This is the side-by-side. If the buyer's guide gives you the criteria and the best-companies list gives you a shortlist, this page puts the providers next to each other so you can compare them on the same dimensions at a glance. It is built to be scanned, then acted on, so the most important rule sits right at the top: compare on total dollar cost, not on headline rate.
Each provider is compared on the dimensions that actually determine whether an advance is a good deal for a commercial leasing broker. Fee structure matters more than the rate by itself, because stacked or compounding fees change the real cost. Commercial focus matters because a specialist verifies and funds faster on leasing deals. Use the table to narrow the field, then get a written total-dollar-cost quote from your finalists on the same commission and payout date.
Residential-focused providers (eCommission, Tongo, RealCommissions) are intentionally excluded from this commercial comparison and covered separately, since they serve a different market.
If you only compare one row, compare pricing transparency. Cash For Commish publishes a flat, time-based rate, so the total dollar cost is visible before you sign. Dealius does not publish pricing, so a comparison requires requesting a quote. RLTY advertises no hidden fees but is fee-based per transaction. A published flat rate is the easiest to plan around, which is why pricing transparency sits at the top, and why the guide on red flags in commission advance pricing exists.
After pricing, the dimensions that matter most are commercial focus and how the deal is structured. Both Cash For Commish and Dealius are commercial leasing specialists, while RLTY is an all-real-estate generalist. And the providers differ in whether they are a dedicated advance company or part of a broader platform. RLTY's historical recourse, where the agent is liable if a deal falls through, is also worth confirming for any provider, since how a provider handles a deal that does not close affects your risk.
Use this page to get to two or three finalists, then do the one thing the table cannot do for you: get each finalist's total dollar cost in writing on your actual commission, at your actual expected payout date, with every charge included, and confirm how each handles a deal that does not close. The buyer's guide walks through that final scoring step.
Pricing transparency first, then commercial focus, funding speed, and how the provider handles a deal that does not close. Compare total dollar cost at your expected payout date rather than headline rate.
They serve a different market than commercial leasing and the comparison would not be like for like. They are covered in the dedicated residential versus commercial piece.
It reflects public information as of mid-2026 and should be refreshed regularly with a last-updated date. Always confirm a provider's present terms directly before signing, since pricing and features change.
This guide is general information for commercial real estate brokers and is not financial, tax, or legal advice. Competitor details were sourced from public information as of June 2026 and must be re-verified before publication.