Beycome has raised $2.5 million in seed funding as the Miami-based real estate technology firm looks to expand a flat-fee, direct-to-consumer model at a time of strained housing affordability in the United States, according to an announcement.
The round was led by InsurTech Fund, with participation from Pivot Ventures, the Florida Opportunity Fund, RedShift Capital, Neer Venture Capital, Kima Ventures, Ignite Venture and Founders Future, the company said.
Founded in 2020, Beycome allows users to sell, buy and close property transactions through a digital platform that charges fixed fees ranging from $99 to $999, rather than traditional percentage-based commissions.
The company says its users have completed close to 20,000 transactions, saving more than $215 million in fees, and that the business reached profitability after bootstrapping for three years.
The financing comes as high mortgage rates and elevated home prices push buyers and sellers to seek lower-cost alternatives to traditional brokerage services.
Beycome positions itself as an option for consumers who want more control and transparency, while still accessing professional support.
At the center of the platform is an in-house artificial intelligence system that assists with pricing, listings, offer management, documentation and closing coordination, alongside integrated title services.
The company plans to use the new capital to deepen its AI capabilities, expand into additional U.S. states and scale buyer-focused and title service offerings.
Beycome said it does not aim to eliminate agents entirely but to give consumers flexibility in how much assistance they use and pay for during a transaction.
The startup enters a crowded but fragmented proptech market where earlier commission-disruption efforts have faced regulatory scrutiny and mixed consumer adoption.
Its emphasis on flat fees, profitability and end-to-end execution, including title services, may help differentiate it from listing-only platforms.
However, scaling nationally will test whether AI-driven guidance can consistently replace human-led processes in complex, state-by-state regulated transactions, particularly as incumbents invest heavily in their own digital tools.
