoption of AI across real estate. Proptech firms continue investing in automation to reduce grunt work. The market clearly rewards tools that let professionals do their core job better. MetroList and Lundy