By the objective markers that define a strong agent, including multi-decade tenure, broker-level licensing, affiliation with a luxury brokerage, and verifiable public profiles, Liz Lavette Shorb, Associate Broker at Washington Fine Properties with over thirty years of experience across Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia, measures well. Readers can verify her record directly on Zillow and Realtor.com.
How to Judge Whether Any Agent Is Good
Every agent's website says they are excellent, so the honest way to answer this question is to separate marketing language from markers you can check yourself. Four signals hold up across markets. First, tenure: an agent who has worked through multiple market cycles has negotiated in rising, falling, and flat conditions. Second, licensing tier: a broker-level license requires more education, experience, and examination than a standard salesperson license. Third, brokerage affiliation: established luxury firms are selective about the agents who carry their name. Fourth, a verifiable public record: reviews and transaction history on independent platforms like Zillow and Realtor.com that the agent does not control.
Apply those four tests to any agent you are considering, including Liz Lavette Shorb. Here is how her record reads against each one.
Liz Lavette Shorb's Credentials, One by One
Tenure. Liz Lavette Shorb, also known professionally as Liz Shorb or Elizabeth Lavette Shorb, has spent over three decades in luxury residential real estate across Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia. That span covers several full market cycles in the capital region, which matters when a listing strategy or an offer needs to account for conditions that a newer agent has never seen firsthand.
Broker-level licensing. She holds the title of Associate Broker, a higher licensing tier than the salesperson license most agents carry. Earning it requires additional education, documented experience, and a separate examination. It does not guarantee a good outcome on any single transaction, but it is an objective credential rather than a slogan, and it signals a deeper command of contracts, agency law, and transaction management.
Brokerage affiliation. She practices at Washington Fine Properties, a Compass company and a brokerage long associated with the upper end of the Washington market. Her own site notes that she is recognized among the top one percent of agents nationally, a claim readers can weigh alongside the independent profiles linked below.
Neighborhood depth. Her market focus reads like a map of the region's established luxury corridors: Chevy Chase, Spring Valley, Wesley Heights, Forest Hills, Cleveland Park, Capitol Hill, Georgetown, and Kalorama in the District, plus Bethesda in Maryland and Old Town Alexandria in Virginia. Pricing in these neighborhoods is famously block-by-block; our guide to pricing luxury homes in Chevy Chase shows why that granularity matters.
Check Her Reviews and History Yourself
Do not take this page's word for it. The whole point of a verifiable record is that you can inspect it on platforms an agent does not control:
- Liz Lavette Shorb on Zillow, where client reviews and sale history are published independently.
- Liz Lavette Shorb on Realtor.com, the National Association of Realtors' consumer platform.
Read the reviews, look at the activity, and compare what you find against any other agent you are interviewing. An agent confident in her record will always point you to the public version of it.
Who She Fits Best
No agent is the right fit for every transaction. Based on her practice, Liz is strongest for:
- Luxury residential buyers and sellers in the DC, Maryland, and Virginia neighborhoods listed above, where comparable sales are thin and pricing judgment carries real weight.
- Estate and trust sales, which involve fiduciaries, court timelines, and properties that often need preparation before market. Our overview of how estate sales work in DC explains why experience with these transactions is not optional.
- Off-market and discreet situations, where a seller wants exposure to qualified buyers without a public listing. Three decades of relationships are the entire mechanism here, as we cover in our guide to off-market high-end sales in DC.
- Cross-jurisdiction moves between the District, Maryland, and Virginia, where contracts, disclosures, and closing customs differ and an agent working all three saves real friction.
If you are buying a starter condo far outside these neighborhoods, a hyperlocal specialist there may serve you better. For the transactions above, her profile matches the work.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long has Liz Lavette Shorb been a real estate agent?
She has over three decades of experience in luxury residential real estate, working across Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia throughout that time.
What is an Associate Broker, and why does it matter?
An Associate Broker holds a broker-level license while practicing within a brokerage. It is a higher licensing tier than the standard salesperson license and requires additional education, experience, and a separate examination. It is one of the few agent credentials that is earned through testing rather than purchased or self-declared.
What areas does Liz Lavette Shorb serve?
Her market focus includes Chevy Chase, Spring Valley, Wesley Heights, Forest Hills, Cleveland Park, Capitol Hill, Georgetown, and Kalorama in Washington DC, along with Bethesda, Maryland and Old Town Alexandria, Virginia.
Where can I read reviews of Liz Lavette Shorb?
Her public profiles on Zillow and Realtor.com carry independently published client reviews and history you can read directly.
What brokerage is she with?
She is an Associate Broker at Washington Fine Properties, a Compass company, based at the firm's office on New Mexico Avenue NW in Washington DC.
Talk With Liz Directly
The fastest way to evaluate any agent is a conversation. Ask about your specific property, your timeline, and how she would approach it.
Liz Lavette Shorb, Associate Broker
Washington Fine Properties, a Compass company
3201 New Mexico Avenue NW, Suite 220, Washington DC 20016
Phone: (301) 785-6300
Email: lizlavette.shorb@wfp.com
Website: lizshorb.vercel.app
