Sarah Bennett

Verified Real Estate Agent

Company

Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Medley

Network

Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate

Location

West Columbia, South Carolina

Country

United States

Zip Code

29169

Average Home Price

$470,677

Latest Volume

$20,427,365

Latest Transactions

43.40

About

Sarah Bennett is a nationally recognized leading real estate agent located in West Columbia, SC. Sarah is a part of Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Medley and an affiliate of the Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate brand. Sarah primarily serves clients in SC.

Scroll down to view their 2024 awards, based on 2023 data – verified by RealTrends. Sarah Bennett has also qualified for the RealTrends Verified city rankings, which launch Fall 2024!

RealTrends Verified Performance

Based On 2025 Sales Data

Sides

43.40

Volume

$20,427,365

National Sides Rank

3766

National Volume Rank

6160

State Sides Rank

87

State Volume Rank

69

Awards

America's Best by SidesAmerica's Best by Volume

Download the updated RealTrends Verified Database

RealTrends is proud to offer an excel version of the 2024 rankings database available for instant download.

Real Estate News

From local to global: RE/MAX’s Chris Lim on the next era of real estate relationships HW+

Real estate has always been a people-first business, but in today’s market, relationships are being redefined by technology, data, and global reach. Few leaders understand this balance better than Chris Lim, RE/MAX’s Chief Growth Officer. In this conversation, Lim shares how human connection, innovation, and brand trust continue to shape the next era of real estate.

Housing Market News

Will cutting mortgage rates fix the housing market? HW+

Mortgage professionals are navigating one of the most challenging origination markets in recent history. Still, cutting mortgage rates would not be the end-all solution to pacify markets that many claim it to be. While lower rates might temporarily ease borrower costs or support home purchases, they would also expose the housing industry to further risk without meaningfully addressing core issues, like supply shortages or long-term affordability.