Real estate automation with Claude and n8n lets you handle the busywork while keeping the relationship-building parts human. Real estate is one of the most automation-friendly industries — high volume of repetitive tasks, lots of document processing, and constant client communication that follows predictable patterns.
This guide covers 5 practical workflows you can build today, based on real patterns used by agents, brokers, and property managers.
Why Real Estate Automation Works So Well with Claude + n8n
Claude quietly changed what’s possible for contract-heavy real estate work. Sonnet’s large context window holds an entire transaction file — purchase agreement, every addendum, full inspection report, title commitment, MLS comps, and months of email — in one conversation. n8n
This matters enormously for automation. n8n handles the orchestration — pulling documents, triggering workflows, routing data — while Claude handles the part that actually requires understanding: reading a 40-page inspection report, summarizing a transaction file, or drafting a personalized follow-up based on a client’s specific situation.
Workflow 1 — Automated Lead Qualification
When a lead comes in through your website, Zillow, or a Facebook ad, most agents manually review and qualify before following up — wasting time on leads that go nowhere.
The automation:
Nodes: Webhook (lead form) → Claude AI Agent (qualify + score) → IF node (route by score) → CRM update + Slack notification
Claude analyzes the lead’s stated budget, timeline, and message content, scores it 1-10, and routes hot leads to immediate follow-up while nurture leads go into a drip campaign.
This pattern automates incoming web lead qualification, scheduled data research, and content generation in one connected suite. n8n
Workflow 2 — Contract and Disclosure Review
This is where Claude’s long context window becomes genuinely valuable. The 2026 model lineup splits the work: use Sonnet for full-document review, deal analysis, and any task requiring the large context window. n8n
The automation:
Nodes: Google Drive Trigger (new contract uploaded) → Claude (extract key terms + flag unusual clauses) → Google Sheets (log summary) → Email (send summary to agent)
When a new purchase agreement or seller disclosure is uploaded, Claude reads the full document and extracts contingency dates, special clauses, and anything that deviates from standard terms — giving the agent a 2-minute summary instead of a 20-minute read.
Workflow 3 — Automated Listing Copy Generation
Haiku produces fast listing copy and routine client replies at a fraction of the cost of larger models — making it ideal for high-volume, repetitive content generation. n8n
The automation:
Nodes: Form Trigger (agent fills property details) → Claude Haiku (generate listing description) → MLS/Website (publish)
The agent fills in basic facts — bedrooms, square footage, key features — and Claude generates a polished, on-brand listing description in seconds. Run it through 3 variations and pick the best, instead of starting from a blank page every time.
Workflow 4 — Smart Client Follow-Up Sequences
Generic follow-up emails get ignored. Personalized ones that reference specific details get responses. The problem is personalization doesn’t scale manually.
The automation:
Nodes: Schedule Trigger (daily) → CRM query (clients needing follow-up) → Claude (personalize message based on client history) → Gmail (send)
Claude pulls each client’s specific situation — properties viewed, last conversation topic, timeline — from your CRM and drafts a personalized follow-up that references real context, not generic templates.
Workflow 5 — Market Report Synthesis
Claude can synthesize market reports on large datasets, holding comps, pricing trends, and inventory data in a single analysis. n8n
The automation:
Nodes: Schedule Trigger (weekly) → MLS API (pull comps data) → Claude (synthesize trends + write summary) → Email (send to client list)
Instead of manually pulling comps and writing market updates, this workflow automatically generates a personalized market report for your farm area or specific client segment every week.
Choosing the Right Claude Model for Each Task
Opus for deal analysis and negotiation, Sonnet for full-document review, Haiku for fast listing copy and routine replies. n8n
For most of the workflows above, Sonnet is the right default — it balances cost and capability well for document review and content generation. Reserve Haiku for high-volume, simple tasks like listing copy, and Opus only for complex negotiation analysis where accuracy matters most.
Real Estate Automation: Getting Started
If you’re new to automation, don’t try to build all 5 workflows at once. Start with the one that saves you the most time today — for most agents, that’s either lead qualification (Workflow 1) or listing copy generation (Workflow 3), since both are high-frequency, low-complexity tasks.
Once that workflow is running reliably, add the next one. Within a few months, most of the repetitive work in your business runs on autopilot, leaving you to focus on the relationship-driven parts of the job that AI can’t replace.
Last updated: June 2026