Editable 8.5×11 Canva Template for Real Estate Agents

2-Sided Listing Flyer

A front that sells the home. A back that explains it.

A single-page flyer makes you choose between a strong photo and the details. A 2-sided flyer doesn’t: the front leads with one high-impact image, and the back carries the specs, description, and a QR code — so the listing looks clean and still answers the buyer’s questions.

It comes in two front-cover options. The back is the same on both; you pick the cover that fits your hero photo, edit it in Canva, and reuse it for every listing.

Two cover options for the 2-sided real estate listing flyer, shown side by side

What this flyer helps you do

The 2-sided flyer is the everyday listing piece — the one you print for the table, hand to a buyer, or attach to an email.

Use it to:

  • give buyers a clean one-sheet with the photo up front and the details on the back
  • leave a tidy detail sheet at the sign-in table and on the open house counter
  • send a “Just Listed” announcement on social or by email from the cover alone
  • point buyers to a tour, landing page, or listing link with the built-in QR code
  • keep a consistent listing flyer you rebrand and reuse for every property

Two covers, one flyer — pick the one that fits your photo

Both covers lead to the same back page (a three-photo grid, a beds/baths/sqft icon row, the description, the feature list, a QR code, and your branding). The only difference is the front — and the right choice comes down to your hero photo:

The “Offered At” cover

A clean, understated front: one full hero image, the price, and the address, with your branding set quietly. Best when your best exterior or hero shot is well-composed and fills the frame — it lets the photo do the work.

The “For Sale” banner cover

A bold, high-contrast headline band over the hero image. The banner commands attention on a crowded counter or a social feed — and it’s the more forgiving option if your hero photo is an awkward shape or a tight crop, because the headline anchors the page instead of the photo carrying it alone. The headline text swaps to “Just Listed,” “Under Contract,” or “Open House.”

Not sure? If you’ve got a clean, well-proportioned hero shot, the “Offered At” cover lets it lead. If the photo is off-ratio or you want more visual punch, the “For Sale” banner cover is the safer pick.

Who this is for

Best for agents who want a clean, reusable listing flyer with the photo up front and the details on the back.

A good fit if you:

  • market active listings and want a one-sheet for the table, showings, or email
  • want the photo to lead without losing room for specs and a description
  • like having a QR code to send buyers to a tour or landing page
  • are comfortable editing photos and text in Canva

Not ideal if:

  • you want a full multi-page leave-behind — the 4-Page Listing Brochure is the fuller piece
  • you specifically need a “Just Listed” announcement with multiple layout options — the Just Listed Flyer is built for that moment
  • you have no usable listing photo for the cover — it’s photo-forward (the banner cover is the more forgiving of the two, but both lead with an image)

What’s included

Whichever cover you choose, you get a complete 2-sided flyer (8.5×11), fully editable in Canva:

  • Front (your chosen cover): a full hero image with the price and address — and, on the banner cover, the swappable headline
  • Back: a three-photo grid, a beds / baths / square-footage icon row, a spacious description block, a bulleted feature list, a QR code module, and an agent branding block (headshot, logo, contact)
  • QR or garage icon: keep the QR to link a tour or landing page, or delete it to reveal a matching garage icon
  • Print-ready and digital-friendly: export a double-sided print PDF, or a single cover image for social and email

You make your own copy in Canva, swap in the photos and details, and reuse it for every listing.

How it works

1. Pick the cover that fits your photo.
Choose the “Offered At” cover for a clean hero shot, or the “For Sale” banner cover for more punch or a tougher-to-crop photo — and grab that listing.

2. Copy the template in Canva.
Make your own editable copy. Works with a free Canva account.

3. Build the front.
Add your hero image, price, and address. On the banner cover, set the headline (“For Sale,” “Just Listed,” “Under Contract,” or “Open House”).

4. Fill in the back.
Drop in the three photos, the beds/baths/sqft, the description, and the features.

5. Set the QR — or swap it.
Point the QR at a tour, landing page, or listing link, or delete it to show the garage icon instead.

6. Brand it, export, reuse.
Add your headshot, logo, and contact details, then print double-sided or export the cover for digital. Copy it for the next listing and update the details.

Why a 2-sided flyer

One page forces a compromise: cram the photo and the facts together, or cut one short. Two sides remove the compromise. The front gets a single strong image that stops a buyer on the counter or in a feed; the back organizes the specs, description, and QR so the details are there without competing with the photo. It’s the difference between a flyer that looks busy and one that looks marketed.

Works well with

  • the 4-Page Listing Brochure when a listing warrants a full, multi-page leave-behind
  • the Just Listed Flyer for the announcement the day you take the listing
  • the QR code can point buyers to whatever next step you want — a tour, a landing page, or a listing link

You don’t need any other product to use this flyer.

Compatibility and setup notes

This is a Canva template — a free Canva account is all you need, and it’s built for Canva’s free plan. It’s 8.5×11; export a double-sided print PDF for the office or a local shop, or export the cover as an image for social and email. The QR module is independent — keep it to link a tour or landing page, or delete it to reveal a matching garage icon. On the banner cover, the headline text is editable. It’s photo-forward, so it reads best with a strong hero image (the banner cover is the more forgiving of the two). It’s a digital template; nothing physical ships, and you reuse it per listing on your own.

Common questions

Which cover should I choose?

Both have the same back; the choice is your hero photo. The “Offered At” cover is clean and lets a well-composed shot lead. The “For Sale” banner cover commands more attention and is more forgiving of an off-ratio or tightly cropped photo, and its headline swaps to “Just Listed,” “Under Contract,” or “Open House.”


Are these two separate products?

Yes — two Etsy listings, one for each cover. The back page is identical. Buy the cover that fits the listing in front of you.


Do I need Canva Pro?

No. Both edit on Canva’s free plan.


Can I change the “For Sale” text?

Yes, on the banner cover — switch it to “Just Listed,” “Under Contract,” or “Open House.”


What if I don’t use QR codes?

Delete the QR and a matching garage icon takes its place — or use the space for an extra detail.


Can I print it myself?

Yes. It’s 8.5×11; export the PDF and print double-sided at your brokerage, FedEx, Staples, or any local shop.


Can I reuse it for more than one listing?

Yes. Copy it, swap the photos and details, and reuse it for every property.