CRE Listing Intelligence Series
- Best CoStar alternatives for small CRE brokers
- How to scrape LoopNet and Crexi listings into one CRE dataset
- Commercial real estate API for brokers: cheap CoStar alternative
- I Pulled 1,234 Dallas CRE Listings from LoopNet + Crexi. Deduping Was the Real Problem.
- LoopNet vs Crexi: Which Commercial Real Estate Platform Is Better?
If you work in commercial real estate, you have probably asked this question:
The short answer is:
LoopNet is usually stronger for broad listing exposure and search visibility. Crexi is often stronger for a more modern deal-discovery workflow, auction/listing tools, and active investor browsing.
But for commercial real estate research, the more useful answer is:
You often need both. The real problem is turning both platforms into one clean market file.
This article compares LoopNet and Crexi from a practical broker and analyst perspective: listing discovery, audience, cost, broker leads, data quality, and workflow.
Quick comparison
| Category | LoopNet | Crexi |
|---|---|---|
| Best known for | Large commercial real estate marketplace and visibility | Modern CRE marketplace, sale/lease listings, auctions, investor discovery |
| Typical strength | Broad search reach and brand recognition | Faster-feeling marketplace workflow and deal browsing |
| Strong use case | Marketing listings to a large tenant/investor audience | Finding active opportunities and managing buyer interest |
| Common buyer/user | Brokers, owners, tenants, investors | Brokers, investors, buyers, tenants |
| Data workflow | Useful source, but not always analysis-ready as a raw export | Useful source, but still needs cleanup for market research |
| Best for research | Strong when combined with other sources | Strong when combined with other sources |
| Main limitation | Cost and workflow friction can be an issue depending on the user | Coverage and data completeness can vary by market |
| Best practical answer | Use it when visibility matters | Use it when deal discovery and speed matter |
What LoopNet does well
LoopNet is one of the most recognized names in online commercial real estate listings.
It is part of CoStar Group, and CoStar describes LoopNet as a heavily trafficked online commercial real estate marketplace. LoopNet itself positions the site around commercial property for sale, lease, auctions, and businesses for sale.
That matters because CRE listing platforms are partly about data and partly about attention.
For a broker marketing a property, LoopNet's main advantage is simple:
More people know to search there.
That makes LoopNet especially relevant for:
- office listings
- retail listings
- industrial listings
- lease listings
- sale listings
- mainstream tenant and investor discovery
- properties where broad online exposure matters
If the job is "make this property visible to as many relevant online searchers as possible," LoopNet is hard to ignore.
What Crexi does well
Crexi is also a commercial real estate marketplace, but it often feels different from LoopNet in day-to-day use.
Crexi positions itself as a platform for brokers, buyers, tenants, and investors. Its marketplace includes sale and lease listings, and Crexi also has auction and deal-management features.
In practice, Crexi can feel more natural for active deal browsing.
It is often useful when the job is:
- find new investment opportunities
- review broker-posted listings
- browse sale and lease inventory
- monitor auction-style opportunities
- discover smaller or mid-market listings
- compare a market beyond the largest incumbent platform
Crexi's biggest strength is not that it "replaces" LoopNet in every market.
Its strength is that it can show a different slice of the market.
That matters because CRE listing coverage is not perfectly uniform. A broker, investor, or analyst who checks only one portal may miss listings that appear elsewhere.
Listing coverage: the answer depends on the market
The most common mistake in a LoopNet vs Crexi comparison is trying to declare one universal winner.
CRE is too local for that.
In one market, LoopNet may have stronger inventory for a certain asset class. In another market, Crexi may show more relevant sale listings, more active broker pages, or better investor-facing deal flow.
The answer can change by:
- city
- asset class
- sale vs lease
- broker behavior
- property size
- paid listing strategy
- whether the searcher is a tenant, broker, investor, or analyst
For example:
- a tenant rep may care more about lease visibility
- an acquisition analyst may care more about sale inventory
- an investment sales broker may care more about buyer lead quality
- a market researcher may care more about completeness and deduplication
That is why "LoopNet vs Crexi" is usually the wrong operational question.
The better question is:
Which platform gives me the cleanest view of this specific market?
And often, the answer is both.
Lead quality and broker workflow
LoopNet and Crexi can both help generate attention around listings.
But attention is not the same as usable broker intelligence.
A broker or analyst usually needs to know:
- who represents the listing
- which company is attached
- whether the listing is new or stale
- whether the same property is listed somewhere else
- what price, rent, cap rate, NOI, or square footage is visible
- whether the row is clean enough to send to a CRM or spreadsheet
This is where both platforms have the same limitation:
They are listing portals first. They are not always clean research databases for your internal workflow.
That does not make them bad.
It just means the workflow does not end on the portal page.
Cost: LoopNet vs Crexi
Cost is one of the reasons brokers compare LoopNet and Crexi in the first place.
LoopNet is connected to the CoStar ecosystem, and many CRE professionals perceive CoStar/LoopNet as expensive compared with lighter tools. Crexi is often discussed as a more accessible or flexible alternative, although pricing and value depend heavily on the product tier, market, and use case.
The important point is not simply "which one is cheaper?"
The better question is:
What job am I paying for?
If the job is listing exposure, the value depends on lead quality and closed business.
If the job is market research, the value depends on how quickly a team can build a usable market file.
For research, the hidden cost is usually manual work:
- checking two tabs
- copying listings into spreadsheets
- cleaning addresses
- removing duplicates
- finding broker contacts
- comparing cap rates
- tracking days on market
- exporting rows into a CRM
That hidden labor can cost more than the tool itself.
Data quality: the real comparison
For broker research, data quality is where the LoopNet vs Crexi question becomes interesting.
The same property can appear on both platforms with slightly different fields.
Example:
1200 East 6th Street
1200 E 6th St
1200 E. Sixth Street
Those may be the same property, but exact matching would miss it.
Square footage can also vary:
7,500 SF
7,480 SF
7.5K SF
Cap rates may be listed, missing, estimated, or implied from other fields.
Broker contact data can be present on one source and missing on another.
That is why the best research workflow is not just:
Search LoopNet
Search Crexi
Pick the better one
It is closer to:
Search LoopNet
Search Crexi
Merge both sources
Normalize fields
Deduplicate listings
Preserve source links
Export one clean market file
Which platform is better for CRE research?
If I had to answer directly:
- LoopNet is better for broad visibility and familiar search behavior.
- Crexi is better for active deal discovery and a modern marketplace workflow.
- Using both is better for first-pass market research.
For a broker, the final answer depends on the job:
| Job | Better fit |
|---|---|
| Advertise a listing to a large online audience | LoopNet |
| Browse active deal opportunities | Crexi |
| Compare public inventory across a market | Both |
| Build a broker lead list | Both |
| Track stale listings and days on market | Both, after cleanup |
| Create a CSV for underwriting or CRM | Both, after extraction and normalization |
Where an extraction tool fits
This is where a data workflow can help.
I built Commercial Real Estate Brokerage Intel on Apify for this exact use case:
Run LoopNet + Crexi searches and turn the results into one structured dataset.
The point is not to declare one portal the winner.
The point is to make both sources easier to use together.
The actor is built to help with:
- LoopNet + Crexi listing extraction
- deduplication across platforms
- normalized cap-rate fields
- days-on-market context
- broker contact fields where available
-
also_listed_onsignals - CSV, Excel, JSON, and API export
So if your workflow is "which platform should I manually check today?", the answer might be LoopNet or Crexi.
But if your workflow is "I need one clean market file," the better answer may be:
Pull both, clean both, and compare the market from one dataset.
Final verdict
LoopNet vs Crexi is not a simple winner-takes-all comparison.
LoopNet usually wins on brand recognition, broad search behavior, and listing visibility.
Crexi often wins on deal-discovery workflow, marketplace feel, and alternative inventory discovery.
For commercial real estate brokers, investors, and analysts, the strongest workflow is often not choosing one platform.
It is using both platforms without letting duplicate listings, messy addresses, missing broker fields, and inconsistent cap rates slow the team down.
That is the real lesson:
The better platform is the one that helps you create a cleaner market view faster.
And in many CRE workflows, that market view comes from LoopNet and Crexi together.
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