Which is the Hotter Netflix Real Estate Show?

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Luxury real estate has become Hollywood's favorite soap opera, with two shows battling it out for the keys to the mansion. Netflix has Selling Sunset and Buying Beverly Hills, both circling around million-dollar listings, high-fashion offices, and egos large enough to rival the L.A. skyline. But while Selling Sunset thrives on glamour and gossip, Buying Beverly Hills doubles down on family drama and real brokerage grit. One sells fantasy; the other sells legacy. So, which team is really closing the deal-the polished chaos of The Oppenheim Group or the power dynasty of The Umansky Family?
Selling Sunset
Selling Sunset redefined reality luxury. Instantly upon its premiere in 2019, audiences were hooked with the cocktail of couture, conflict, and California sunshine. The Oppenheim Group's all-female powerhouse of agents turned property tours into runway shows, while feuds-Chrishell versus Christine, Heather versus Mary-became as headline-worthy as the homes themselves.

Over its seasons, the show transformed from glossy escapism into a cultural microcosm of ambition, rivalry, and reinvention. Chrishell Stause's meteoric rise and relationship with G Flip kept tabloids busy, while Emma Hernan and Chelsea Lazkani injected fresh personality into the mix.

Critics argue that the drama often overshadows the real estate, but it's precisely its genius: it sells aspiration more than architecture. Selling Sunset is less about escrow and more about empowerment. It proves that in Hollywood, the closing of the deal is merely the beginning of the storyline.
Buying Beverly Hills
While Selling Sunset is spectacle, Buying Beverly Hills is substance wrapped in style. At the center of this show stands Mauricio Umansky, real estate magnate and husband to Real Housewives star Kyle Richards, focusing on The Agency, a family-run brokerage where bloodlines meet bottom lines. His daughters, Farrah Britt and Alexia Umansky, navigate the push-pull between privilege and pressure as they work their own reputations in an industry built on pedigree.

What makes Buying Beverly Hills different is its tone. It's less catwalk, more conference room. There's real tension in the market: commission wars, demanding clients, and a very real-seeming mentorship. The show swaps out scandal for succession-the audiences get a peek into the machinery of elite real estate.

Still, there's glamour baked in: designer suits, skyline views, and emotional stakes that feel earned, not scripted. Buying Beverly Hills might not have the viral chaos of Selling Sunset, but it's winning its own far more elusive prize: credibility. It's the quiet empire proving that family businesses can rival any Netflix franchise.

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