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Rocket Companies, Inc. Proxy Solicitation & Information Statement 2025

May 29, 2025

30055_psi_2025-05-29_fd76da1f-ee12-487e-b78e-58929cc5164c.zip

Proxy Solicitation & Information Statement

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UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

SCHEDULE 14A

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the

Securities Exchange Act of 1934

(Amendment No. )

Filed by the Registrant ☒

Filed by a party other than the Registrant ☐

Check the appropriate box:

☐ Preliminary Proxy Statement

☐ Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))

☒ Definitive Proxy Statement

☐ Definitive Additional Materials

☐ Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12

Rocket Companies, Inc.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check all boxes that apply):

☒ No fee required

☐ Fee paid previously with preliminary materials

☐ Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11

May 29 , 2025

Dear fellow stockholders,

On behalf of the Board of Directors and the leadership team, we invite

you to attend the 2025 annual meeting of stockholders, to be held at:

The 2025 annual meeting of stockholders will be held exclusively online. There will not be a physical location for

the annual meeting and you will not be able to attend the meeting in person. We have designed the format of the

annual meeting to provide stockholders substantially the same rights and opportunities to participate as they

would at an in-person meeting. We hope that you will be able to join and participate.

2024 was a foundational year for Rocket Companies. We executed on our AI-fueled homeownership strategy,

delivered strong financial results, and positioned the company for long-term growth.

In 2024, we helped 365,000 clients buy or refinance a home and served 2.8 million clients in our servicing

portfolio. Throughout the year, we focused on scaling our business, increasing efficiency and growing our share

of the purchase market.

These results reflect the dedication and passion of our team members. They drive innovation, push boundaries

and continuously improve how we serve the homeowners of today and tomorrow.

The home buying market is massive but fragmented. Mortgage origination alone represents a $2 trillion

opportunity, yet no lender holds more than a single-digit market share . The industry remains fragmented,

slow-moving and full of inefficiencies—precisely the kind of challenge Rocket is built to solve.

Innovation has always been at the core of Rocket. We’ve invested in technology and AI for years , and we

accelerated that progress in 2024. AI-powered automation saved 1 million hours of team member time, generating

$40 million in efficiency gains. Our loan officers and operations teams served 54% more clients per person than

the previous year, showing how technology enables us to scale more effectively.

We also introduced new products to help clients navigate the market, including One+ by Rocket Mortgage ® and

Welcome Home RateBreak . In 2024, we more than doubled the volume of our affordable purchase products over

the previous year.

On March 10, 2025, we announced an agreement to purchase Redf in, a leading digital real estate brokerage,

in an all-stock transaction. Founded in 2004, Redfin is one of America’s most recognized real estate brands.

Nearly 50 million monthly visitors use Redfin’s top-three home search platform with more than 1 million for-sale

and rental listings. Plus Redfi n operates a te ch-powered brokerage of more than 2,200 agents to help buyers and

sellers. By combining Redfin’s home search and real estate agents with Rocket’s mortgage origination and

servicing capabilities, we envision a more seamless experience from search to close, to servicing and to future

transactions. We expect that the Redfin acquisition will close in the second or third quarter of 2025.

Rocket also announced that we have entered into an agreement to simplify our organizational and capital

structure on March 10, 2025. We will collapse our current “Up-C” structure, eliminate our high-vote/low-vote

structure and reduce our classes of common stock from four to two (the “Up-C Collapse”). The Up-C Collapse

will simplify our organizational structure, improve our ability to use our common stock as acquisition currency in

acquisition transactions, including the acquisitions of Redfin and Mr. Cooper, create a clearer corporate profile and

enhance equity liquidity.

On March 31, 2025, we entered into an agreement to purchase Mr. Cooper, Inc., America’s largest mortgage

servicer, in an all-stock transaction. With this acquisition, Rocket will bring its industry-leading mortgage recapture

capabilities to a combined servicing book of $2.1 trillion across nearly 10 million clients, representing one in every

six mortgages in America. Ultimately, this combination drives higher loan volume and long-term client

relationships — while providing greater recurring revenue and lowering client acquisition costs. We expect that the

Mr. Cooper acquisition will close in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Rocket is well-positioned for the future. Our focus remains on growing profitable market share, scaling AI-driven

efficiencies, and delivering long-term stockholder value . We are building a modern, intuitive and connected

homeownership experience— one that meets the needs of today’s homeowners and sets the foundation for

the next generation.

We appreciate the trust and confidence of our stockholders, clients, and team members as we continue driving

Rocket forward. We would like to extend our sincere thanks to Nancy Tellem, who is not standing for re-election at

this year’s Annual Meeting. Nancy has served on our Board since Rocket became a public company and has

been a valued contributor over the past five years.

At the meeting, you will have a chance to vote on the matters set forth in the accompanying Notice of 2025 Annual

Meeting of Stockholders and Proxy Statement, and we will share a report on our business and operations.

Your vote is important. Even if you plan to participate in the annual meeting, please vote by internet, telephone

or mail as soon as possible to ensure your vote is recorded promptly. The instructions set forth in the Notice of

Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, proxy card or voting instruction card explain how to vote your shares.

On behalf of the Board of Directors, thank you for your ongoing support of Rocket Companies, Inc.

Sincerely,

Dan Gilbert Founder and Chairman of the Board
Varun Krishna Chief Executive Officer and Member of the Board

Notice of the 2025 annual meeting of stockholders

The accompanying proxy statement is provided in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Board of Directors

of Rocket Companies, Inc. for use at the 2025 annual meeting of stockholders.

The annual meeting is being held virtually by live webcast at: www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RKT2025 on

Wednesday, June 11, 2025, at 1:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, to conduct the following items of business :

Proposal 1
TO ELECT to our Board of Directors two Class II directors, named in the accompanying proxy statement, each to serve for a three-year term and until a successor has been duly elected and qualified, or until such director’s earlier resignation, retirement or other termination of service.
Board recommendation: FOR election of each director nominee Proposal pages: 15 - 16
Proposal 2
TO RATIFY the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2025.
Board recommendation: FOR ratification of EY Proposal pages: 100-101

The accompanying proxy statement describes each of these items of business in detail. The Company will also transact

in any other business that may properly come before the meeting and any postponement or adjournment of the meeting.

We have not received notice of any other matters that may properly be presented at the annual meeting.

Only stockholders of record at the close of business on May 20, 2025 , the date established by our Board of Directors

as the record date, are entitled to receive notice of, and vote at, the annual meeting. Additional information regarding

the virtual meeting is included in the accompanying proxy statement.

Your vote is very important. Whether or not you plan to participate in the annual meeting, we urge you to vote as soon

as possible by internet, telephone or mail as described in the accompanying proxy statement.

Online: Go to www.ProxyVote.com: you can use the internet 24 hours a day to transmit your voting instructions.
By phone: Call 1-800-690-6903: You can use any touch-tone telephone.
By mail: If you receive a printed copy of the proxy materials, complete, sign and return your proxy card or voting instruction card in the enclosed envelope in accordance with the instructions provided in the proxy statement.

By Order of our Board of Directors,

Tina V. John Corporate Secretary at Rocket Companies

DETROIT, MICHIGAN • May 29, 2025

Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Stockholder Meeting to be Held June 11, 2025.

This notice, the proxy statement and the 2024 Annual Report to stockholders are available at www.proxyvote.com.

Table of conten ts

Proxy summary .................................................................................... 2 Option exercises and stock vested in 2024 .............................. 71
Proposal no. 1 – Election of Class II directors ............................ 15 Potential payments upon termination of employment or Change in Control of the Company ....................................... 72
Director independence ................................................................. 17 Pay versus performance .............................................................. 76
Director backgrounds and qualifications ................................... 18 CEO pay ratio ................................................................................ 84
Director nominations and appointments .................................... 26 Certain relationships and related person transactions ............. 85
Corporate governance ........................................................................ 27 Security ownership of certain beneficial owners and management ........................................................................................
Board leadership ........................................................................... 27 97
Board committees ......................................................................... 28 Proposal no. 2 — Ratification of appointment of independent registered public accounting firm for 2025 ........
Risk oversight by the Board ........................................................ 32 100
Corporate policies and practices ................................................ 36 Audit Committee report ................................................................ 102
Human capital management ....................................................... 39 Audit Committee matters ............................................................. 103
Stockholder engagement ............................................................. 41 Questions and answers about the proxy materials and 2025 annual meeting ..................................................................
Communications with our Board ................................................. 42 104
Compensation of Non-Affiliated Directors .................................... 43 Other matters ........................................................................................ 110
Executive officers ................................................................................ 45 Securities authorized for issuance under equity compensation plans ......................................................................
Compensation discussion and analysis ....................................... 49 110
Compensation Committee report .................................................... 65 Presentation of stockholder proposals and director nominations at 2026 annual meeting ........................................
Compensation Committee interlocks and insider participation .......................................................................................... 110
65 Delinquent Section 16(a) reports ................................................ 111
Named executive officer compensation tables ........................... 66 Access to reports and other information .................................... 111
2024 summary compensation table ........................................... 66 Forward-looking statements ........................................................ 111
Grants of plan-based awards in 2024 ........................................ 67
Narrative disclosure to summary compensation table and grants of plan-based awards table .............................................
68
Outstanding equity awards at December 31, 2024 ................. 70

Index of frequently requested information

Topic Page Topic Page
Audit Fees 103 Hedging and Pledging Policies 37
Auditor Ratification Proposal 100 Human Capital Management 39
Board Leadership Structure 27 Key Acquisitions 4
Clawback Policy 63 Peer Group 53
Director Qualifications 9 Proposals and Required Approvals 107
Director Independence 17 Risk Oversight of Board and Board Committees 32
Director Meeting Attendance 27 Stock Ownership Guidelines – Directors 43
Components of Compensation 54 Stock Ownership Guidelines – Named Executive Officers 63
Executive Succession Planning 35 Up-C Collapse 92

Non-GAAP Financial Measures. This proxy statement includes non-GAAP financial measures that excludes the impact

of certain amounts. For their definitions, supplemental information and reconciliations to the most directly comparable

GAAP financial measure, see our earnings release issued on February 27, 2025 that was furnished to the SEC on a Form

8-K as of such date and our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the SEC on

March 3, 2025.

2025 Proxy Report • 1 of 112

Rocket key terms and abbreviations

Common stock

Our authorized classes of common stock are as follows:

Class A common stock, Class B common stock, Class C

common stock and Class D common stock. As of the

record date, only shares of Class A common stock and

Class D common stock are outstanding. See “ Security

ownership of certain beneficial owners and

management ” and “ Certain relationships and related

person transactions – Related person transactions –

Exchange Agreement ” for important information

regarding the voting and economic rights of our classes

of common stock, as well as securities of Rocket

Companies, Inc. and Holdings that may be exchanged

for shares of our classes of common stock. See also,

“ About Rocket Companies— The Up-C Collapse ”

and “ Certain relationships and Related Person

Transactions— Related Person Transactions—

Transaction Agreement ” for a description of how our

classes of common stock will change after the Up-C

Collapse.

Company, we, us, our and

Rocket

Rocket Companies, Inc. is a Delaware corporation

incorporated on February 26, 2020 and is a holding

company. Its primary material asset is the equity

interest in Holdings which, including through its direct

and indirect subsidiaries, conducts a majority of the

Company’s operations. As the sole managing member of

Holdings, Rocket Companies, Inc. operates and controls

all of the business affairs of Holdings, and through

Holdings and its subsidiaries, conducts its business.

Holdings

Rocket, LLC dba RKT Holdings , a Michigan limited

liability company formed on March 6, 2020, wholly

owns the following entities as of December 31, 2024,

with each entity’s subsidiaries identified in parentheses:

Rocket Mortgage, LLC , Amrock Holdings, LLC (“Rocket

Close, LLC”), Rocket Title Insurance Company (“ RTIC ”),

LMB HoldCo LLC (“Core Digital Media”), RCRA Holdings

LLC (Rock Connections LLC dba “Rocket Connections”),

Rocket Homes Real Estate LLC (“Rocket Homes”),

RockLoans Holdings LLC (“Rocket Loans”), Rocket

Money, Inc. (“Rocket Money”), Rocket Worldwide

Holdings, Inc. (EFB Holdings Inc. (“Rocket Mortgage

Canada”)) and Lendesk Canada Holdings Inc. (“Lendesk

Technologies”)), Woodward Capital Management LLC,

and Rocket Card, LLC. As part of the Up-C Collapse,

R ocket, LLC will become “Rocket Limited Partnership”,

a Michigan limited partnership.

“Holdings” will refer to both Rocket, LLC existing prior

to the Pre-Closing Conversion (as defined below) and

Rocket Limited Partnership existing after the Pre-Closing

Conversion.

Holdings Units

The non-voting common interest units of Holdings

prior to the Pre-Closing Conversion and the limited

partnership interests of Holdings after the Pre-Closing

Conversion, as applicable.

RHI

Rock Holdings Inc., our principal stockholder.

RHI Affiliated Entities

RHI and its affiliates other than the Company and

its subsidiaries.

RHI Securities

The outstanding common stock or preferred stock

beneficially owned by RHI or any entity disregarded as

separate from RHI for U.S. federal income tax purposes.

Rocket Mortgage

Rocket Mortgage brand or platform, or the Rocket

Mortgage business, as the context allows.

Team members

Employees of the Company.

Voting Limitation

A provision in our Amended and Restated Certificate

of Incorporation that provides that, at any time when

the aggregate voting power of the RHI Securities

would be equal to or greater than 79% of the total

voting power of our outstanding stock, the number

of votes per share of each RHI Security will be reduced

such that the aggregate voting power of all of the RHI

Securities is equal to 79%.

2025 Proxy Report • 2 of 112

Proxy summary

This proxy summary highlights information regarding Rocket Companies, Inc. and

certain information included elsewhere in this proxy statement. You should read the

entire proxy statement before voting. You should also review our 2024 Annual Report

to stockholders for detailed information regarding the 2024 financial and operating

performance of Rocket Companies, Inc., including the audited financial statements

and related notes included in the report.

We will begin mailing proxy materials on or about May 29, 2025 to holders of record of shares of our Class A common

stock and Class D common stock at the close of business on the record date, May 20, 2025.

2025 annual meeting of Stockholders

Meeting date : Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Time : 1:00 P.M., Eastern Daylight Time
Location (virtual only): www.VirtualShareholderMeeting.com/RKT2025
Record date : Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Please vote today

Your vote is important. Whether or not you plan to virtually attend the annual meeting, we urge you to vote promptly.

Please carefully review the proxy materials and follow the instructions below to cast your vote on all of the proposals.

Voting methods in advance of 2025 annual meeting

Even if you plan to attend the annual meeting, please vote in advance. Make sure to have your proxy card or voting

instruction card and follow the instructions.

Online: Go to www.ProxyVote.com: you can use the internet 24 hours a day to transmit your voting instructions.
By phone: Call 1-800-690-6903: You can use any touch-tone telephone.
By mail: If you receive a printed copy of the proxy materials, complete, sign and return your proxy card or voting instruction card in the enclosed envelope in accordance with the instructions provided in the proxy statement.

Q&A

Please see “ Questions and answers

about the proxy materials and 2025

annual meeting ” for important

information about the annual meeting,

virtual meeting format, proxy materials,

voting, Company documents,

communications, deadlines to submit

stockholder proposals and director

nominations, and other pertinent

information.

2025 Proxy Report • 3 of 112

About Rocket Companies

We are a Detroit-based

fintech company including

mortgage, real estate and

personal finance businesses.

Business overview

We are a Detroit-based financial technology platform with operations spanning mortgage, real estate, and personal

finance.

Our mission is to help more people achieve homeownership through an AI-driven homeownership strategy. In 2024,

we delivered strong financial results, generating $4.9 billion in adjusted revenue 1 , a 30% increase year-over-year.

We expanded profitability in 2024, increasing adjusted diluted earnings per share 1 to $0.23 in 2024, up from ($0.07)

in the prior year.

We continue to expand our overall market share , particularly in home purchase, where no single player holds more

than a single-digit market share. In 2024, we helped 365,000 clients achieve homeownership or access their home

equity and served 2.8 million servicing clients.

Rocket Companies delivers an industry-leading client experience through the Rocket Superstack, which provides a

competitive advantage supporting long-term growth and scale. The Superstack is built on four key pillars: an end-to-end

ecosystem, proprietary AI-driven technology, a seamless multi-channel experience, and the strength of the Rocket brand.

Throughout the year, we expanded and enhanced our durable competitive advantage across our ecosystem, technology,

experience and brand:

Ecosystem : Our origination-servicing model remains central to our long-term growth strategy. By year-end, our

servicing portfolio grew 17% year-over-year to $593 billion in unpaid principal balance, and we added 308,000 new

servicing clients, bringing our total to 2.8 million. This expansion was driven by self-originations, bulk acquisitions,

and the Annaly partnership.

Technology : We leveraged our vast data infrastructure, housing 10 petabytes of information, thousands of client

attributes, and over 65 million call logs annually. Rocket Logic, our AI-powered loan origination system, improved both

client-facing interactions and back-end underwriting. In Q4 2024, our bankers and operations teams served 54% more

clients year-over-year on a per-team-member basis. AI-driven mortgage automation saved 1 million hours of team

member time and drove $40 million in efficiency gains.

Experience : As affordability remained a challenge for homebuyers, we expanded affordable purchase products such

as One+ by Rocket Mortgage ® and Welcome Home RateBreak. In 2024, we more than doubled the volume of these

products compared to 2023.

In early 2025, we also launched Rocket.com and new mobile apps, integrating home search, mortgage, and financing

into a single connected platform.

Brand : We introduced our brand refresh in early 2025, aligning our identity with the evolving needs of today’s

homebuyers. As part of this effort, we launched the "Own the Dream" campaign during the 2025 Super Bowl,

reinforcing our commitment to making homeownership more accessible.

2025 Proxy Report • 4 of 112

2024 was a foundational year for the next chapter of Rocket, and we’re carrying that momentum to help more

people achieve homeownership.

Our shares of Class A common stock are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the symbol “RKT. ”

(1) See the Table of Contents for information regarding our non-GAAP financial measures.

R HI, our principal stockholder

In addition to being our principal stockholder, RHI is the majority stockholder of several other businesses, including

a technology services provider (Detroit Labs) and a fund dedicated to providing low-income housing to combat

homelessness (Rocket Community Fund). For more information on RHI, see “ Certain relationships and related

person transactions .”

Dan Gilbert is the majority stockholder of RHI and serves as the CEO and President of RHI and as the chairman of

RHI’s board of directors. Dan is passionate about building great American cities and has invested billions of dollars

into properties and community programming in Detroit and Cleveland. Dan is also the majority shareholder of the

Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association, the majority shareholder and founder of the real estate

investment firm Bedrock Management Services LLC (“Bedrock”) and the largest shareholder and founder of the

unicorn online startup StockX.

In connection with the Up-C Collapse, we will acquire RHI and RHI will no longer be our principal stockholder. For

more information see “ — The Up-C Collapse ” and “ Certain relationships and related person transactions—

Related person transactions — Transaction Agreement .”

The Redfin a cquisition

On March 10, 2025, we announced that we have entered into an agreement to purchase Redfin, a leading digital real

estate brokerage, in an all-stock transaction in which Redfin stockholders will receive 0.7926 shares of our Class A

common stock per Redfin share. At the time of the announcement, this represented a value of $12.50 per Redfin share,

or $1.75 billion of equity value.

Bringing Rocket and Redfin together is expected to:

Introduce more consumers to the Rocket ecosystem: We will benefit from Redfin’s nearly 50 million monthly visitors,

1 million active purchase and rental listings and staff of 2,200+ real estate agents across 42 states – with Redfin agents

ranking in the top 1% of agents working at any nationwide brokerage.

Drive Rocket’s purchase mortgage growth: The transaction will generate significant revenue synergies across search,

real estate brokerage, mortgage origination, title and servicing. We will match homebuyers with the best real estate agents

and the best loan officers across the combined companies. In 2024, we saw an 8% year-over-year increase in purchase

market share and aim to further accelerate growth through this acquisition.

2025 Proxy Report • 5 of 112

AI, technology and personalization at scale: With more than 14 petabytes of combined data, we will gain unparalleled

consumer insights, including information about homebuyers, sellers and agents across a data repository of 100 million

properties. This data will strengthen our AI models enabling easier and more personalized and automated consumer

experiences.

Achieve significant synergies and earnings accretion: We expect the combined company to achieve more than

$200 million in run-rate synergies by 2027, including approximately $140 million in cost synergies from rationalization

of duplicative operations and other costs. In addition, we expect more than $60 million in revenue synergies from pairing

our financing clients with Redfin real estate agents, and from driving clients working with Redfin agents to our mortgage,

title and servicing offerings. The transaction is expected to be accretive to our adjusted earnings per share by the end of

  1. We will maintain our strong balance sheet and conservative leverage profile upon close of the transaction.

We expect that the Redfin Acquisition will close in the s econd or third quarter of 2025 .

The Mr. Cooper acquisition

On March 31, 2025, we entered into an agreement to purchase Mr. Cooper, America’s largest servicer, in an all-stock

transaction in which Mr. Cooper stockholders will receive 11.00 shares of our Class A common stock per share of Mr.

Cooper common stock. At the time of the announcement, this represented a value of $143.33 per share of Mr. Cooper

common stock, or $9.4 billion of equity value.

Benefits of the combined company:

Scaled homeownership platform: Our combined servicing portfolio will exceed $2.1 trillion in unpaid principal balance

— or one in every six mortgages in America.

Accelerate origination-servicing recapture flywheel: Rocket Mortgage has ranked #1 in J.D. Power’s mortgage

servicer study for 10 years and #1 in mortgage origination 12 times, driving the company’s 83% recapture rate — triple

the industry average. With a significantly larger servicing portfolio, we are poised to sustain its industry-leading retention

and recapture rates.

Significantly increase data set to improve automation, personalization and efficiency: Following the Mr. Cooper

Acquisition, we will gain understanding of nearly 7 million additional client and 150 million annual customer interactions.

Enhance earnings growth opportunity across all interest rate market environments: The combined company will

attain a balanced business model and maintain stability in all market environments. We will drive earnings growth from

high-margin recapture opportunities on the combined servicing portfolio, which together generated $4 billion of servicing

fee revenue in 2024.

Substantial revenue and cost synergies: The transaction is expected to generate $100 million in additional pre-tax

revenue from higher recapture rates and attaching our title, closing and appraisal services to Mr. Cooper’s existing

originations. We project $400 million in pre-tax cost savings from streamlining operations, corporate expense and

technology investments.

Impact on earnings: The Mr. Cooper Acquisition is expected to be accretive to Rocket’s adjusted earnings per share

immediately after closing.

We expect that the Mr. Cooper Acquisition will close in the fourth quarter of 2025.

The Up-C collapse

On March 9, 2025, we entered into an agreement (the “Transaction Agreement”) to simplify our organizational and

capital structure. Under the Transaction Agreement, we will collapse our current “Up-C” structure, eliminate our

high-vote / low-vote structure and reduce our classes of common stock from four to two. Following the Up-C Collapse,

our public stockholders will continue to hold their current shares of common stock, while Dan Gilbert and the other

stockholders of RHI will hold shares of common stock directly in the Company, instead of through RHI, and Dan Gilbert

and RHI will no longer hold Holdings Units. Additionally, shares of common stock to be directly held by Dan Gilbert and

other stockholders of RHI will carry one vote per share, as opposed to the ten votes per share of the Class D common

2025 Proxy Report • 6 of 112

stock they currently hold, and will be subject to a lock up. The Up-C Collapse will simplify our organizational structure

and improve our ability to use our common stock as acquisition currency in acquisition transactions, including the Redfin

Acquisition and the Mr. Cooper Acquisition, creating a clearer corporate profile and enhancing equity liquidity.

On May 1, 2025, we commenced mailing of a notice of action by written consent and accompanying information statement

to our stockholders, which contains important information about the Up-C Collapse and the terms of the Transaction

Agreement.

Following the Up-C Collapse, the Redfin Acquisition and the Mr. Cooper Acquisition, we expect Dan Gilbert to hold

more than a majority of the combined voting power of the Company’s common stock. As a result, we expect to continue

to remain a “controlled company” within the meaning of the NYSE rules.

2025 Proxy Report • 7 of 112

2024 Company performance highlight s

(1) See the Table of contents for information regarding our non-GAAP financial measures.

(2) Total liquidity was $8.2 billion, as of December 31, 2024, which includes $1.3 billion of cash on the balance sheet, and $1.6 billion of corporate cash used to self-fund loan

originations, $3.3 billion of undrawn lines of credit, and $2.0 billion of undrawn MSR lines of credit.

(3) 2023 HMDA data based on closed loan units, excluding correspondent lending.

(4) We define “net client retention rate” as the number of clients that were active at the beginning of a period and which remain active at the end of the period, divided by the

number of clients that were active at the beginning of the period. This metric excludes clients whose loans were sold during the period as well as clients to whom we did

not actively market to due to contractual prohibitions or other business reasons. We define “active” as those clients who do not pay-off their mortgage with us and

originate a new mortgage with another lender during the period.

2025 Proxy Report • 8 of 112

Proposal no. 1 – Class II director nominees for three-year terms

Upon the unanimous recommendation of our Nominating and Governance Committee, our Board has unanimously

nominated each of the following nominees for election as Class II directors to serve for a three-year term and until a

successor has been duly elected and qualified, or until such director’s earlier resignation, retirement or other termination

of service .

Dan Gilbert, Chairman
Age: 63
Director since : March 2020
Independent : No
Committee(s) : None
Primary occupation : Founder and Chairman of the Company
Current service on other public company boards: None
Alastair (Alex) Rampell
Age: 43
Director since: February 2024
Independent: Yes
Committee(s) : None
Primary occupation: General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz
Current service on other public company boards : Wise Ltd. (LSE: WISE.L)

2025 Proxy Report • 9 of 112

A Board with strong composition tailored to Rocket

We believe that our Board has an appropriate mix of skills , expertise and experience to oversee critical matters of the

Company and to represent the interests of our sto ckho lder s . The following represents the skills, expertise, experience

and diversity of the continuing members of our Board.

2025 Proxy Report • 10 of 112

Proposal no. 2 – Ratification of appointment of Ernst & Young as

independent registered public accounting firm for 2025

Our Board is seeking stockholder support of our Audit Committee’s appointment of Ernst & Young as the Company’s

independent registered public accounting firm for 2025. Ernst & Young has served as the independent auditor of the

Company or RHI and its subsidiaries since 1999.

At the 2024 annual meeting of stockholders, stockholders voted more than 99% in favor of the proposal to ratify

the appointment of Ernst & Young as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for 2024.

Our Audit Committee reappointed Ernst & Young as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for

2025 primarily based upon the factors set forth below.

• Performance assessment by our Audit Committee and management

• Expertise and industry knowledge

• Independence, objectivity and professional skepticism

• External data on audit quality and performance

• Reasonableness of fees

• Efficiencies in performing services, including use of technology

• Quality of communications

• Significant institutional knowledge from long tenure

2025 Proxy Report • 11 of 112

Executive compensation

Compensation design

Our executive compensation program, including for our NEOs, consists of fixed compensation (a base salary), a

short-term variable cash compensation component (a cash bonus under our annual cash incentive plan, or “AIP”) and

a long-term variable equity compensation component (long-term equity awards). We refer to the combination of fixed

and variable compensation as total direct compensation. Our program is designed and administered to align with our

compensation philosophy, which includes promoting long-term value creation, balancing short- and long-term performance

and providing competitive pay.

In 2024, we implemented a number of enhancements to our executive compensation program to better reflect

and reinforce our compensation philosophy and objectives. These enhancements aim to:

• Strengthen our pay-for-performance culture by aligning compensation decisions more closely with

Company performance

• Reward achievement of short- and long-term results that reflect our strategic goals and create

long-term stockholder value

• Attract, motivate and retain executive talent to drive our long-term success

W e accomplished these objectives and reinforced the business strategy and pay-for-performance culture through the

adoption of new variable compensation components: the AIP and performance-based restricted stock units (“PSUs”) .

• Variable cash component : Transitioned our cash bonus from a fully discretionary cash bonus payout to the AIP.

The AIP consists of objective Company financial performance metrics ( two-thirds of the target cash bonus ), and

a subjective assessment of Company performance via a scorecard ( one-third of the target cash bonus ) covering

three core focus areas: (1) Execution; (2) Client; and (3) Culture.

• Variable equity component : Transitioned our long-term equity award from solely consisting of restricted stock

units (“RSUs”) that are subject to an ongoing service condition to an equal split of the total equity grant value

into 50% RSUs and 50% PSUs, with three year performance goal.

2024 CEO target compensation and pay components

Varun joined the Company as Chief Executive

Officer (“CEO”) in September 2023, and his total

direct compensation was set forth in his employment

agreement that was approved by our Compensation

Committee. The agreement included his annual base

salary and annual bonus target, as a percentage of

base salary, and provided that he was eligible for his

initial annual long-term equity award in 2024, including

the amounts to be awarded in RSUs and PSUs in

March 2024, as part of annual compensation decisions.

The majority of the CEO’s target total direct compensation

is subject to forfeiture (“at-risk”) with an emphasis on

variable compensation to reward short- and long-term

performance measured against financial and non-financial

goals informed by our Company’s strategy. The only fixed

component is base salary.

The chart summarizes the 2024 components of the

compensation that comprised the CEO’s target total

direct compensation opportunity, with approximately 94%

delivered in variable compensation. See the “2024 summary

compensation table” for compensation actually paid for 2024.

2025 Proxy Report • 12 of 112

Compensation governance

Our Compensation Committee and the Company adhere to many compensation policies and practices that are aligned

with our compensation philosophy and objectives.

See “ Compensation discussion and analysis ” for detailed information regarding the foregoing matters and additional

information as to our executive compensation program applicable to our NEOs.

Corporate governance highlights

We believe our corporate governance policies and practices are reasonable and appropriate for a controlled company.

Key elements of our governance are set forth below.

Human capital management

Being all-in

Rocket Companies invests for the long term and places tremendous value in supporting our team members, clients and

hometowns. Dan Gilbert, our founder and Chairman, purposefully created a strong cultural foundation of core principles,

or “ISMs”, as a cultural operating system to guide decision making by all of our team members. These ISMs are our DNA,

compass and foundation. At the heart of the ISMs is a simple, yet powerful, concept: “Love our team members. Love our

2025 Proxy Report • 13 of 112

clients.” Our team members put the ISMs into action every day. The result is an empowered and passionate team aligned

in a common mission. In 2024, 87% of team members participated in our annual engagement survey.

• In 2024, 93% of team members stated the work they do has an impact on the Company’s success.

• In 2024, 87% of team members shared they are proud to work for Rocket Companies.

As part of our ‘ALL IN’ talent strategy, we provide tools and resources to our team members that enable them to reach

their full potential, build their own career paths, enhance their well-being and support their financial goals. Our team

members have access to training and mentorship opportunities, specialized leadership programs and a variety of

educational programs. These programs include Rocket Academy, our tuition assistance program, as well as our internal

mobility program, THRIVE. We also actively provide and promote opportunities for our team members to share their

voice and engage with our community.

• In 2024, approximately 93% of our team members feel good about various ways the Company contributes

to the community.

• In 2024, 72% of our team members participated in community volunteering or giving events.

Our commitment to fostering a workplace where every team member thrives is deeply rooted in our culture and

values. We are dedicated to creating an environment of openness, trust, and belonging—where unique perspectives

and experiences fuel innovation and excellence. To build the strongest, most dynamic teams, we actively seek and

hire talent from a wide range of backgrounds. We also encourage collaboration, learning and connection through our

Team Member Resource Networks, which are open to all team members.

• Rocket Companies ranked on Fortune Magazine’s list of 100 Best Companies to Work For in 2024 and has

ranked in the top-30 companies on the list for 22 consecutive years.

• People Magazine’s 100 Companies that Companies That Care list ranked Rocket Companies #11 in 2024.

• Newsweek named Rocket Companies one of America’s Greatest Workplaces for Inclusion & Diversity in 2024.

• In 2024, 86% of our team members feel they can be their authentic self at work.

2025 Proxy Report • 14 of 112

Additional resources

Annual meeting Board and management
Proxy Statement. Board of Directors. https://www.rocketcompanies.com/ our-team/board-of-directors/
Annual Report. Management. https://www.rocketcompanies.com/our- team/leadership/
Voting Website. www.proxyvote.com
Certain governance and compensation documents Other
Code of Conduct and Ethics. Investor Relations. ir.rocketcompanies.com
Corporate Governance Guidelines. 2024 Rocket Community Fund Report. https:// www.rocketcommunityfund.org/impact-report-2024/
Committee Charters.
Insider Trading Policy.
Clawback Policy.
ir.rocketcompanies.com/governance/governance- documents

2025 Proxy Report • 15 of 112

Proposal no. 1 – election of Class II directors

Upon the unanimous recommendation of our Nominating and Governance Committee,

our Board has unanimously nominated directors Dan Gilbert and Alastair (Alex)

Rampell for election as Class II directors at the annual meeting for new three-year

terms, each to serve until the 2028 annual meeting of stockholders and until a

successor has been duly elected and qualified, or until such director’s earlier

resignation, retirement or other termination of service . Nancy Tellem, a Class II director,

has determined not to stand for re-election and will serve the remainder of her term,

which will end prior to the annual meeting.

Our Board

CLASS II CLASS III CLASS I
Terms Expiring in 2025 Terms Expiring in 2026 Terms Expiring in 2027
Dan Gilbert Varun Krishna Bill Emerson
Alastair (Alex) Rampell Matthew Rizik Jennifer Gilbert
Suzanne Shank Jonathan Mariner

2025 Proxy Report • 16 of 112

Board size and terms

In accordance with our Certificate of Incorporation and bylaws, the number of directors on our Board will be determined

from time to time by our Board. Our Certificate of Incorporation provides that our Board is divided into three classes of

directors, with staggered three-year terms. Historically, the Board has consisted of nine directors. Following the expiration

of Nancy’s term, the size of the Board will be decreased to eight directors. Approximately one-third of our Board will be

elected each year. Information regarding each director nominee and continuing director is set forth below as of the record

date.

Board composition – a balanced, skilled Board, including four experienced

independent directors

Our Board includes directors with varied attributes, backgrounds, qualifications, skills and experience relevant

to the Company’s business to serve the long-term interests of the Company and our stockholders. The Company

believes that each of our director nominees and continuing directors possesses strong character and integrity, and

works cohesively and constructively with each other and with management of the Company. Each of the directors has

demonstrated business acumen and an ability to exercise sound judgment. See “ Proxy summary – A Board with

strong composition tailored to Rocket ” for further information regarding our Board’s broad array of knowledge,

experience, skills, backgrounds and other attributes.

Although we remain a controlled company that is not subject to the independence requirements of the NYSE, we

have four highly-qualified independent directors who enhance our Board with extensive public company experience,

independent judgment and unique perspectives. Nancy, Suzanne and Jonathan comprise our fully independent Audit

Committee, each of them qualifies as an audit committee financial expert, and each of them serves on two Board

Committees. In February 2024, our Board expanded the Board from eight to nine directors and concurrently appointed

Alex Rampell to our Board as a Class II director. Alex, our fourth independent director, is a thought leader in AI and the

financial services industry. Following the expiration of Nancy’s term, the size of the Board will decrease to eight directors.

Voting considerations

The individuals named as proxies in the form of proxy solicited by our Board intend to vote the represented shares for

such nominees, unless otherwise instructed on the form of proxy. The individuals named as proxies cannot vote for

more than two nominees for election as directors at the annual meeting.

Each of the nominees has consented to be named in this proxy statement and to serve if elected. If one or more of the

nominees confirm before the election that they are unable or unwilling to serve, the proxy holders will vote the proxies

for any remaining Board nominee and for any substitute nominee nominated by our Board. Alternatively, our Board may

reduce the size of our Board and, therefore, the number of directors to be elected. If any substitute nominee is designated,

we will file amended proxy materials required by the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”)

that, as applicable, identifies any substitute nominee, discloses that such nominee has consented to being named in

the revised proxy statement and to serve if elected, and includes certain biographical and other information about

such nominee.

2025 Proxy Report • 17 of 112

Director independence

Controlled company exception

Our shares of Class A common stock are listed on the NYSE. As RHI controls more than 50% of our combined voting

power, we are considered a controlled company for the purposes of the rules and corporate governance standards of the

NYSE. As a controlled company, we are not required to comply with certain corporate governance requirements, including

(1) that our Board have a majority of independent directors, (2) that we establish a compensation committee composed

entirely of independent directors and (3) that we have a nominating and governance committee comprised entirely of

independent directors, or otherwise ensure that the nominees for directors are determined or recommended to our Board

by the independent members of our Board. However, we are subject to and comply with the requirement that we have an

audit committee composed entirely of independent members. If at any time we cease to be a controlled company under

the rules of the NYSE, our Board will take all action necessary to comply with the applicable rules of the NYSE, including

appointing a majority of independent directors to our Board and establishing certain committees composed entirely of

independent directors, subject to a permitted phase-in period.

Four independent directors

Our Board recently undertook its annual review of director independence in accordance with the applicable rules of

the NYSE. The independence rules include a series of objective tests, including that the director is not employed by

us and has not engaged in various types of business dealings with us. In addition, our Board must make a subjective

determination as to each independent director that no relationship exists which, in the opinion of our Board, would

interfere with the exercise of independent judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of a director. In making these

determinations, our Nominating and Governance Committee made recommendations to our Board based on its review

and discussion of information provided by the directors and us regarding each director’s business and personal activities

as they may relate to us and our management.

Our Board has determined that each of Jonathan Mariner, Alex Rampell, Suzanne Shank and Nancy Tellem are

independent directors as such term is defined by the applicable rules and regulations of the NYSE. In addition, after

considering all of the relevant facts and circumstances, our Board has determined that each of: (1) Jonathan Mariner,

Suzanne Shank and Nancy Tellem, for purposes of service on our Audit Committee, and (2) Jonathan Mariner and

Nancy Tellem, for purposes of service on our Compensation Committee, qualifies as independent in accordance with

the additional independence rules established by the SEC and the NYSE for such committees. Matthew Rizik, who

serves as the Chair of the Compensation Committee, is the only current member of the Compensation Committee that

does not qualify as independent under applicable independence standards. All of the members of the Audit Committee

qualify as independent under applicable independence standards.

2025 Proxy Report • 18 of 112

Director backgrounds and qualifications

Class II directors with terms expiring in 2025

Dan Gilbert, Chairman of our Board

Age : 63
Director and Chairman since : March 2020
Chairman of Rocket Mortgage since : 1985

Dan Gilbert is the Chairman of our Board. Dan is the founder of Rocket Mortgage, where he is currently a manager and

served as Chairman of the board of directors from 1985 to 2020 . He also served as the Chief Executive Officer of Rocket

Mortgage from 1985 to 2002. Prior to the Up-C Collapse, Dan is the majority owner of RH I, and the Chairman of its board

of directors, a position he has held since 2002. Dan was appointed as CEO and President of RHI in March 2023, and Dan

also serves in officer and director roles for certain RHI affiliates. Dan is the majority owner of the NBA Cleveland Cavaliers

basketball team and the operator of the Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. Furthermore, he is the Chairman of ROCK and

majority shareholder and founder of the real estate investment firm Bedrock, which has invested and committed billions to

acquiring and developing more than 100 properties, including new construction of ground up developments in downtown

Detroit and Cleveland, and totaling more than 18 million square feet in Detroit’s downtown urban core. In February 2016,

Dan co-founded Detroit-based StockX, the world’s first “stock market of things,” combining the visible, liquid, anonymous,

and transparent benefits of a stock market with the online consumer secondary market. In 2015, Dan and Jennifer Gilbert

established the Gilbert Family Foundation and in 2017, formed NF Forward to fund cutting-edge research dedicated to

finding a cure for neurofibromatosis (NF). Dan earned his Bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University and his law

degree from Wayne State University.

As our founder and Chairman and a national leader in the mortgage industry, Dan has provided us with critical leadership

during our entire 40-year history, including his service as Chief Executive Officer from 1985 until 2002. In that role, he

pioneered the digitization of mortgages in America, revolutionized the mortgage industry, and created our ISMs as the

guiding principles and philosophy for our team members, which continue to define our corporate culture as well as

fundamental corporate strategies and innovation. Our Board also benefits from his in-depth industry knowledge and

significant relationships with key business partners and national business leaders.

Favorite ISM : Always Raising Our Level Of Awareness.

2025 Proxy Report • 19 of 112

Class II directors with terms expiring in 2025, continued

Alastair (Alex) Rampell, Director (Independent)

Age : 43
Director since : February 2024
Public Company Boards : Current • Wise Ltd. (since 2021; LSE: WISE.L), a UK-based foreign exchange financial technology company

Alex Rampell is a member of our Board. Alex has been a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz, where he focuses

on financial services, since October 2015. Alex serves on the boards of several Andreessen Horowitz portfolio companies

and has led a number of Andreessen Horowitz’s investments. Prior to joining Andreessen Horowitz, Alex co-founded

multiple companies including Affirm, FraudEliminator, Point, TrialPay, TXN, and Yub. He currently is a member of the

board of directors of Wise, Ltd., a position he has held since 2021, and from 2015 to 2017, he was a member of the

board of directors of KCG Holdings, Inc. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Applied Mathematics and Computer Science

from Harvard University.

Alex is one of the world’s experts on artificial intelligence and provides a unique perspective on the intersection of

technology, finance and emerging trends. Alex contributes his senior leadership and private board experience and

financial services expertise to our Board from his service to the portfolio companies of Andreessen Horowitz, as

well as his prior serial entrepreneurship, including cofounding many tech-driven financial companies. Alex also has

significant expertise in business strategy, emerging trends, innovation and technology, including responsible use of

artificial intelligence, and corporate governance. He also has public company experience with a foreign-listed company.

Favorite ISM : Obsessed With Finding A Better Way.

2025 Proxy Report • 20 of 112

Class III directors with terms expiring in 2026

Varun Krishna, Chief Executive Officer, Director

Age: 43
Director since: December 2023

Varun Krishna is our Chief Executive Officer. Varun has held this position since September 2023. As CEO of Rocket

Companies and as CEO of Rocket Mortgage, Varun is responsible for guiding business strategy and overseeing its

implementation as well as overseeing how Rocket’s brands and products work together as an ecosystem . He previously

served as Executive Vice President and General Manager of Intuit Inc.’s Consumer Group from May 2022 to September

2023, holding the positions of Senior Vice President and General Manager of Growth Products and Senior Vice President

and General Manager of Mint, from February 2022 and January 2020, respectively. He joined Intuit in September 2015

as Vice President of Product for Intuit’s TurboTax business unit and became Senior Vice President of Product for TurboTax

and Mint in August 2019. At Intuit, Varun was responsible for overseeing the organization’s end-to-end suite of consumer

and tax products and services, including TurboTax and TurboTax Live. Prior to Intuit, Varun held executive positions at

PayPal, Groupon, and BetterWorks after spending some of his early career at Microsoft overseeing a variety of product

lines and features. Varun holds a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Engineering from the University of Waterloo in Canada.

Varun contributes his significant executive leadership experience and business acumen gained within the fintech industry

to our Board, while also providing his unique insights as our Chief Executive Officer. Varun has a proven track record of

driving product growth and enhancing client experiences through strategy and innovation. His entrepreneurial mindset

and tech-forward vision make him a key asset to the Board.

Favorite ISM : Obsessed With Finding A Better Way.

2025 Proxy Report • 21 of 112

Class III directors with terms expiring in 2026, continued

Matthew Rizik, Director

Age: 70
Director since: March 2020
Committee memberships: Compensation (Chair), Nominating and Governance (Chair)

Matthew Rizik is a member of our Board as well as a director of RHI. The Company has also engaged Matthew as

a consultant since 2020. Matthew’s compensation is provided entirely pursuant to his role as a consultant, and he

is not compensated additionally for his service on the Board or as a director of RHI. Matthew joined RHI in 2012

as the Chief Tax Officer and is currently Treasurer, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Tax Officer. In February 2023,

Matthew was appointed as the Chief Executive Officer of ROCK. Prior to joining RHI, Matthew was a tax partner

with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP in Detroit, where he had over 31 years of experience serving Fortune 500 public

companies. Matthew currently serves as a board member of ROCK , Bedrock, Rocket Mortgage, Rocket Classic, the

Cleveland Cavaliers, the Motown Museum Legacy Council, City Year, Gilbert Family Foundation, Rocket Giving Fund

and NF Forward. Matthew is a Certified Public Account and is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public

Accountants and the Michigan Association of CPAs. Matthew earned a Bachelor’s degree in Accounting and a Master’s

degree in Business Administration from Michigan State University.

Matthew is qualified to serve as a member of our Board due to his significant senior leadership experience in the areas of

accounting and tax. As Chief Financial Officer of RHI with prior experience serving prominent companies in the banking

and mortgage industries, his significant knowledge and experience brings important perspective on our business strategy,

operating structure, operations and general industry conditions.

Favorite ISM : You’ll See It When You Believe It.

2025 Proxy Report • 22 of 112

Class III directors with terms expiring in 2026, continued

Suzanne Shank, Director (Independent)

Age: 63
Director since: August 2020
Committee memberships: Audit, Nominating and Governance
Public Company Boards: Current • CMS Energy and Consumer’s Energy (since 2019; NYSE: CMS), an electric and natural gas utility provider + Audit (Member), Executive (Member), Finance (Chair) • White Mountains Insurance Group Ltd. (since 2021; NYSE: WTM), a Bermuda company engaged in the business of making acquisitions in the insurance, financial services and related sectors + Finance (Member), Compensation and Nominating and Governance (Member) Last five years • American Virtual Cloud Technologies (2017 to 2020; Nasdaq: AVCT), a blank check company, or a SPAC + Audit (Member), Nominating (Member)

Suzanne Shank is a member of our Board. Suzanne is the President, CEO and co-founder of Siebert Williams Shank &

Co., LLC, a full-service investment banking firm offering debt and equity origination services to a wide range of Fortune

500 companies and debt underwriting for municipal clients nationally. She has held this role since 2019. Previously,

Suzanne was Chairperson and CEO of Siebert Cisneros Shank & Co., L.L.C., a firm which she co-founded in 1996.

Suzanne currently serves as a board member of CMS Energy and Consumers Energy as well as White Mountains

Insurance Group Ltd., and also serves on private company boards of the Kresge Foundation, the Skillman Foundation,

the Detroit Regional Chamber (Executive Committee), Partnership for New York City, and the Spelman College Board

of Trustees. She formerly served on the board of SIFMA, the SEC’s Fixed Income Market Structure Advisory Committee,

the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board and the Bipartisan Policy Center’s CEO Council on Infrastructure. Suzanne

earned a Bachelor’s degree in Civil Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology and a Master’s degree in

Business Administration from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania.

Suzanne’s senior leadership experience in the financial services industry is of particular importance to our Board given

the Company’s ongoing business and strategy. Further, her experience as a current and former director of other public

companies provides our Board with an important perspective on many fundamental areas of oversight, including

governance, finance, accounting, stockholder engagement and risk management. Our Board has determined that she

qualifies as an audit committee financial expert under SEC rules.

Favorite ISM : Do The Right Thing.

2025 Proxy Report • 23 of 112

Class I directors with terms expiring in 2027

Bill Emerson, President, Director

Age: 62
Director since: February 2023

Bill Emerson is a member of our Board, and has served as our President since September 5, 2023. In this executive

position, he is a strategic advisor to the CEO. He served as our Chief Operating Officer from September 2023 until June

2024 as well as our Interim Chief Executive Officer from June 2023 to September 2023. Bill was previously Vice Chairman

of RHI, a position he held from February 2017 until May 2023, and he served in a leadership role at Bedrock from July

2020 until February 2023. In both roles, he was responsible for leadership, growth and development of culture. From

2002 to 2017, Bill was Chief Executive Officer of Rocket Mortgage, the Company’s flagship business, a position he held

for 15 years. Bill is a member of the board of directors of the United Way of Southeast Michigan; Detroit Economic

Club; Detroit Sports Organizing Committee; Housing Policy Council; Rocket Giving Fund; Rocket Classic; The Parade

Company; the Detroit Children’s Fund and the Skillman Foundation. Bill earned a Bachelor’s degree in business from

Penn State University.

Bill’s extensive leadership roles in our key businesses for many years gives him a unique understanding of our business,

culture and history through many economic cycles, which is particularly critical given recent executive transitions and the

current macroeconomic challenges. His senior leadership experience also provides our Board with valuable perspective

in significant areas of oversight such as long-term strategy, budgeting, risk management, human capital management and

succession planning.

Favorite ISM : You’ll See It When You Believe It.

2025 Proxy Report • 24 of 112

Class I directors with terms expiring in 2027, continued

Jennifer Gilbert, Director

Age: 56
Director since: March 2020
Committee memberships: Nominating and Governance

Jennifer Gilbert is a member of our Board. Jennifer is the wife of Dan Gilbert. Jennifer has been a director of RHI since

2019 and currently serves as a board member of ROCK and the Gilbert Family Foundation. With more than 20 years of

experience in interior design, Jennifer Gilbert has evolved her expertise to serve as the Founder and Creative Director

of Detroit-based POPHOUSE, a commercial design firm specializing in utilizing data and industry research to provide

cutting-edge workplaces for clients across a broad spectrum of industries since 2013. Jennifer also founded Amber

Engine in 2015, a Detroit-based home furnishings services and solutions technology company. Amber Engine’s mission

is to provide the most accurate, complete and timely record of product data for the $275 billion home furnishings industry

through its easy-to-use, flexible and affordable cloud-based SaaS solutions. Amber Engine was sold to Material Bank in

March 2022. Prior to Amber Engine, Jennifer founded Doodle Home, a digital platform for residential interior designers.

Doodle Home was sold to Dering Hall in 2015. Jennifer is active with a number of non-profits focused on the arts, Jewish

causes and finding a cure for neurofibromatosis (NF). She is President of NF Forward, Chair of the Cranbrook Academy

of Art Board of Governors. Jennifer founded the Detroit Art Collection to beautify and inspire public spaces and structures

in downtown Detroit with sculptural and mixed media works from local, as well as national artists, galleries and dealers.

Jennifer earned her Bachelor of Arts in Interior Design at Michigan State University.

As a founder of companies focused on delivering a strong client experience surrounding data, research and technology-

driven solutions, Jennifer contributes to our Board her significant business and leadership experience in the areas of

innovation and technology, entrepreneurship and strategic thinking and client experience. Further, her commitment to

notable non-profit businesses serving key community needs provides her insight to the key drivers and importance of

culture, sustainability and human capital.

Favorite ISM : Every Client. Every Time.

2025 Proxy Report • 25 of 112

Class I directors with terms expiring in 2027, continued

Jonathan Mariner, Director (Independent)

Age: 70
Director since: March 2020
Committee memberships: Audit (Chair), Compensation
Public Company Boards: Current • Five9, Inc. (since 2023; Nasdaq: FIVN), a provider of cloud contact centers + Audit (Member) • OneStream, Inc. (since 2024; Nasdaq: OS), an enterprise finance management platform + Audit (Member ) Last five years • Tyson Foods, Inc (2019 to 2025; NYSE: TSN), a global food company • Enjoy Technology, Inc. (2021 to 2022; a public company through July 2022; Nasdaq: ENJY) an eCommerce company

J onathan Mariner i s a member of our Board. Jonathan has served as the Founder and President of TaxDay, LLC, a

mobile residency tax tracking application, since April 2016. Jonathan previously served in various roles for Legacy EJY,

Inc. (formerly known as Enjoy Technology, Inc.), an operator of mobile retail stores that went public in 2021, including

as a member of the board of directors (from December 2020 to September 2022), Chief Administrative Officer (from

December 2020 to September 2022), and Chief People Officer (from February 2021 to January 2022). On June 30, 2022,

Enjoy filed voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the United States Code in the United States Bankruptcy

Court for the District of Delaware. He also served in executive leadership roles at the Major League Baseball, including as

Chief Investment Officer from January 2015 to May 2016 and as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer from

March 2002 to December 2014, and as Interim Head of Regional Sports Networks for The Walt Disney Company in 2019

prior to their sale to Sinclair Broadcasting. Prior to his position at the Major League Baseball, he was the Chief Financial

Officer for the Florida Marlins Baseball Club, Florida Panthers Hockey Club and Dolphins Stadium. He has served as a

board member of Five9, Inc. since May 2023 and OneStream, Inc. since July 2024, and various other private companies

and organizations, including McGraw-Hill Education since 2016 and IEX Group, Inc. since 2016. He previously served

as a board member of Tyson Foods, Inc., Ultimate Software Group Inc. and FM Global Insurance, Inc. Jonathan earned

a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Virginia and a Master’s degree in Business Administration from the Harvard

Business School. He was previously a certified public accountant.

Through his numerous executive roles and as a former CPA, Jonathan contributes to our Board with significant leadership

experience in finance, investments, human capital, compliance, accounting and strategy. Further, through his experience

at Enjoy Technology and as founder of a software company, he also has experience in technology, client development

and user experience, and industry disruptive innovation. Jonathan’s ongoing service as a director of other public company

boards also provides critical knowledge on key oversight functions. Our Board has determined that he qualifies as an audit

committee financial expert under SEC rules, providing the basis for his critical leadership as our Audit Committee Chair.

Favorite ISM : We’ll Figure It Out.

2025 Proxy Report • 26 of 112

Director nominations and appointments

Our Nominating and Governance Committee is responsible for recommending director candidates to our Board,

including reviewing current directors for re-nomination. Our Board seeks members from a range of professional and

personal backgrounds who combine a broad spectrum of experience and expertise with a reputation for integrity.

In assessing director candidates to fulfill the foregoing, our Nominating and Governance Committee considers those

factors it deems appropriate in the context of the needs of the Company and the overall composition of our Board.

These factors include the individual’s:

• Skills, diversity of experience and perspective and other background;

• Demonstration of leadership and a history of high-performance and achievement;

• Possession of high ethical standards and integrity;

• Ability to exercise sound judgment and be accountable;

• Ability to interact with others in a manner which encourages responsible, open, challenging and inspired

discussion; and

• Independence, as applicable.

Our Board, taking into account the recommendations of our Nominating and Governance Committee, selects nominees

for election as directors at each annual meeting of stockholders. Our Nominating and Governance Committee and Board

evaluate candidates to fill any vacancies during the year on a similar basis.

Our Nominating and Governance Committee considers candidates for our Board from any reasonable source, including

recommendations from our existing directors, management, stockholders and any third-party search firms engaged, and

does not evaluate candidates differently based on the source of the recommendation. Our Nominating and Governance

Committee’s charter provides it with the authority to retain and terminate search firms to identify director candidates,

consultants and any other advisors to assist it in carrying out its duties.

Stockholders may recommend director candidates for consideration by our Nominating and Governance Committee by

giving written notice of the recommendation to the Chair of our Nominating and Governance Committee, in care of the

Company, at the Company’s principal executive offices at 1050 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226.

2025 Proxy Report • 27 of 112

Corporate governance

Our Board has general oversight responsibility for the business and affairs of the Company. The directors, in exercising

their duties, represent and act on behalf of the stockholders. Our Board serves as the ultimate decision-making body

of the Company, except for those matters reserved to (or shared with) our stockholders. Our Board is responsible for

overseeing senior management, which is, in turn, responsible for the operations of the Company. Although our Board

does not have responsibility for our day-to-day management, it stays regularly informed about our business and provides

guidance to senior management through periodic meetings and other informal engagement.

Our Board and Board Committees meet throughout the year at regularly scheduled meetings and informational sessions,

and also hold special meetings, strategy day meetings and act by written consent as appropriate. The non-management

directors hold executive sessions to meet without management present, generally at regularly scheduled Board meetings

as well as other times that such directors deem appropriate. The independent directors meet in executive session at least

once per year.

Our Board’s primary areas of focus include strategy, finance, marketing, capital markets and capital allocation,

leadership development and succession planning, risk management (including cybersecurity), corporate governance

and compliance, human capital management and ESG, as well as evaluating management and guiding changes as

circumstances warrant. As described below, significant additional responsibilities are delegated to Board Committees,

which report to our Board on their activities and actions on a regular basis. The Board Committees include our Audit

Committee, Compensation Committee and Nominating and Governance Committee.

Directors are expected to attend Board meetings, Board Committee meetings as applicable, and the annual meeting

of stockholders. We permit participation by telephone or videoconference, which is deemed attendance for all meetings.

All of our then-current directors attended the 2024 annual meeting of stockholders.

Our Board met 5 times during 2024. In 2024, each of our directors attended 75% or more of the meetings of our Board

and all Board Committees on which such director served.

Board leaders hip

Our Board operates under the leadership of our Chairman, Dan Gilbert. Our Board believes Dan is best suited to

serve as Chairman and guide the strategic priorities of the Company in light of his substantial industry knowledge and

experience as founder, current Chairman and former Chief Executive Officer of Rocket Mortgage, one of our key operating

subsidiaries. In addition, Dan Gilbert and RHI, our principal stockholder, which is controlled by Dan Gilbert, hold all of our

issued and outstanding Class D common stock and control 79% of the combined voting power of our common stock as

of the record date. Accordingly, RHI and Dan Gilbert control our business, policies and affairs. RHI and Dan Gilbert also

can control any action requiring the general approval of our stockholders, including the election of our Board, the adoption

of amendments to our Certificate of Incorporation and bylaws and the approval of any merger or sale of substantially all

of our assets. Varun, our Chief Executive Officer, is responsible for the Company’s day-to-day operations and strategic

leadership, and implementing the actions, policies and strategies approved by the Board.

Our Board believes that, by separating the positions of Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, the Board can provide

significant leadership to management and strong oversight of key opportunities and risks impacting the Company while

providing more time for the Chief Executive Officer to manage the business and develop and implement strategies. Our

Board also believes that the Company and its stockholders are best served by maintaining flexibility to have any director

serve as Chairman or Vice Chairman and periodically evaluate whether to have an independent lead director. Our Board

recognizes the increasing utilization of non-executive chairmen and independent lead directors in many public companies.

However, our Board believes its current leadership structure is most appropriate for us as a controlled company and

best serves the stockholders of the Company at this time. The Corporate Governance Guidelines require us to have

an independent lead director if we are no longer a controlled company under the rules of the NYSE, and the Chairman

is not an independent director.

There is no “one size fits all” approach to ensuring independent leadership. Our Board believes that its four independent

directors are deeply engaged and provide significant independent leadership and direction given their executive and

Board experience. Three independent directors are sole members of our Audit Committee, two independent directors

serve on our Compensation Committee and one independent director serves on our Nominating and Governance

Committee, which collectively oversee critical matters of the Company. When our non-management or independent

directors meet in executive sessions, Jonathan Mariner generally presides over such sessions. The independent directors

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further have access to team members and independent advisors as they deem appropriate. Management supports this

oversight role through its tone-at-the-top and open communication.

Board committees

Our Board has delegated various responsibilities and authority to Board Committees, which include our Audit

Committee, Compensation Committee and Nominating and Governance Committee. Each Board Committee may

form and delegate authority to subcommittees from time to time as it sees fit, subject to applicable law and the NYSE

regulations. Each Board Committee operates under a written charter approved by our Board, which is reviewed annually

by the respective Board Committee and is available on the Governance tab of our investor relations website located at

ir.rocketcompanies.com.

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Audit Committee

Jonathan Mariner, Chair
2024 Meetings: 6

Our Audit Committee assists our Board by providing independent, objective oversight

of our auditing, accounting, risk management and financial reporting activities.

The principal responsibilities of our Audit Committee are to:

• Oversee the reliability and integrity of the Company’s accounting policies, financial statements and other financial

information provided by the Company to its stockholders, the general public, the SEC and the NYSE;

• Oversee the Company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, including monitoring related key

governance policies;

• Review the qualifications, independence and performance of the Company’s independent auditor, with direct

responsibility for the appointment, compensation, retention (including termination) and oversight of our

independent auditor, who reports directly to our Audit Committee;

• Oversee the performance of the Company’s internal audit function, and the effectiveness of internal control over

financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures;

• Oversee the Company’s cybersecurity, information and technology security and data privacy strategies and

policies;

• Oversee the Company’s major financial risk exposures and management’s risk management policies;

• Assist the Board in fulfilling its oversight of enterprise risk management, including, but not limited to, cybersecurity

and data governance;

• Review and approve any related person transactions; and

• Review certain disclosures and proposals in any proxy statement or other SEC filing related to Audit Committee

matters, including review of its report furnished in this proxy statement.

Our Board has determined that each Audit Committee member has sufficient knowledge in reading and understanding

financial statements to serve on our Audit Committee and is otherwise financially literate. Our Board has determined that

each of Jonathan Mariner, Suzanne Shank and Nancy Tellem qualifies as an audit committee financial expert as such

term is defined under the rules of the SEC .

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Compensation Committee

Matthew Rizik, Chair
2024 Meetings: 8

Our Compensation Committee is responsible for the compensation of our executive

officers, including our Chief Executive Officer, and for oversight of our incentive

compensation and equity-based plans.

The principal responsibilities of our Compensation Committee are to:

• Review and approve or make recommendations to the Board with respect to the Company’s compensation

strategy to ensure it is effective to attract, reward and retain senior management and other key team members;

• Review and approve or make recommendations to the Board with respect to the philosophy, policies and programs

of executive compensation and human capital management and discuss, at least annually, risk management with

respect to the material underlying risks associated with executive compensation;

• Review and approve corporate goals and objectives relevant to the compensation of our executive officers, the

evaluation of the executive officers’ performance in light of those goals and objectives and determine and approve

executive officer compensation based on this evaluation;

• Review and make recommendations to our Board with respect to the Company’s incentive compensation

and equity-based plans and administer such plans;

• Review and make recommendations to our Board regarding any employment, severance and other

compensatory-related agreements with our executive officers;

• Monitor compliance with stock ownership guidelines;

• Administer our Clawback Policy as delegated by our Board;

• Review, at least annually, the relationship between risk management policies and practices, corporate strategy

and our compensation programs for all team members; and

• Review certain compensation disclosures and proposals in any proxy statement or other SEC filing, including

the review and discussion with management of the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section of our proxy

statement for an annual meeting of stockholders or other SEC filing (“CD&A”) and the recommendation to our

Board that such CD&A be disclosed in such proxy statement or other SEC filing together with the report of our

Compensation Committee.

Compensation Committee use of compensation consultants

Our Compensation Committee may retain or terminate, at its sole discretion, compensation consultants, independent

legal counsel or other advisors to assist in its responsibilities. The Compensation Committee is directly responsible

for overseeing the work of such advisors. Our Compensation Committee reviews the independence of such outside

advisors and, with respect to its independent compensation consultant, any conflicts of interest raised by such work.

See “ Compensation discussion and analysis – Compensation governance – Independent compensation

consultant ” for information regarding the independent compensation consultants.

Compensation risk assessment

As part of the annual risk assessment, management reviewed and assessed our 2024 team member compensation

policies, plans and practices in conjunction with Semler Brossy. Based on a review of this assessment, our Compensation

Committee concluded that our compensation policies, plans and practices were not reasonably likely to have a material

adverse effect on the Company .

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Nominating and Governance Committee

Matt Rizik, Chair
2024 Meetings: 3

Our Nominating and Governance Committee identifies and recommends director

nominees to our Board for election, develops and recommends to our Board certain

key governance policies, and implements key governance responsibilities of our Board.

The principal responsibilities of our Nominating and Governance Committee are to:

• Identify individuals qualified to become directors, consistent with the criteria approved by our Board and set forth

in our policies, and recommend to our Board the director nominees for the next annual meeting of stockholders

or director candidates to fill vacancies on our Board;

• Review and assess annually the adequacy of our Corporate Governance Guidelines and other key governance

policies and monitor compliance;

• Review and make recommendations to our Board with respect to the size, composition and organization of our

Board and Board Committees;

• Review and recommend to our Board for approval the compensation of directors who are not affiliated with the

Company or RHI (“Non-Affiliated Directors”);

• Oversee the annual self-evaluations of our Board and Board Committees, and the related activities resulting

from such review;

• Assist our Board in determining the independence of the directors, to the extent such directors are required to

be independent by the NYSE or other applicable regulatory requirements;

• Oversee director and management succession planning, including in the event of an unexpected occurrence; and

• Review certain governance and director disclosures and proposals in any proxy statement or other SEC filing.

See “ Proposal no. 1 - election of Class II directors – Director nominations and appointments ” for a description of

the experience, mix of skills and other criteria that our Nominating and Governance Committee considers in the director

nomination process. If a vacancy on our Board occurs, our Nominating and Governance Committee will seek individuals

who satisfy similar criteria for appointment to our Board.

See “ Other matters – Presentation of stockholder proposals and director nominations at 2026 annual meeting ”

for information regarding providing timely notice of stockholder proposals and director nominations. See our bylaws for

additional information required to nominate candidates for election as directors or bring other business before an annual

meeting of stockholders.

Nominating and Governance Committee use of compensation consultants

Our Nominating and Governance Committee regularly reviews our director compensation program and periodically

recommends changes to the program for Board approval. The Nominating and Governance Committee’s review and

recommendation, if any, considers our direct pay philosophy, relevant market practices, and consultation with the

independent compensation consultants. See “Compensation discussion and analysis – Compensation governance –

Independent compensation consultant ” for information regarding the independent compensation consultants.

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Risk oversight by the Board

Our enterprise risk management program assesses the status and impact of risks

that are determined to have the potential for significant impact to strategic objectives,

capital and/or earnings. Our risk universe focuses on six key risk areas: strategic;

operational; financial; legal/compliance; reputation; and technology and information

management. In addition, we have an internal risk advisory group focused

on compliance with regulatory matters.

Our Board and Board Committees have a significant role in overseeing management’s

activities regarding risk identification, risk management, risk monitoring and risk

mitigation . Our entire Board is regularly informed through Board Committee reports

about material risks, while each Board Committee is responsible for oversight of

certain relevant risks. Our Board and Board Committees oversee the Company’s

risk management process and substantive risk matters primarily through the matters

noted below.

Full Board

• Review of business plan, budget, strategic plans, business developments, and business results.

• Address emerging issues and risks in technology and innovation.

• Approval of key operating policies, including liquidity risk management, cash management and MSR

investment policies.

• Key strategic acquisitions, mergers and divestitures, as well as our expansion into complementary industries.

• Review of capital allocation strategy, including share repurchase program and dividends.

• Oversight of management’s response to crises, including our response to recent macroeconomic issues

and related reputational risks.

• Oversight of human capital management, including corporate culture, talent strategies and retention and

diversity, equity and inclusion.

• Oversight of ESG matters important to our stakeholders.

• General oversight of investor relations and stockholder engagement.

• Succession planning for the CEO and other executive officers, as well as Board leadership.

• Executive sessions consisting solely of the non-management and independent directors.

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Audit

• Oversight of our major financial risk exposures (including liquidity, capital spending, credit, financings,

interest rate management (hedging), tax matters and, on a shared basis with our Board, ongoing litigation).

• Review of financial statements and SEC reports, including the adequacy of our internal control over financial

reporting, disclosure controls and procedures, including any specific cybersecurity issues that could affect

the adequacy of the Company’s internal controls and internal controls related to sustainability information in

public disclosures, and any mitigating activities adopted in response to material weaknesses or significant

control deficiencies.

• Oversight of the Company’s policies on risk assessment, risk management and risk monitoring including

enterprise risk management.

• Monitor legal matters and regulatory compliance including compliance with the Company’s Code of

Conduct and Ethics.

• Regular oversight and consultations with the independent registered public accounting firm.

• Direct oversight of the internal audit function including approval and monitoring of the annual internal audit plan.

• Oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity and data privacy risk management framework and related matters.

• Review and monitor compliance with our Insider Trading Policy.

• Oversight of the whistleblower hotline processes for accounting and auditing matters.

• Review and approval of related person transactions in accordance with our Related Person Transaction Policy.

Compensation

• Review and approval (or recommendation to our Board for approval) of compensation (including establishing

performance metrics and goals for incentive programs), as well as severance, termination and change in

control, policies and agreements for the executive officers.

• Oversight of delegation to management for administration of equity program for non-executive officers.

• Comparing benchmarking and survey data to evaluate executive officer compensation programs.

• Consideration of whether and how our executive compensation philosophy, policies and programs support

our overall business and risk management strategy.

• Review of the material risks associated with our compensation structure, policies and programs for all

team members to determine whether they encourage excessive risk-taking.

• Evaluation of compensation policies and practices to mitigate risk, including timing of equity awards

to executive officers and directors.

• Administration of our Clawback Policy as delegated by our Board.

• Direct oversight of stockholder engagement related to compensation matters.

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Nominating and Governance

• Review of qualifications, expertise, experience and characteristics of Board members and oversight

of director nominations and appointments.

• Oversight of Board structure and composition, and review of director succession planning.

• Leadership of management succession planning, including in the event of an unexpected occurrence.

• Comparing benchmarking and survey data to evaluate director compensation programs.

• Review and assessment annually of the adequacy of our Corporate Governance Guidelines and

other key governance policies, and monitoring compliance.

• Management of the self-evaluation process for our Board and Board Committees, and oversight

of activities resulting from such review.

• Oversight of the Company’s onboarding and continuing education programs for directors.

Set forth below is additional information on certain key matters of risk oversight.

2024 strategic update

In September 2024, we hosted our inaugural Investor Day, at which the executive leadership team presented our AI-fueled

homeownership strategy and financial priorities to deliver stockholder value over the long-term. Topics disclosed included

our overall vision, our technology platform and how we are activating our brand, with a view into the areas where we are

innovating currently to drive our success into the future. A primary area of focus for our first Investor Day was Rocket’s

durable competitive advantage, or Superstack, which includes our iconic brand, proprietary technology, unparalleled

experiences and powerful ecosystem. The components of Rocket’s Superstack have been reviewed by the Board and

continue to be a focus related to strategic oversight.

Human capital management

Our Board understands the importance of supporting our team members’ growth and mobility within the organization

and receives periodic updates from leadership regarding our workplace culture, talent management strategies and

team member engagement.

In 2024, our Board received updates from our new Chief People & Places Officer related to leadership team performance,

career development and internal mobility, competitive compensation strategies and performance standards.

Market and industry trend

The Board received periodic updates on the state of the mortgage market, trends in Federal Funds rate movements, and

expectations for 2024. In addition, our Chief Business Officer provided a report to the Board on the impact of additional

market headwinds including climate risk, tax matters and insurance, rising costs and client challenges to qualify for a

mortgage. During 2024, our Board received regular updates related to the challenges of higher interest rates and declining

home affordability and the resulting impacts of these challenges on the Company’s strategies. The Board also received

reports on the Company’s efforts to expand our servicing portfolio, including the acquisition of multiple Mortgage Servicing

Rights (MSRs) portfolios in 2024.

Cybersecurity and data privacy risk and oversight

We prioritize digital safety for our clients, team members and stakeholders. We are dependent on information technology

networks and systems, including the internet, to securely collect, process, transmit and store electronic information, and

networks of third-party vendors that receive, process, retain and transmit electronic information on our behalf. Further,

we are dependent on the secure, efficient and uninterrupted operation of our technology infrastructure, including computer

systems, related software applications and data centers, as well as those of certain third parties and affiliates.

We also continue to provide, and update as appropriate, clear and comprehensive privacy policies that detail how we

collect, use, share, and protect personal information. In addition, our privacy policies detail the data rights available for

certain data and how to execute those rights. In 2024, we also focused on activities to continue aligning data utilization

to meet enhanced privacy protections including purpose limitation, data minimization, data retention and anonymizing data

for use in training of AI models which in turn allowed us to better understand the nature of our data.

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Our Audit Committee oversees our programs and risks related to cybersecurity and data privacy, including receiving

periodic management reports concerning cybersecurity and information security trends and regulatory updates,

technology risks, privacy policies and related regulatory changes, the implications for our business strategy, audit and

compliance, risk mitigation programs (including table-top exercises), and preparedness and incident response plans,

as well as related cybersecurity insurance coverage. During 2024, the Audit Committee received updates on increasing

cybersecurity threats, ongoing reduction of attack surfaces, increased team member cybersecurity education, preemptive

risk assessments and the deployment of advanced security technologies, including the results of our tabletop exercises

to assess the effectiveness of our incident response program.

Management succession planning

Our Nominating and Governance Committee oversees the Company’s executive officer succession planning. Our

Nominating and Governance Committee generally will discuss and recommend to our Board for approval a CEO and

executive officer succession plan as well as an interim CEO succession plan in the event of an unexpected occurrence,

which is intended to provide leadership continuity in the event of unexpected vacancies, including those from a major

catastrophe. Our Nominating and Governance Committee reviews such matters and makes recommendations to our

Board from time to time as appropriate. In addition, our Compensation Committee approves (or recommends to the

Board to approve) one-time new hire and promotion compensation, annual target compensation for new executive

officers and related offer letters, employment agreements and similar agreements. In 2024, following review by the

Nominating and Governance Committee, the Board approved the expansion of our executive officers to include four

new leaders to further align with the Company’s evolving business strategy.

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Corporate policies and practices

Our Board has adopted tailored governance policies and practices appropriate given

our status as a public company and controlled company. Our policies align our

corporate governance structure and our business strategy and culture, and enable our

Board to effectively oversee our culture of compliance and rigorous risk management.

Copies of our Corporate Governance Guidelines and our Code of Conduct and Ethics

are available under the Governance tab of our website at ir.rocketcompanies.com .

Code of conduct and ethics – a compliance culture

Our Code of Conduct and Ethics applies to all of our directors, officers and team members and is intended to comply

with the relevant listing requirements for a code of conduct as well as qualify as a code of ethics as defined by the rules

of the SEC. The Code of Conduct and Ethics contains general guidelines for conducting our business consistent with

high standards of business ethics. We intend to disclose future amendments to certain provisions of our Code of Conduct

and Ethics, or waivers of such provisions applicable to any principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal

accounting officer and controller, or persons performing similar functions, and our directors, on our website at

ir.rocketcompanies.com or in filings under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”).

All new team members are provided access to our team member Guideposts, which incorporates our Rocket Companies

Code of Conduct and Ethics, on our Company intranet site. Team members must acknowledge and confirm their review.

In addition, on an annual basis, all executive officers and other team members complete an online course addressing

ethics, non-discrimination and non-harassment, cybersecurity, insider trading, workplace security, relevant regulatory

compliance, and other workplace expectations.

Corporate governance guidelines — core principles of governance

We believe that good corporate governance promotes the effective functioning of our Board and Board Committees and

helps to ensure that the Company is managed for the long-term benefits of our stockholders. We regularly review and

consider our corporate governance policies and practices, the SEC’s corporate governance rules and regulations, and

the corporate governance listing standards of the NYSE. Our Board has adopted our Corporate Governance Guidelines

to provide a framework for the governance of the Company as a whole and describe the principles and practices that our

Board follows in carrying out its responsibilities.

The Corporate Governance Guidelines are annually reviewed by our Nominating and Governance Committee to ensure

that they effectively promote the best interests of both the Company and our stockholders and that they comply with all

applicable laws, regulations and NYSE requirements. The Corporate Governance Guidelines address, among other

things, the size, composition, structure and policies of our Board and Board Committees, the responsibilities and authority

of our Chairman and lead director (if any), director qualification standards, expectations and responsibilities of directors,

management succession planning and the self-evaluation of Board and Board Committee performance.

No director overboarding. The overboarding restrictions in our Corporate Governance Guidelines provide reasonable

restrictions on additional public company board and board committee service to address potential time and resource

constraints. These restrictions include that no director should serve on more than three other public company boards, no

member of our Audit Committee should serve on more than two other public company audit committees and no director

who is the Chief Executive Officer of another public company should serve on more than two other public company

boards, aside from the board of such person’s own company. In addition, in accordance with NYSE rules, an Audit

Committee member may not simultaneously serve on more than two other audit committees of public companies unless

our Board determines that such simultaneous service would not impair the ability of such person to effectively serve on

our Audit Committee and discloses such determination. Currently, a ll of our directors are in compliance with the foregoing

overboarding restrictions .

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Insider trading policy — addressing risk mitigation of equity ownership

Our Board has adopted an Insider Trading Policy governing the purchase, sale, and/or other dispositions by directors,

officers, team members and other specified persons. Our Insider Trading Policy is designed to promote compliance

with insider trading laws. Our policy generally prohibits officers, directors, contractors, consultants and team members

from engaging in any transaction of Company securities while aware of material non-public information relating to

the Company, including “tipping” or otherwise passing on inside information to any other person who might make an

investment decision based on that information or further pass the information to third parties. The policy also implements

quarterly trading blackout periods and allows for special blackout periods, for all Board members, all Section 16 officers,

certain team members that are a part of accounting, finance and legal functions, and any other designated team members

in order to reduce the likelihood of trading at times with significant risk of insider trading exposure. In addition, all directors

and Section 16 officers are subject to pre-clearance requirements. A copy of our Insider Trading Policy is filed as Exhibit

19.1 to our Annual Report on Form 10-K for 2024 .

Further, our Insider Trading Policy includes guidelines for the implementation of Rule 10b5-1 trading plans to assist

in compliance with the Rule 10b5-1 affirmative defense for insider trading liability. Such plans can only be adopted

or modified when the applicable person is permitted to transact in Company securities under the terms of the policy

(including not being aware of any material non-public information), must include the minimum statutory cooling-off period

between plan adoption and the first trade under such plan, and must comply with the prohibitions on multiple overlapping

plans and limitations on single-trade plans. The adoption, modification or termination of any such plan is subject to

pre-clearance requirements.

We believe it is improper and inappropriate for Company personnel to engage in short-term or speculative transactions

involving our securities. We prohibit or provide guidelines and limitations on Company personnel from engaging in any

of the following activities with respect to our securities.

• Pledging/purchases of securities on margin. Although Company personnel may pledge our securities as security

for margin accounts, such persons are responsible for ensuring that foreclosure on any such account would not

violate our Insider Trading Policy and should be aware that sales of such securities could have securities law

implications.

• Short sales. Our Insider Trading Policy prohibits Company personnel from selling Company securities they do

not own and borrowing the shares to make delivery.

• Buying or selling puts, calls, options or other derivatives in respect of our securities. This prohibition extends to

any instrument whose value is derived from the value of any of our securities.

• Hedging transactions. Although we discourage speculative hedging transactions, we permit long-term hedging

transactions that are designed to protect an individual’s investment in our securities. Any hedge must be for at least

six months and relate to stock or options held by the individual. All such hedging transactions must be pre-cleared

in accordance with the pre-clearance procedures described in our Insider Trading Policy.

Director onboarding and continuing education

Our Nominating and Governance Committee oversees the Company’s orientation programs for new directors and

continuing education programs for existing directors. Each new director, upon joining our Board, is provided with an

orientation session regarding our Board and the Company’s unique culture and operations. As part of this orientation,

each new director has an opportunity to meet with members of senior management of the Company.

Directors are also provided with continuing education on various subjects that will assist them in discharging their duties,

including the evolving regulatory and business landscape. This may include presentations by Company management or

our Board’s advisors on the Company’s business, compliance efforts, applicable legal, regulatory or other developments

or other matters deemed appropriate by our Board or Nominating and Governance Committee. In addition, the Company

and each director are members of the National Association of Corporate Directors (“NACD”). As NACD members, the

Company and each Board member have access to various instructional programs, training resources and networking

opportunitie s.

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Board and Committee evaluations

Each year, the Board and the Board Committees undergo an evaluation process to examine membership, composition

and structure, committee and committee chair rotation, role and effectiveness, fulfillment of fiduciary duties, meetings

and materials, and overall board operations (including interaction with leadership). We believe Board and Board

Committee self-evaluations play an important role in supporting the effective functioning of our Board. Through the

evaluation process led by our Nominating and Governance Committee, our directors review where they believe our

Board and Board Committees function effectively and, importantly, areas where our directors think there may be

opportunities for improvement. The Nominating and Governance Committee Chair reviews the questionnaire results

and shares them with each Board Committee chair.

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Human capital management

Being all-in

Rocket Companies invests for the long term and places tremendous value in supporting our team members, clients and

hometowns. Dan Gilbert, our founder and Chairman, purposefully created a strong cultural foundation of core principles,

or “ISMs”, as a cultural operating system to guide decision making by all of our team members. These ISMs are our DNA,

compass and foundation. At the heart of the ISMs is a simple, yet powerful, concept: “Love our team members. Love our

clients.” Our team members put the ISMs into action every day. The result is an empowered and passionate team aligned

in a common mission. As of December 31, 2024, we had approximately 14,200 team members all of whom are based in

the United States and Canada. As part of our ‘ALL IN’ talent management strategy, we provide tools and resources to our

team members that enable them to reach their full potential, build their own career paths, enhance their well-being and

support their financial goals. Our team members have access to training and mentorship opportunities, specialized

leadership programs and a variety of educational programs through ROCK Academy. The Company supports team

member growth and mobility within the organization through the Company’s internal mobility program, THRIVE.

In 2024, the Company continued to enhance the team member experience by empowering individuals to share more

about their experiences, skills, and knowledge within the Career Hub, further enabling career growth and development.

To provide greater clarity and alignment, we introduced a new goal-setting framework, ensuring every team member

understands how their work contributes to our mission of helping everyone home. Additionally, we strengthened

performance guidance to ensure every team member has the tools, resources, and direction needed to thrive. These

efforts reflect our ongoing commitment to fostering a culture where team members feel supported, engaged, and

empowered in their careers. As a result, 89% of team members know how their work contributes to the goals of Rocket

and 86% know what they need to do to be successful in their role.

In 2024, team members participated in the Rocket Companies Community Challenge raising over $1.6 million for nonprofit

organizations across the country, exceeding the 2023 fundraising record. These contributions supported 180 nonprofits

focused on critical areas such as education, housing, and employment, reinforcing the Company’s ongoing commitment

to strengthening communities and driving meaningful impac t.

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Fostering a culture of inclusion and opportunity

Our commitment to fostering a workplace where every team member feels valued and supported is embedded in our

culture. We recognize the power of unique perspectives in driving innovation and business success, and we continue to

take meaningful steps to enhance inclusivity and opportunity. Our vision is rooted in our For More Than Profit philosophy,

guiding our efforts to create positive impact through talent development, workplace culture, community engagement, and

marketplace initiatives. By strengthening these focus areas, we aim to build a connected, high-performing organization

where all team members can thrive. As we continue to adapt to an evolving business landscape, our commitment to

fostering an inclusive and connected workplace remains a strategic priority. We are focused on strengthening cross-team

collaboration, enhancing opportunities for all team members, and providing support during pivotal moments. To ensure

inclusivity is embedded throughout our organization, we consider our talent, our culture, and our communities. This serves

as our guiding framework, as a result, 86% of team members feel they can be their authentic selves at work and 80% feel

a sense of belonging at Rocket Companies.

In 2024, we expanded our reach to a broader pool of top talent and strengthened our talent value proposition. To support

these efforts, we strategically partnered with a diverse range of professional organizations.

Our Team Member Resource Networks (“TMRNs”), open to all team members, continue to foster connection and

belonging at Rocket Companies. Participation has grown, with 30% of team members engaged in at least one TMRN—a

3% increase from previous years.

Our financial investments and community programs have played a key role in expanding access to homeownership and

enhancing digital inclusion. However, we recognize that lasting community impact is driven by the collective efforts of our

team members. In support of these initiatives, 78% of our team members participated in volunteering and philanthropic

giving efforts, and 93% feel positively about the ways we contribute to the community.

Stockholder engagement

We have established an investor relations program that maintains ongoing, proactive outreach with our stakeholders and

investors. Throughout the year, members of our Investor Relations team and business leaders engage with stakeholders

and investors to inform them about our business and industry while also gaining insight into their feedback and

perspectives.

In 2024, we met with the holders of approximately 50% of our stock and engaged with roughly 100 investment funds.

We also attended nine investor conferences. The feedback from our stockholder and investor outreach efforts is

communicated to our Board and helps inform our business and strategy.

In September 2024, we hosted our first Investor Day in Detroit, where our leaders shared our vision for homeownership,

our Superstack durable competitive advantage, and our 2027 purchase and refinance market share goals. The in-person

experience also featured interactive product demos and a walking tour of downtown Detroit.

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Communications with our Board

Our Board welcomes engagement with our stockholders and other interested parties. If you want to communicate with

the non-management members of our Board of Directors, you should send a letter to any such director at 1050 Woodward

Avenue, Detroit MI 48226 or to the e-mail address [email protected]. The Corporate Secretary

may sort or summarize the communications as appropriate. Communications that are commercial solicitations, customer

complaints, incoherent or inappropriate will not be communicated to the non-management members of our Board.

To submit concerns regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters, you may also call:

1-844-907-2291. Team members may submit such concerns on a confidential or anonymous basis. Communications

made through the confidential hotline will be reviewed by our Audit Committee in accordance with its procedures.

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Compensation of Non-Affiliated Directors

2024 compensation program

Our Non-Affiliated Director compensation policy was last revised by the Board in June 2023 following a review

of information provided by Korn Ferry, an independent compensation consultant. Key elements of the policy are

summarized below — n o changes were made to the policy for 2024.

Retainer 2024 ($)
Cash
Annual – All Directors 75,000
Annual – Committee Chair 30,000
Annual – Committee Member (non-Chair) 15,000
Fee Per Meeting
RSU Award (grant value) 215,000

Each director is reimbursed for reasonable business expenses incurred by such director in connection with such

director’s services. Affiliated directors, or directors who are employees or executives of the Company, or who provide

services to RHI or any of its subsidiaries, do not receive compensation for their services as directors of the Company.

Utilization of peer group benchmarking

When revising the Non-Affiliated Director compensation policy in June 2023, our Board utilized benchmarking with the

same peer group used for NEO compensation, general industry survey data and related market information from Korn

Ferry. Our Nominating and Governance Committee will consider the need for additional benchmarking or other changes

to the compensation program for Non-Affiliated Directors on a periodic basis. The Nominating and Governance Committee

did not review benchmarking data or consider changes to the policy in 2024, but expects to do so in 2025.

Annual cash retainers

All cash retainers are paid quarterly in arrears.

Annual RSU award

The annual RSU award is granted on the date of each annual meeting of stockholders and will vest in full on the earlier

of the first anniversary of the grant date or the date of the first regularly scheduled annual meeting of stockholders

following the grant date. In the event of a Change in Control (as defined below), any unvested RSU awards will become

immediately vested and settled if either (a) the director will not continue as a member of our Board of the Company,

acquirer or surviving company as applicable or (b) if the RSU awards are not continued or assumed. The RSU awards

also provide for immediate vesting of the unvested portion of the RSU award at the time of termination of service due

to death or disability. In the event of a director’s termination of service at any time prior to the vesting date, other than

due to death or disability or in connection with a Change in Control, all unvested RSUs will be canceled and forfeited.

All RSUs are credited with dividend equivalent rights that are accrued and paid in cash at settlement following the

vesting date. To the extent the RSUs vest, the cash amount paid is equal to the dividends declared per share of our

Class A common stock over the vesting period, multiplied by the number of vested RSUs. No dividends are paid on

unvested RSUs.

Non-Affiliated Director compensation limitation

Our stockholder-approved 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan provides that the maximum grant date fair value of awards to

a Non-Affiliated Director in any single fiscal year, taken together with any cash fees paid to such director during the fiscal

year, will be $750,000.

Stock ownership guidelines for Non-Affiliated Directors

In March 2021, we adopted robust stock ownership guidelines to further future alignment of the long-term interests of our

executive officers and Non-Affiliated Directors with those of our stockholders. Our stock ownership guidelines generally

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require that our Non-Affiliated Directors own shares of our common stock having an aggregate value equal to five times

the Non-Affiliated Director’s annual cash retainer. Shares that count towards ownership include vested shares or units

owned outright, and vested shares or units owned by immediate family members. Generally, each Non-Affiliated Director

will have five years from joining the Board, or the date such director becomes subject to the guidelines to achieve

compliance. As of December 31, 2024, all Non-Affiliated Directors had met or were on track to meet the requirements

within the five year compliance period .

2024 director compensation t able

The table below sets forth the compensation of our directors in 2024, excluding Varun, whose compensation for his

service as an executive officer is covered in the Summary Compensation Table. Bill Emerson is also a director and

an executive officer of the Company, and he does not receive any additional compensation for services provided as

a director. Equity award amounts are based on grant date fair values and do not represent the actual value that will

be received by each individual from the awards.

Name Fees earned or paid in cash ($) (1) Stock awards ($) (2) All other compensation ($) Total ($)
Dan Gilbert
Jennifer Gilbert
Jonathan Mariner 120,000 214,986 334,986
Alex Rampell (3) 68,613 296,042 364,655
Matthew Rizik (4)
Suzanne Shank 105,000 214,986 319,986
Nancy Tellem 105,000 214,986 319,986

(1) Reflects annual cash retainer for Board Committee and Board Committee chairperson service.

(2) Reflects the grant date fair value of RSU awards granted under our 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan in accordance with the Financial Accounting Standards Board

Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718 for stock-based compensation, disregarding the effect of estimated forfeitures (“ASC Topic 718”). The grant date fair

value is calculated as of the closing price of our Class A common stock as quoted on NYSE on the grant date, multiplied by the number of shares subject to the award .

(3) The amount reflected in the Stock Awards column for Alex includes RSUs granted on February 1, 2024 in connection with his appointment to the Board.

(4) Matthew is a member of RHI’s board and is an executive of RHI, as well as serving Chief Executive Officer of ROCK, and therefore does not receive compensation for

services as a director of the Company in accordance with our policy. However, he receives compensation from his consulting services to the Company and Holdings.

See “Certain relationships and related person transactions – Related person transactions – Other transactions.”

As of December 31, 2024 , Jonathan, Suzanne and Nancy each held 15,034 unvested RSUs, Alex held 22,623 unvested

RSUs and Matthew held 276,174 unvested RSUs and options to purchase 30,801 shares of Class A common stock.

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Executive officers

Our Nominating and Governance Committee oversees the Company’s executive officer succession planning, and

periodically reviews internal and external candidates for key new and promotion roles. We are focused on developing and

promoting talent from within, enabling us to develop both the current team of senior leaders as well as the next generation

of leaders. Our Board also recognizes the importance of bringing in new ideas and expertise through talent acquisition.

Our Compensation Committee oversees establishing revised compensation structures in the event of a new or promoted

executive officer.

Our Chief Executive Officer, Varun Krishna, was hired in September 2023, and in 2024, we continued to expand our

executive officer team through external hires and internal promotions. In January 2024, t he Company hired Jonathan

Mildenhall, its first-ever Chief Marketing Officer, and in May 2024 hired Shawn Malhotra, its first-ever Chief Technology

Officer. In addition, the Company promoted long-time team members Bill Banfield and Heather Lovier, with Bill Emerson

continuing as the Company’s President.

Set forth below are descriptions of the backgrounds of each executive officer of the Company as of the record date.

Varun Krishna, Chief Executive Officer, Director Age : 43 See “ Proposal no. 1 - election of Class II directors – Director backgrounds and qualifications ” for biographical and other information regarding Varun.
Bill Emerson, President, Director Age : 62 See “ Proposal no. 1 - election of Class II directors – Director backgrounds and qualifications ” for biographical and other information regarding Bill.
William Banfield, Chief Business Officer Age : 53 Bill Banfield is our Chief Business Officer. He has held this position since March 2024. In this role, Bill is responsible for overseeing critical business areas including capital markets, mortgage servicing and government affairs. Under Bill’s leadership, the company navigates the ever-evolving financial landscape, safeguarding the company’s interests while fostering growth. Bill’s team creates innovative mortgage offerings that help more Americans responsibly achieve homeownership, manages its interest rate risk, and partners with the government regarding the mortgage market and home accessibility. Bill also serves on the Mortgage Bankers Association Board of Directors and is a sought-after commentator on mortgage and personal finance topics. Bill joined Rocket Mortgage in 1999, holding many leadership roles in capital markets over the last 25 years, including most recently as Chief Risk Officer since January 2020, and Executive Vice President – Capital Markets from February 2017 to January 2020. Before Rocket, Bill served at MCA Mortgage and Lambrecht Mortgage Company. He earned his Bachelor’s degree in Finance from Western Michigan University. Favorite ISM: Innovation is rewarded, Execution is Worshipped.

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Brian Brown, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Age : 46 Brian Brown is our Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. Brian has held these positions since November 2022. In these positions, Brian is responsible for the accounting, finance, treasury, tax, investor relations and procurement functions, while also overseeing the internal audit work. Brian previously served as our Chief Accounting Officer since our initial public offering in August 2020. In his role as Chief Accounting Officer, Brian led our accounting, finance, treasury and procurement functions. He also serves as the Treasurer of Rocket Mortgage, LLC. Brian previously held a number of roles at Rocket Mortgage, LLC from 2014 to 2020, including Senior Vice President of Accounting and Finance. Prior to joining Rocket Mortgage, LLC, Brian spent eight years as a senior manager at Ernst & Young serving financial services and mortgage banking clients. Brian earned his Bachelor’s degree in Accounting from Wayne State University. Favorite ISM : Numbers And Money Follow; They Do Not Lead.
Heather Lovier, Chief Operating Officer Age : 51 Heather Lovier serves as the Chief Operating Officer at Rocket, a role she has held since June 2024. In this position, she oversees the entire homeownership experience, with a strong focus on delivering a world-class client journey and leveraging artificial intelligence to enhance every stage of the process. Heather leads strategy and operations for Rocket Mortgage’s Banking and Client Experience teams, ensuring seamless integration with sister companies Rocket Close, LLC and Rocket Homes Real Estate LLC. Prior to her current role, Heather served as Chief Client Experience Officer from November 2021 to March 2024. From 2015 to 2021, she held various Vice President positions, including leading the Client Experience team. Between 2010 and 2015, she led the Business Development team. Heather began her career at Rocket in 2003 as a loan analyst in Operations and later joined the Mousetrap team in 2005, where she focused on innovation and client solutions.Before joining Rocket, Heather spent eight years in the automotive industry, where she led a customer service team and developed her leadership expertise. Favorite ISM: Obsessed with Finding a Better Way

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Shawn Malhotra, Chief Technology Officer Age : 43 Shawn Malhotra is our Chief Technology Officer. He has held this position since May 2024. In this role, Shawn oversees the development and implementation of technology across the entire Rocket Companies’ ecosystem. Shawn is especially focused on increasing the rate of innovation and execution in the organization and amplifying Rocket’s AI initiatives driving the company toward its goal of AI-fueled homeownership. In addition, he has oversight of the company’s data science, product engineering, technology operations and information security. Prior to joining Rocket Companies, Shawn worked at Thomson Reuters Corporation, including as Head of Engineering from September 2020 to May 2024, Chief Technology Officer of the Corporate Technology business unit from August 2018 to September 2020, and Vice President, Toronto Technology Centre from February 2017 to August 2018. Previously, Shawn served as the Site Director, Software Engineering for Intel Corporation from August 2013 to February 2017. Prior to Intel, Shawn served as Manager, Software Engineering at Altera Corporation from 2005 to 2013. He began his career in technology at Qualcomm Incorporated as a software engineer in 2000. Shawn earned a Bachelor of Applied Science degree in Computer Engineering at the University of Waterloo, and a Master of Engineering degree at the University of Toronto and is credited with five issued U.S. patents and two published papers. Favorite ISM: You’ll see it when you believe it.
Jonathan Mildenhall, Chief Marketing Officer Age : 57 Jonathan Mildenhall, a British-American, is the first-ever Chief Marketing Officer for Rocket Companies, a position he has held since January 2024. He is responsible for creating a unified and compelling voice for all businesses under the Rocket Companies umbrella, with all marketing and communications teams for the Rocket brands reporting directly to him. Jonathan is also the Co-Founder and served as the Executive Chairman of TwentyFirstCenturyBrand since 2018, a consumer brand strategy and marketing consultancy firm, and serves on the board of Sonos, Inc. (Nasdaq: SONO) and Fanatics, Inc. He previously served on the board of Peloton Interactive (Nasdaq: PTON) from February 2022 to December 2023 and the board of Northern Star Investment Corp. IV (NYSE: NSTD), a special purpose acquisition company, from March 2021 to September 2023. Jonathan has more than 30 years of experience building and promoting large, brand-focused companies. Prior to co-founding TwentyFirstCenturyBrand, Jonathan served as the first Chief Marketing Officer of Airbnb from 2014 to 2018. Before Airbnb, Jonathan led Coca-Cola’s marketing initiatives as Senior Vice President of integrated marketing communication and design excellence from 2013 to 2014 and as Senior Vice President of global advertising strategy and content excellence from 2007 to 2013. Earlier in his career, Jonathan served in various management positions in marketing and advertising at The Mother Group, TBWA UK Group Limited, DLKW Lowe, and Bartle Bogle Hegarty, Inc. Jonathan holds a Higher National Diploma in Business and Finance from The Manchester Metropolitan University. He completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School, and holds an Honorary Doctorate in Business Administration from The Manchester Metropolitan University. Favorite ISM: It’s not about who is right; it’s about what is right.

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Overlap with executive officers with RHI

Certain of our executive officers and the directors affiliated with RHI own equity interests in RHI. For example, there may

be a conflict of interest if there are issues or disputes under the commercial arrangements that exist between us and the

RHI Affiliated Entities or if we or one of the RHI Affiliated Entities look at acquisition or investment opportunities that may

be suitable for both companies. See “ Certain relationships and related person transactions ” for more information

on the transactions and relationships between the Company and the RHI Affiliated Entities and our policies concerning

related person transactions.

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Compensation discussion and analysis

This Compensation Discussion and Analysis (“CD&A”) provides information regarding the 2024 compensation program for

our NEOs during 2024, who are set forth below.

Name Titles in 2024 Title since Rocket team member since
Varun Krishna Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) September 2023 September 2023
Brian Brown Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”) and Treasurer November 2022 June 2014
Shawn Malhotra Chief Technology Officer (“CTO”) May 2024 May 2024
Jonathan Mildenhall Chief Marketing Officer (“CMO”) January 2024 January 2024
Heather Lovier (1) Chief Operating Officer (“COO”) June 2024 April 2003

(1) Heather was not an executive officer prior to 2024, and therefore this CD&A excludes her compensation information for 2023 as permitted under SEC regulations.

Heather has been with the Company for 22 years, including most recently as Chief Client Experience Officer since 2021 prior to her promotion to COO.

CD&A table of contents

Executive summary Page 50
2024 executive compensation program and pay Page 54
Annual base salary Page 55
Annual cash incentive plan (AIP) Page 55
Long-term equity awards Page 57
2024 PSU plan Page 58
Compensation Governance Page 62
Defining roles for effective compensation oversight Page 62
Independent compensation consultant Page 62
Compensation policies and practices Page 63
Stock ownership guidelines for executive officers Page 63
Timing and pricing of equity awards Page 63
Hedging and pledging Page 63
Clawback policy Page 63
Benefits and perquisites Page 64
Other Compensation Page 64
Tax considerations Page 64

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Executive summary

Executive compensation program enhancements

Our executive compensation program, including for our NEOs, consists of fixed compensation (a base salary), a short-

term variable cash compensation component (a cash bonus under our annual cash incentive plan, or “AIP”) and a long-

term variable equity compensation component (long-term equity awards). We refer to the combination of fixed and

variable compensation as total direct compensation. Our program is designed and administered to align with our

compensation philosophy, which includes promoting long-term value creation, balancing short- and long-term performance

and providing competitive pay.

In 2024, we implemented a number of enhancements to our executive compensation program to better reflect and

reinforce our compensation philosophy and objectives. These enhancements aim to:

• Strengthen our pay-for-performance culture by aligning compensation decisions more closely with Company

performance

• Reward achievement of short- and long-term results that reflect our strategic goals and create long-term

stockholder value

• Attract, motivate and retain executive talent to drive our long-term success

We accomplished these objectives and reinforced the business strategy and pay-for-performance culture through the

adoption of new variable compensation components: the AIP and performance-based restricted stock units (“PSUs”).

• Variable cash component : Transitioned our cash bonus from a fully discretionary cash bonus payout to the AIP.

The AIP consists of objective Company financial performance metrics ( two-thirds of the target cash bonus ), and a

subjective assessment of Company performance via a scorecard ( one-third of the target cash bonus ) covering

three core focus areas: (1) Execution; (2) Client; and (3) Culture.

• Variable equity component : Transitioned our long-term equity award from solely consisting of restricted stock

units (“RSUs”) that are subject to an ongoing service condition to an equal split of the target equity grant value into

50% RSUs and 50% PSUs, with three year performance goals.

This CD&A explains our compensation philosophy, objectives and design, our compensation-setting process and our

executive compensation program components. It also describes the decisions made for 2024 for each of our NEOs.

2024 fiscal year performance highlights

2024 was a transformational year in leadership as well as in building the strong foundation to revolutionize the industry by

enabling AI-fueled homeownership . Rocket Logic, our AI-powered loan origination system, improved both client-facing

interactions and back-end underwriting. In the fourth quarter of 2024, our bankers and operations teams served 54% more

clients year-over-year on a per-team-member basis. AI-driven mortgage automation saved one million hours of team

member time and drove $40 million in efficiency gains.

In addition, we completed foundational brand transformation work, preparing for our brand refresh in 2025, aligning our

identity with the evolving needs of today’s homebuyers. We also laid the ground work to launch Rocket.com and new

mobile apps in early 2025 to integrate home search, mortgage, and financing into a single connected platform.

Our financial performance was driven by both efficiency gains and profitable market share growth. P urchase mortgage

market share growth remains one of our areas of focus. We grew our purchase mortgage market share year-over-year

through focused innovation and execution, improving every part of our business, and we are investing strategically to

accelerate this growth . Our full year 2024 results reflect strong execution, and we closed the year with positive

momentum, as reflected in the following results :

• Grew origination volume nearly 30% year over year, driven by both purchase and home equity loan growth

• Increased servicing portfolio to $593 billion in unpaid principal balance, a 17% increase

• Delivered a djusted revenue of $4.9 billion, a 30% year-over-year increase 1

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• Achieved adjusted EBITDA of $862 million, or 18% adjusted EBITDA margin, compared to 2% the prior year 1

• Improved adjusted diluted earnings per share to $0.23, compared to ($0.07) the prior year 1

• Reported adjusted net income of $456 million, compared to ($143M) t he prior year 1

(1) See the Table of contents for information regarding our non-GAAP financial measures.

See “ Proxy summary ” for further information regarding our business, as well as our operational and financial

performance in 2024.

2024 “say-on-pay” advisory vote on NEO compensation

At our 2024 annual meeting of stockholders, the Company provided stockholders with a “say-on-pay” advisory vote on

executive compensation, and 99.4% of the votes cast were “FOR” approval of our NEO compensation . This very high

support did not imply a need to make material changes to our executive compensation program in 2024. However, our

Compensation Committee and leadership team introduced enhancements to the pay program to better support our

compensation objectives, including to reinforce a pay-for-performance culture. These enhancements included transitioning

our cash bonus from a fully discretionary cash bonus payout to the metrics-based AIP, the introduction of PSUs as an

element of the pay program and a change in pay mix for the annual long-term equity award from 100% RSUs to 50%

RSUs and 50% PSUs. Our Compensation Committee will continue to consider stockholder feedback and the results of

future say-on-pay advisory votes to inform our executive compensation program.

Compensation practices

Key elements of our compensation governance practices for our NEOs are set f orth below .

What we do
Provide incentive compensation that is variable, “at risk” and balances short- and long-term results No guaranteed annual salary increases, bonuses or equity awards
Align compensation with stockholder returns through long-term equity with multi-year vesting No supplemental company-paid retirement benefits or nonqualified deferred compensation plans
Use peer group, and broader market data, to establish competitive compensation No repricing of stock options
Engage independent compensation consultant to advise on executive and director compensation No excise tax “gross-up” on change-of-control payments
Maintain robust stock ownership guidelines for NEOs and non-employee directors No dividends on unvested equity awards
Conduct annual risk assessment of compensation policies, plans and practices No discounted stock options
Maintain Clawback Policy for financial restatements
Hold say-on-pay vote every three years
Maintain Insider Trading Policy that prohibits, or provides guidelines and limitations, with respect to transactions in our securities
Use market-aligned cash severance and right to acceleration of equity awards upon death, disability, change in control and, for certain executives, upon termination without cause

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2024 CEO target compensation and pay components

Varun joined the Company as Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) in September 2023, and his total direct compensation was

set forth in his employment agreement that was approved by our Compensation Committee. The agreement included his

annual base salary and annual bonus target, as a percentage of base salary, and provided that he was eligible for his

initial annual long-term equity award in 2024, including the amounts to be awarded in RSUs and PSUs in March 2024, as

part of annual compensation decisions.

The majority of the CEO’s target total direct compensation is subject to forfeiture (“at-risk”) with an emphasis on variable

compensation to reward short- and long-term performance measured against financial and non-financial goals informed

by our Company’s strategy. The only fixed component is base salary.

The chart below summarizes the 2024 components of the compensation that comprised the CEO’s target total direct

compensation opportunity, with approximately 94% delivered in variable compensation . See the “ 2024 summary

compensation table ” for compensation actually paid for 2024.

Compensation philosophy and objectives

Our Compensation Committee’s guiding philosophy in designing and administering our executive compensation

program is to promote long-term value creation, balance short- and long-term performance and provide competitive

pay. Our philosophy is achieved through three compensation objectives :

Pay-for- performance Compensation reflects financial and non-financial performance metrics to drive achievement of our strategic goals and to create long-term value aligned with stockholder interest
Use a balanced compensation structure Compensation delivered in a mix of fixed and variable compensation, with an emphasis on variable compensation that appropriately balances short- and long-term goals and promotes long-term stockholder value creation
Attract, motivate and retain Compensation is competitive to our peers and the broader market in order attract, motivate and retain executives that possess the skills, talent and experience necessary to drive our long-term success

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Compensation peer group and benchmarking

Our Compensation Committee uses our compensation peer group, broader market survey data and guidance from its

independent compensation consultant to implement our executive compensation philosophy and objectives. The peer

group is used to develop an understanding of market compensation pay levels and mix for executives in comparable

roles and executive pay practices including program design. While our Compensation Committee utilizes such information

broadly in connection with its annual review of executive compensation, it is not used to formulaically define pay levels.

Instead, our Compensation Committee evaluates our compensation peer group, broader market pay practices and

internal pay equity, and seeks to maintain pay positioning that is consistent with the market while allowing flexibility

for differentiated, market-leading pay opportunities for high-impact, visionary leadership and superior performance.

Our compensation peer group includes companies that compete with us for executive talent. During 2024, we continued

to develop and implement our refreshed strategy to be the leader in AI-enabled financial solutions for our customers. As

the business shifts, we must maintain competitive positions against comparable companies in the market. Accordingly,

our Compensation Committee requested that Korn Ferry, as its independent compensation consultant, review the

composition of such compensation peer group. Following a review by Korn Ferry with input from management, our

Compensation Committee decided to make several refinements to our compensation peer group for 2024 as set

forth below. Our Compensation Committee generally selects peer group companies based on the following factors:

Revenue 0.25x to 4x that of Rocket Fintech companies Consumer financial products Significant brand presence
Based on such considerations, we determined that the following companies were appropriate for 2024:
• Adobe Inc. • Ally Financial Inc. • Airbnb, Inc. • Block, Inc. (f/k/a Square, Inc.) • Carvana Co. • Discover Financial Services • eBay Inc. • Expedia Group, Inc. • Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. • Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. • Fiserv, Inc. • Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. • Intuit Inc. • PayPal Holdings, Inc. • PennyMac Financial Services, Inc. • Servicenow, Inc. • Sofi Technologies, Inc. • The Charles Schwab Corporation • The Western Union Company • Visa Inc. • Zillow Group, Inc.

The companies listed in bold were added based on the revenue and business criteria . The following companies

were included in the prior year’s compensation peer group and removed based on the revenue criteria and consideration

of business alignment: Capital One Financial Corporation, Mastercard Incorporated, OpenDoor Technologies Inc . and

The Progressive Corporation.

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2024 executive compensation program and pay

Our executive compensation program, including for our NEOs, consists of fixed compensation (a base salary),

a short-term variable cash compensation (or a cash bonus paid under our AIP) and a long-term variable equity

component (long-term equity awards). The Compensation Committee approves annual pay decisions for each

of the components of executive compensation, for each of our NEOs, as detailed within this section.

Components of executive compensation

Brief descriptions of each principal component of our 2024 executive compensation program are described in more

detail in the table below .

Type Component Vehicle Objectives and key features
Fixed Base salary Cash • Provide fixed compensation for performing responsibilities of role to attract and retain talent • Reflect competitive market compensation
Variable (“at-risk”) Annual cash bonus Cash • Reinforce key financial objective achievement, as well as maintain a focus on key strategic business goals • Reward for achievement of Company performance over 1-year period under the annual cash bonus incentive plan (“AIP”) • Determine payout with 2/3rd based on the achievement of financial metrics and 1/3rd based on subjective Company performance scorecard • Payouts can range from 0% to 200% of the weighted target bonus for each metric • Subject to recovery under the Clawback Policy, for 2/3rd of payout determined based on financial metrics
Annual long-term equity awards RSUs • Reward for long-term stockholder value to create alignment with stockholder interest; promote long-term retention • Time vest semiannually in equal portions over three years and, if earned and vested, are settled in common stock
PSUs • Reward achievement of key long-term performance measures and stock performance to create alignment with stockholder interest; promote long-term retention • Determine payout based on achievement against three metrics (relative total shareholder return, refinance market share growth, purchase market share growth) over a 3-year performance period, and, if earned and vested, are settled in common stock • Any payout is subject to a circuit breaker - cumulative adjusted EBITDA over the first two years must be greater than zero • Payouts can range from 0% to 200% of the weighted target performance amount for each metric • Subject to recovery under the Clawback Policy

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Annual base salary

The 2023 and 2024 annual base salary rates of our NEOs are set forth in the table below.

Name 2023 annual base salary rates ($) 2024 annual base salary rates ($)
Varun Krishna 1,250,000 1,250,000
Brian Brown 500,000 700,000 (1)
Shawn Malhotra 700,000 (2)
Jonathan Mildenhall 670,000 (2)
Heather Lovier N/A 600,000 (3)

(1) 2024 base salary for Brian was approved by the Compensation Committee in August 2024 in recognition of his additional responsibility for leading corporate strategy &

development. Brian’s 2024 salary prior to his expanded role was $650,000, which was approved by the Compensation Committee as part of its annual review process in

January 2024. The initial salary adjustment reflected Brian’s continued strength in overseeing the Company’s financial direction and aligning with the objective of providing

competitive compensation.

(2) 2024 base salaries for Shawn and Jonathan were established in connection with their hires in May 2024 and January 2024 respectively.

(3) 2024 base salary for Heather was approved by the Compensation Committee in August 2024, retroactive to her June 2024 promotion to the Chief Operations Officer.

Heather’s 2024 base salary was $350,000 from January 1, 2024 to February 18, 2024. In connection with the Company’s annual review cycle, her base salary was

increased to $450,000 on February 19 , 2024 until her promotion in June 2024.

Annual cash incentive plan (AIP)

For 2024, we transitioned from a fully

discretionary annual cash bonus program

to the AIP, with payout based on

performance against three measures

for one-year performance periods ending

December 31, 2024, weighted equally

at target value:

(1) Company adjusted Revenue;

(2) Company adjusted EBITDA; and

(3) Company scorecard of financial and

non-financial strategic priorities across three

focus areas - Execution, Client, and Culture.

Company financial metrics, goals and results (67% weighted at target value)

The two financial metrics of adjusted Revenue and adjusted EBITDA are key performance indicators that reflect the

Company’s commitment to continuing growth and operational performance. Due to the significant variability in adjusted

Revenue and adjusted EBITDA based on the mortgage market size, which is out of the Company’s control, the

Compensation Committee determined to utilize dynamic goal setting that scales with the actual size of the mortgage

market size determined after the end of the performance period.

At the time of approving the AIP, the Compensation Committee set target goals that vary with the actual size of the

mortgage market where the goals reflect a rigorous evaluation of the proposed business plan. For each target

performance level, the Compensation Committee also established threshold (50% payout) and maximum (200% payout)

performance and payout ranges. The Compensation Committee relied upon its experience and collective business

judgment, along with input from Korn Ferry, in establishing goals and believes they are set at levels that require strong

performance for target payout and exceptional performance for maximum payout.

The Compensation Committee set the scaling between threshold and maximum payouts as a percentage of target for

adjusted Revenue, or 80% and 120% of target respectively. The performance range is wider for adjusted EBITDA, 60%

and 140% of target respectively, to account for greater variability of adjusted EBITDA on a percentage basis. In addition,

for adjusted EBITDA, targets were set so that threshold must be at least $150 million less than target, and maximum must

be at least $150 million more than target, to appropriately differentiate payouts when the mortgage market size is on the

lower end of the dynamic goal setting scale.

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Following the end of the performance period, the actual goals in dollars are known (based on mortgage market size),

actual performance is evaluated, and if the Company has a net loss in the performance period the Compensation

Committee has the discretion to reduce payouts under the AIP. To determine the final goals and payouts under the AIP,

the Compensation Committee estimated the mo rtgage market size was $1.7 trillion for 2024 based on industry source s.

The Company financial metrics, payout scale, and 2024 performance and payout for each metric for the 2024 AIP are set

forth below.

Financial metric Weight (%) Performance period ($ in billions) — Threshold (50% payout) Target (100% payout) Maximum (200% payout) 2024 actual performance 2024 actual payout
Adjusted Revenue (1) 33% Full year $3.610 (80% of target) $4.512 (100% of target) $5.414 (120% of target) $4.902 143%
Adjusted EBITDA (2) 33% Full year $0.321 (60% of target) $0.534 (100% of target) $0.748 (140% of target) $0.862 200%

(1) Adjusted Revenue is defined as total revenues net of the change in fair value of mortgage servicing rights (“MSRs”) due to valuation assumptions, net of hedges.

(2) Adjusted EBITDA is defined as net income (loss) before interest and amortization expense on non-funding debt, (benefit from) provision for income taxes, depreciation

and amortization, share-based compensation expense, change in fair value of MSRs due to valuation assumptions, net of hedges and career transition program.

Company subjective assessment of performance (33% weighted at target value)

For the assessment of performance, via a Company scorecard, payout can be earned from 0% to 200%. The

Compensation Committee chose to use a scorecard approach, informed by the CEO’s subjective assessment, against

three focus areas: Execution, Client and Culture. The final 2024 payout of 73% of target for this element was based on

progress against a mix of internal quantitative and qualitative objectives underlying the three focus areas to drive results

against long-term Company strategic goals , as summarized below . The Compensation Committee’s overall assessment

was that, while the Company had made positive strides in meeting its objectives across all focus areas, more progress

was required to be performing at the target level. Therefore, the final funding for this part of the AIP was below target.

Focus area descriptions Results summary
Execution A product and strategy focus based on the adoption of AI, launch of new products and technology infrastructure. We concluded an important foundational year for Rocket’s next chapter, with successes across all of our three focus areas, with continuing and opportunities for improvement, including: • Rolled out a refreshed line of sight from a new mission statement, strategic bets and execution system • Set clear goals to grow profitable market share, and organized around refreshed priorities, with a focus on business model diversification • Shipped product 3x faster, AI saving us thousands of hours a year, yet AI is still in its infancy at Rocket • Completed foundation brand transformation work, but yet to realize impact • Maintained company engagement survey score of 82% through significant change; top 10% of companies with over 5,000 employees (1) • Significantly strengthened our executive bench with the top 45 leadership roles filled with high-performing leaders who reflect a broad range of backgrounds and experiences, and the opportunity to cascade this culture throughout the Company
Client A consumer focus based on client satisfaction, client trust and market brand health.
Culture A culture focus based on organizational health, fostering innovation, engaging team members and consistently enhancing performance.
2024 payout: 73%

(1) As measured by Culture Amp through Rocket’s semi-annual engagement survey in November 2024, as compared to engagement scores of companies with more than

5,000 U.S. employees.

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2024 AIP aggregate payout percentage

The total achievement for the 2024 AIP resulted in a 139% payout of the target bonus for each NEO, as included in the

table below . This reflects strong improvements in financial results, where both adjusted revenue and adjusted EBITDA

results exceeded target performance. Progress on the key Company Scorecard elements of Execution, Client, and

Culture were considered to be positive, though below the desired target performance level.

Financial metric Weight (%) 2024 actual payout (%) Weighted payout (%)
Adjusted Revenue 33% 143% 48%
Adjusted EBITDA 33% 200% 67%
Company Scorecard 33% 73% 24%
Total (1) 100% 139%

(1) Sum totals may differ based on rounding.

2024 target and actual cash bonus

The Compensation Committee set the 2024 target bonuses (as a percentage of base salary) for our NEOs. The target and

actual earned cash bonus amounts for our NEOs for the 2024 AIP cash bonus are set forth below, based on the following

calculation :

The final 2024 cash bonus payouts for each NEO, based on base salary (prorated, where applicable), target bonus %

of base salary and AIP payout % are s et forth below .

Name Base salary ($) Target bonus (%) Target bonus ($) AIP payout (%) Actual cash bonus ($)
Varun Krishna 1,250,000 150 1,875,000 139 2,606,250
Brian Brown 700,000 (1) 100 (1) 700,000 (1) 139 973,000
Shawn Malhotra 459,016 (2) 75 (2) 344,262 (2) 139 478,525
Jonathan Mildenhall 657,186 (2) 75 (2) 492,890 (2) 139 685,116
Heather Lovier 600,000 (1) 100 (1) 600,000 (1) 139 834,000

(1) The target bonuses (as a percentage of salary) for Brian and Heather were approved by the Compensation Committee in August 2024, after a review of market data and

internal pay equity, following a mid-year expansion of responsibilities for Brian and a mid-year promotion to Chief Operating Officer for Heather. The Compensation

Committee determined, in recognition for their contributions to the Company for the entire year, it was appropriate to use Brian and Heather’s new base salaries,

retroactive to January 1, 2024, for determining final payout under the AIP.

(2) The target bonuses (as a percentage of salary) for Shawn and Jonathan were approved by the Compensation Committee in August 2024, after a review of market data

and internal pay equity following their appointment by the Board as executive officers on June 20, 2024. These target bonuses of 75% superseded the target bonuses of

50% included in each of their employment agreements, and the new target bonuses were used for determining final payouts under the AIP, along with prorated salaries

based on their dates of hire pursuant to their employment agreements .

Long-term equity awards

The Compensation Committee grants RSUs and PSUs to align our executive pay with stockholder interests and long-term

Company strategic goals to drive long-term stockholder value. The value ultimately realized from any long-term equity

grant is a function of the number of shares that are earned and vest and our stock price at the time of vesting and

settlement, and for PSUs, achieving three-year performance goals. Long-term equity is an important strategic lever to

help attract, motivate and retain the talent and experience required to drive our long-term success.

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In March 2024, our Compensation Committee chose to implement a shift in the Company’s long-term equity awards

for select senior leaders. The Compensation Committee adopted the new PSU structure to reinforce the Company’s

philosophy of having a strong pay-for-performance culture with direct alignment to stockholder value creation. Since

the PSU framework was new to the Company, the Compensation Committee elected to have limited participation in the

2024 PSU grants, including our CEO and CFO, with plans to consider expanding as part of the continued evolution of

the executive compensation program in 2025 . For the CEO and CFO, the approved 2024 equity mix was 50% RSUs

( at target equity grant value ) and 50% PSUs (at target equity grant value). Our other NEOs received 100% RSUs for

their 2024 equity awards. Generally, the size of the awards depended on the NEO’s position and current salary, as well

as management’s recommendations, competitiveness in the market, internal pay equity and other subjective factors

deemed relevant by the Compensation Committee. Shawn and Jonathan received only RSUs in 2024 per their

employment agreements in connection with their hiring. Shawn’s RSUs were granted to replace the value forfeited

by him relating to certain outstanding equity awards at his prior employer and Jonathan’s RSUs were granted as an

inducement to join the Company . Heather received only RSUs in 2024, due to the timing of her annual award being

granted prior to her appointment as an executive officer, and her subsequent award was in recognition of her promotion

to Chief Operating Officer.

E quity grant values and award amounts

Each NEO’s grant value of target RSUs and target PSUs (if applicable) are divided by the closing stock price on the grant

date to determine the respective amount of RSUs and PSUs granted, except the methodology for Varun’s awards was set

forth in his employment agreement (see footnote 1 below). As discussed above, Shawn, Jonathan and Heather received

only RSUs in 2024.

Name Target total grant values ($) Target RSUs Target PSUs
Grant value ($) Shares (#) Grant value ($) Shares (#)
Varun Krishna (1) 16,875,000 8,437,500 780,252 8,437,500 780,252
Brian Brown (2) 5,000,000 2,500,000 196,540 2,500,000 196,540
Shawn Malhotra (2) 8,000,000 8,000,000 579,290
Jonathan Mildenhall (2) 7,000,000 7,000,000 553,797
Heather Lovier (2) 3,250,000 3,250,000 218,380

(1) The grant date for the annual awards to Varun was March 8, 2024. Varun’s employment agreement provided that, for 2024 annual equity awards, his applicable grant

value of RSUs and Target PSUs, each to be in the amount of $8,437,500, would be divided by the 30-day trailing average stock price ending on September 5, 2023, his

employment start date, to determine the applicable number of shares for his respective RSU and PSU grants. The 30-day trailing average stock price end on September

5, 2023 was $10.81. The value disclosed in the Summary Compensation Table below is higher than the value above as the actual stock price on the date of grant was

$12.72.

(2) The grant dates and closing price for our common stock on the grant date were as follows: (i) Brian - March 8, 2024; $12.72; (ii) Shawn - May 6, 2024; $13.81; (iii)

Jonathan - March 7, 2024; $12.64; and (iv) Heather - March 7, 2024; $12.64 and August 26, 2024; $20.78. The target total grant value for Brian was determined by the

Compensation Committee as part of 2024 annual compensation decisions for our NEOs. For Heather, the target total grant includes her 2024 annual award of

$2,000,000, prior to her appointment as an executive officer in June 2024, and a $1,250,000 award approved by the Compensation Committee in conjunction with her

promotion to Chief Operating Officer in August 2024. For Shawn and Jonathan, the target total grant values represent awards established in connection with their hiring

dates, in May 2024 and January 2024, respectively.

2024 PSU plan

The Compensation Committee introduced PSUs for the first time in 2024 as a new vehicle within our executive

compensation program to better meet our compensation objectives, strengthening our pay-for-performance culture

by aligning compensation decisions to Company performance to drive long-term value aligned with stockholder interest.

Unlike time-based RSUs that generally vest semiannually in equal installments over three years, our PSUs cliff vest

after three years based on achievement against three Company performance metrics, with a payout range of 0% - 200%

of target.

Company performance metrics overview

PSUs are earned and vest based on three Company performance metrics to be achieved over a three-year performance

period: Relative Total Shareholder Return (“rTSR”), Refinance Mortgage Market Share Growth (“Refinance Market

Growth”) and Purchase Mortgage Market Share Growth (“Purchase Market Growth”) . The Compensation Committee

selected these three metrics as they help to drive the Company’s overall strategic objectives of creating stockholder value

and increasing long-term market share. In determining the weighting between refinance and purchase mortgage market

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share growth, our Compensation Committee noted that the Company’s earnings at the time of evaluating the pay mix

were heavily based on refinance market share. The metric weighting, and brief description of each, is included in the

table below.

Metric % of grant value of target PSUs Description
Relative Total Shareholder Return (1)(2) 50% Measures the Company’s total shareholder return (“TSR”) at the end of the performance period, where performance is determined by the ranking (as a percentile) of the Company’s TSR versus a custom peer group. See below for the TSR peer companies.
Refinance Mortgage Market Share Growth (2)(3) 40% Measures growth of the Company’s market share of U.S. residential single family (1-4 units) mortgages originated whose loan purpose is a refinance. See below for more details on year- over-year growth cumulative goal-setting.
Purchase Mortgage Market Share Growth (2)(3) 10% Measures growth of the Company’s market share of U.S. residential single family (1-4 units) mortgages originated whose loan purpose is a purchase. See below for more details on year- over-year growth cumulative goal-setting.

(1) TSR is defined as the stock price appreciation (or reduction) over the performance period, including reinvestment of dividends, divided by the stock price at the beginning

of the period. Stock price shall be based on the 90- trading day average closing stock price of our common stock immediately preceding the first day of the performance

period and the 90-trading day average of our common stock ending on the last day of the performance period. TSR is subject to adjustment by the Compensation

Committee as it determines necessary to give effect to any dividend (other than regular cash dividends) or other distribution, corporate transaction, event or other change

in company structure affecting the common stock of any company or the value thereof, or any other adjustment permissible under the 2024 PSU plan.

(2) The Compensation Committee reserves the right to adjust the goals and/or the level of achievement required for any performance metric for the performance period,

including to account for any (i) corporate acquisition, divestiture or other discontinued operations, (ii) change in tax law or regulation or change in accounting principle,

(iii) corporate event or occurrence that is extraordinary or unusual in nature, or (iv) other adjustment permissible under the 2024 PSU plan.

(3) The Compensation Committee determines refinance and purchase mortgage market share based on its review of independent industry reports using a consistent

methodology to measure growth from the beginning to the end of the performance period.

Based on such performance metric weighting and the target PSUs granted , the number of target PSUs by performance

metric awarded is set forth below .

Name Target PSUs rTSR (50% weighting) — Grant value ($) Shares (#) Target PSUs Refinance Mortgage Market (40% weighting) — Grant value ($) Shares (#) Target PSUs Purchase Mortgage Market (10% weighting) — Grant value ($) Shares (#)
Varun Krishna (1) 4,218,750 390,126 3,375,000 312,100 843,750 78,026
Brian Brown 1,250,000 98,270 1,000,000 78,616 250,000 19,654

(1) The grant date for the annual awards to Varun was March 8, 2024. Varun’s employment agreement provided that the applicable grant value of target PSUs for his 2024

annual equity award would be in the amount of $8,437,500 and would be divided by the 30-day trailing average stock price ending on September 5, 2023, his employment

start date, to determine the applicable number of target shares for his PSU grant. The 30-day trailing average stock price end on September 5, 2023 was $10.81.

The actual value disclosed in the Summary Compensation Table below is higher than the value above as the actual stock price on the date of grant was $12.72.

Relative TSR (rTSR) design overview and TSR peer group

The rTSR performance goal was established as a three-year period covering January 1, 2024 to December 31, 2026. A

payout equal to a specific percentage of the target number of shares is earned based on the Company’s rTSR percentile

rank against its TSR peer group, as described in more detail below, for the applicable performance period. Payouts levels

range from as low as 5 0% to a maximum of 200% of target, based on specific threshold, target, and maximum rTSR

goals, and below threshold performance will result in 0% payout. Payouts are capped at 100% of target if Rocket has

absolute negative TSR over the performance period.

In determining to focus on rTSR, our Compensation Committee considered the importance of promoting long-term

value creation. Our Compensation Committee created a TSR peer group for rTSR comparison purposes, with advice

from Korn Ferry. The companies chosen reflect companies that are operating in the same or adjacent industries as

Rocket, are of a sufficient scale to be generally comparable to Rocket and have historical stock trading profiles with

generally high correlations to Rocket and 10-year treasury bonds. The list of companies is included in the table below.

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Companies (1) — Affirm Holdings Inc. DR Horton, Inc. Loan Depot SoFi Technologies, Inc.
Ally Financial Inc. Ellington Financial, Inc. Mr Cooper Group, Inc. Stewart Information Services Corp.
American Express Co. Fidelity National Financial, Inc. NMI Holdings, Inc. Toll Brothers, Inc.
Annaly Capital Management Inc. First American Financial Corp. PayPal Holdings, Inc. Truist Financial Corp.
Block, Inc. Guild Holdings Co. PennyMac Financial Services, Inc. Upstart Holdings, Inc.
Charles Schwab Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. U.S. Bancorp
Compass, Inc. KB Home Radian Group, Inc. UWM Holdings Corp.
CoStar Group Inc. Lennar Corp. Rithm Capital (New Residential) Corp. Zillow Group Inc.

(1) Compensation Committee reserves the right to remove companies from the rTSR peer group due to the following events involving any such companies during the

performance period: mergers, acquisitions, consolidations, divestitures or insolvencies.

The graphic below summarizes the relationship between the Company’s TSR performance versus the TSR peer group

and the percent target that may be earned based on achievement against the rTSR performance goal.

Rocket’s TSR percentile rank

Shared earned as a percent of target

Mortgage market share performance metrics and goals

In determining to focus on mortgage market share growth, our Compensation Committee considered that financial

performance is driven by profitable market share growth, and that based on analyst and investor feedback, such

performance metrics were strongly aligned with the Company’s long-term stock price. In determining the weighting

between refinance and purchase mortgage market share growth, our Compensation Committee noted that that

Company’s earnings at the time of evaluating the pay mix were heavily based on refinance market share.

The mortgage industry is inherently volatile, with rapid swings possible due to interest rates or other macroeconomic or

geopolitical factors. While Rocket and others in our sector experience volatility, our long-term objective is to profitably

grow market share. Within this context, our Compensation Committee determined the market share growth performance

metrics would be measured over a three-year performance period but that it would set goals annually to determine the

cumulative performance goal. Achievement of the targeted cumulative three-year growth goal will result in a target payout.

There is a threshold growth goal to achieve a 50% payout, below which no market share PSU awards will be earned. The

maximum (or 200% payout) earning opportunity for the market share PSUs is for achievement that is well above the target

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level of three-year cumulative market-share growth. For any market share PSUs to be earned, we must achieve positive

cumulative adjusted EBITDA over the first two years of the performance cycle. The Compensation Committee will set an

annual year-over-year (“YoY”) growth goal in the first quarter of each performance year (for years 2024 through 2026 ),

with a cumulative three-year goal to be established following approval of the goals for the third year, as illustrated below

for visual purposes only .

(1) Actual cumulative growth calculation = (1+'24 YoY Growth Rate) x (1+'25 YoY Growth Rate) x (1+ '26 YoY Growth Rate) -1

2025 PSU plan

In March 2025, our Compensation Committee approved changes to the PSU plan design to simplify the goal-setting

structure, based on input from its new independent compensation consultant, Semler Brossy Consulting Group, LLC

(“Semler Brossy” ). The change focused on the mortgage market share growth performance metrics where we transitioned

from a cumulative three-year growth performance target comprised of annually-set goals, to a one-year growth

performance goal , with payout recognized after the three-year cliff vesting period . In addition, the weighting between

refinance and purchase market share will each be equally balanced at 25% of the total PSUs. There was no change to

the rTSR design framework as compared to the 2024 PSU plan . Finally, we expanded participation beyond NEOs to a

broader set of senior leaders.

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Compensation governance

Our Compensation Committee believes that strong governance and oversight of our executive compensation program

is essential to the Company’s long-term success. The Compensation Committee is informed by an independent

compensation consultant to make compensation decisions based on NEO performance and comparison of compensation

peer group and broader market pay levels and practices, following discussions throughout the year (in both regularly

scheduled and special meetings, as appropriate). See “ Corporate governance – Board Committees – Compensation

Committee ” for a list of key Compensation Committee oversight responsibilities and number of meetings for the year.

Defining roles for effective compensation oversight

Independent compensation consultant

The Compensation Committee had engaged Korn Ferry as its independent compensation consultant since the Company’s

IPO in 2020. In December 2023, the Compensation Committee re-engaged Korn Ferry as its independent compensation

consultant to support the development of the 2024 executive compensation program, including evaluation and assistance

in selecting an appropriate compensation peer group, benchmarking executive compensation programs amongst the peer

group and general market survey data, and providing input on our executive compensation plan design and equity usage

and allocation. In addition, Korn Ferry assisted with the Compensation Committee’s compensation risk assessment in the

first quarter of 2024 for fiscal year 2023, and provided information regarding general compensation market trends. Korn

Ferry also advised the Nominating and Governance Committee with matters related to director compensation for 2024.

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Korn Ferry performed no other services for us in 2024, and the Compensation Committee determined that there were no

conflicts of interest raised by the work of Korn Ferry.

In October 2024, the Compensation Committee conducted a competitive search process for compensation consultation

services and selected Semler Brossy as its new independent compensation consultant, effective October 2024, to assist

our Compensation Committee and Nominating and Governance Committee with matters related to executive officer and

director compensation programs for 2025. Although Semler Brossy’s work plan primarily related to the 2025 executive

compensation program , Semler Brossy assisted in 2024 with the Compensation Committee’s compensation risk

assessment, provided information regarding general compensation market trends and assisted with the review of our

executive compensation philosophy and objectives as we seek to attract, motivate and retain executive talent to drive

our long-term success. Semler Brossy performed no other services for us in 2024, and the Compensation Committee

determined that there were no conflicts of interest raised by the work of Semler Brossy.

Compensation policies and practices

Stock ownership guidelines for executive officers

In March 2021, we adopted robust stock ownership guidelines to further future alignment of the long-term interests of our

executive officers with those of our s tockholder s, as set forth below .

Executive officer Minimum ownership level What counts towards ownership level What doesn’t count towards ownership level
CEO 6x base salary • Stock or units owned outright (or vested) • Stock or units (or equivalents) held in the Team Member Stock Purchase Program • Stock or units owned outright (or vested) by immediate family members • Stock options • Unvested RSUs • Unvested PSUs
Other NEOs 3x base salary

To further enhance the effectiveness of the stock ownership guidelines, the Compensation Committee has a five year

compliance period. Generally, each NEO will have five years as of the later of the date the guidelines were adopted and

the date the person was first designated as an executive officer by the Board to achieve compliance.

The Compensation Committee is responsible for reviewing any non-compliance with the stock ownership requirements

and has the discretion to enforce the requirements. As of December 31, 2024, a ll NEOs had met or were on track to meet

the guidelines within the five year compliance period .

Timing and pricing of equity awards

Our Compensation Committee does not coordinate the timing of equity grants with the release of material non-public

information. Our Compensation Committee generally grants equity awards for executive officers on an annual basis in the

first quarter of the year based upon a pre-determined schedule set well in advance , and for new hires on an ad hoc basis

around the hire date . Our Compensation Committee does not otherwise grant equity awards in anticipation of the release

of material nonpublic information and it does not otherwise time the release of material nonpublic information based on

equity award grant dates.

Hedging and pledging

We prohibit or provide guidelines and limitations on our officers, directors and team members from engaging in certain

securities transactions with respect to our securities. See “ Corporate governance – Corporate policies and practices -

Insider Trading Policy ” for discussion related to our pledging and hedging guidance.

Clawback policy

As required by the listing standards adopted by the NYSE as a result of SEC rulemaking, our Board adopted a Clawback

Policy for the recovery of erroneously awarded compensation. We request each executive officer to sign an

acknowledgment of the policy. The policy provides that we must promptly recover specified incentive-based compensation

that is received by our executive officers on or after October 2, 2023, regardless of fault or misconduct, upon specified

accounting restatements of our financial statements that resulted in such persons receiving an amount that exceeded the

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amount that would have been received if based on the restated financial statements. There are limited exceptions to the

recovery requirement as set forth in the listing standards. Incentive-based compensation is defined as any compensation

that is granted, earned, or vested based wholly or in part upon the attainment of a financial reporting measure. The

subject compensation will be determined without regard to any net settlement of, or taxes paid or payable or withheld on,

such compensation, but there will not be any duplicative recovery by us. As specified in the listing standards, we cannot

indemnify, or pay or provide an insurance reimbursement for, an executive officer for recoveries under this policy.

The recovery period under the policy is three full fiscal years preceding the date our Board or Audit Committee concludes,

or reasonably should have concluded, that an accounting restatement is required. If such repayment or return is not made

when due, the policy provides that we will take all reasonable and appropriate actions to recover such erroneously

awarded compensation from such person. A copy of our Clawback Policy is filed as Exhibit 97.1 to our Annual Report on

Form 10-K for 2024.

Benefits and perquisites

We provide a number of benefit plans to all eligible team members, including our NEOs. These benefits include programs

such as medical, dental, life insurance, business travel accident insurance, short- and long-term disability coverage and a

401(k) defined contribution plan with matching contributions.

Perquisites help to provide our NEOs a benefit with a high perceived value at a generally relatively low cost, and

therefore, we do not typically view perquisites as a material component of our NEO compensation program. However, we

may provide additional or different perquisites or other personal benefits in limited circumstances that we believe are

appropriate to assist an executive in the performance of such executive’s duties, to make our executives more efficient

and effective or for recruitment, motivation and/or retention purposes. As part of the Company’s recent executive

leadership transformation, we agreed to certain benefits and perquisites, in connection with executive officer recruitment:

• Varun: Commuting-related expenses for his first six months of employment and expenses arising from relocation.

• Shawn : Commuting-related expenses to and from, and housing while working at, the Company’s corporate

headquarters in Detroit, MI, until his permanent relocation to the Detroit area.

• Jonathan: Commuting-related expenses to and from, and housing while working at, the Company’s corporate

headquarters in Detroit, MI for approximately two weeks per month.

Other compensation

As part of our efforts to build out the senior management team and to attract and retain top executive talent, we may

provide sign-on bonuses and buy-out equity awards for new hires. New hire sign-on bonuses and buy-out equity awards

are an effective means of making up for compensation opportunities executives forfeit when they leave a former employer,

and/or to act as an inducement to join the Company. We typically require executives to return all or a portion of their

sign-on bonus if, within a certain period after joining us, they voluntarily leave the Company or are involuntarily terminated

by the Company for cause. New hire equity awards are used to incentivize executives to join without unnecessarily

increasing annual compensation levels. Buy-out and new hire equity awards are generally subject to a time-based

vesting period and unvested amounts are forfeited upon voluntary or involuntary termination.

In connection with their hiring in January and May 2024, Jonathan received a sign-on bonus of $2,015,000 and Shawn

received a sign-on bonus of $2,000,000, to provide an inducement to join and replace forfeited compensation . The

sign-on bonuses are subject to reimbursement for specified termination events if their employment is voluntarily

terminated without Good Reason (as defined in their employment agreements) or involuntarily terminated for Cause

(as defined in their employment agreements) within the first 12 months after their respective start dates.

Tax considerations

For income tax purposes, public companies may not deduct any portion of compensation that is in excess of $1 million

paid in a taxable year to certain covered employees, including our NEOs and certain former officers of the Company,

under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”). Even if Section 162(m) of the

Code were to apply to compensation paid to our NEOs, our Board believes that it should not be constrained by the

requirements of Section 162(m) of the Code if those requirements would impair flexibility in compensating our NEOs

in a manner that can best promote our corporate objectives. We intend to continue to compensate our executive officers

in a manner consistent with the best interests of our stockholders and reserve the right to award compensation that may

not be deductible under Section 162(m) where the Company believes it is appropriate to do so.

Section 409A of the Code requires that nonqualified deferred compensation be deferred and paid under plans or

arrangements that satisfy the requirements of the statute with respect to the timing of deferral elections, timing of

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payments and certain other matters. Failure to satisfy these requirements can expose team members and other service

providers to accelerated income tax liabilities, penalty taxes and interest on their vested compensation under such plans.

Accordingly, as a general matter, it is our intention to design and administer our compensation and benefits plans and

arrangements for all of our team members and other service providers, including our NEOs, so that they are either exempt

from, or satisfy the requirements of, Section 409A.

Compensation Committee report

Our Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed the CD&A in this proxy statement with management. Based

on such review and discussion, our Compensation Committee recommended to our Board that the CD&A be included in

the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and the proxy statement for the 2025

annual meeting of stockholders.

Compensation Committee

• Matthew Rizik, Chair

• Jonathan Mariner

• Nancy Tellem

Compensation Committee interlocks and insider participation

During 2024, our Compensation Committee consisted of Jonathan Mariner, Matthew Rizik (Chair) and Nancy Tellem.

No member of our Compensation Committee during 2024 is or was an officer or employee of the Company during 2024.

Dan Gilbert and Matthew have served, and Dan and Matthew are currently serving, in various director, executive and

employment roles for RHI and certain of its affiliates. See “ Proposal no. 1 - election of Class II directors – Director

backgrounds and qualifications ” and “ Executive officers ” for additional biographical information.

Dan and RHI, our principal stockholder that is controlled by Dan, hold all of our issued and outstanding Class D common

stock and control 79% of the combined voting power of our common stock as of the record date. Accordingly, RHI and

Dan control our business, policies and affairs and can control any action requiring the general approval of our

stockholders.

Dan and Matthew are not independent directors as such term is defined by the applicable rules and regulations of the

NYSE and Matthew does not qualify as independent in accordance with the additional independence rules established

by the SEC and the NYSE for our Compensation Committee. As a controlled company, we are not required to establish

a compensation committee composed entirely of independent directors.

See “ Certain relationships and related person transactions ” for more information on the transactions and relationships

between the Company, Dan and the RHI Affiliated Entities.

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Named executive officer compensation tables

2024 summary compensation table

The following table shows total compensation earned by or granted to our NEOs during

the last three fiscal years, as calculated under SEC rules, and titles of each NEO are

as of December 31, 2024.

Name and principal position Year Salary ($) (1) Bonus ($) (2) Stock awards ($) (3) Non-equity incentive plan compensation ($) (4) All other compensation ($) (5) Total ($)
Varun Krishna CEO 2024 1,250,000 21,995,304 2,606,250 36,372 25,887,926
2023 404,110 2,606,164 435,640 3,445,914
Brian Brown CFO And Treasurer 2024 667,486 5,540,463 973,000 29,660 7,210,609
2023 500,000 250,000 2,250,003 18,036* 3,018,039
2022 325,000 466,500 3,044,233 5,998 3,841,731
Shawn Malhotra CTO 2024 459,016 2,000,000 7,999,995 478,525 131,148 11,068,684
Jonathan Mildenhall CMO 2024 657,186 2,015,000 6,999,994 685,116 474,371 10,831,667
Heather Lovier COO 2024 516,530 3,249,969 834,000 55,486 4,655,985

(1) The amounts in this column represent actual salary paid to the NEOs in 2024. For the NEO’s current base salaries, see “Compensation discussion and analysis – 2024

executive compensation program and pay – Annual base salary” .

(2) For Shawn and Jonathan in 2024, reflects the one-time signing cash bonuses of $2 million and $2.015 million, respectively .

(3) T he dollar values shown reflect the grant date fair value of RSU and PSU awards granted under our 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan in accordance with ASC Topic 718.

The grant date fair value for RSU awards is calculated as of the closing price of our Class A common stock as quoted on NYSE on the grant date multiplied by the number

of shares subject to the award.

The fair value for the portion of the PSUs that vest based upon the achievement of mortgage market share growth was based on the probable outcome of the

performance-based vesting conditions as of the service inception date, which was target level of performance, multiplied by the closing price of our Class A common stock

as quoted on NYSE on the service inception date.

Under FASB ASC Topic 718, the provisions of the PSUs that vest upon the achievement of rTSR are considered a market condition, and therefore the effect of that

market condition is reflected in the grant date fair value for this portion of the award. A third party was engaged to complete a Monte Carlo simulation to account for the

market condition. That simulation takes into account the beginning stock price of our common stock, the expected volatilities for the rTSR comparator group, the expected

volatilities for the Company’s stock price, correlation coefficients, the expected risk-free rate of return and the expected dividend yield of the Company and the comparator

group. The single grant-date fair value computed by this valuation method is recognized by the Company in accounting for the awards regardless of the actual future

outcome of the rTSR performance. Therefore, there is no separate maximum grant-date fair value reported with respect to the rTSR PSUs.

Each of Refinance Market Growth and Purchase Market Growth is considered a performance condition and the fair value as of the service inception date used in this table

for Refinance Market Growth and Purchase Market Growth PSUs corresponds with management’s expectation of the probable outcome of the performance condition as

of the service inception date. The fair value of the Refinance Market Growth and Purchase Market Growth PSUs are calculated as the closing price of our common stock

as quoted on NYSE on the service inception date multiplied by the target number of shares subject to the award. The maximum service inception date fair value for the

Refinance Market Growth and Purchase Market Growth PSUs granted in 2024 are as follows:

◦ Varun, $7,939,824 for Refinance Market Growth (compared to $3,969,912 for such measure in the table) and $1,984,981 for Purchase Market Growth

(compared to $992,491 for such measure in the table)

◦ Brian, $1,999,991 for Refinance Market Growth (compared to $999,996 for such measure in the table) and $499,998 for Purchase Market Growth (compared to

$249,999 for such measure in the table)

(4) Represents the AIP cash bonus related to the achievement of Company scorecard, adjusted Revenue, and adjusted EBITDA performance metrics.

(5) The amounts reported in this column for all NEOs for 2024 include Company matching contributions to 401(k) plan accounts, health insurance and certain perquisites and

personal benefits (travel expenses, entertainment tickets, Company gifts, security, technology and new hire benefits, including relocation expenses) . The amounts

reported for Shawn and Jonathan in 2024 include $59,944 and $215,146, respectively, for reimbursement of commuting and temporary lodging expenses for 2024 in

connection with their hiring and in accordance with their respective employment agreements.

The amounts for 2024 also include tax gross-ups in accordance with the employment agreements for each applicable NEO. The tax gross-up amounts reflect the

following: $3,768 for Varun for expenses related to entertainment tickets and Company gifts; $7,111 for Brian for expenses related to entertainment tickets and Company

gifts; $70,939 for Shawn primarily for expenses related to commuting, travel and temporary lodging and also for Company gifts; $238,464 for Jonathan primarily for

expenses related to commuting, travel and temporary lodging and also for entertainment tickets and Company gifts; and $13,610 for Heather for expenses for work-

related travel , entertainment tickets and Company gifts .

  • The above table reflects a revised “All other compensation” amount for Brian for 2023 due to perquisites received in 2023 but paid by the Company in 2024.

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Grants of plan-based awards in 2024

The following table provides information about equity and non-equity awards

granted to our NEOs in 2024. All equity awards were made under the 2020

Omnibus Incentive Plan.

Name Grant date Board approval date Estimated possible payouts under non-equity incentive plan awards (1) Estimated future payouts under equity incentive plan awards (2) All other stock awards: number of shares of stock or units (#) Grant date fair value of stock awards ($) (3)
Threshold ($) Target ($) Maximum ($) Threshold (#) Target (#) Maximum (#)
Varun Krishna 3/8/2024 (2) 3/8/2024 390,126 780,252 1,560,504 12,070,498
3/8/2024 (4) 3/8/2024 780,252 9,924,805
312,500 1,250,000 2,500,000
Brian Brown 3/8/2024 (2) 3/8/2024 98,270 196,540 393,080 3,040,474
3/8/2024 (4) 3/8/2024 196,540 2,499,989
116,667 466,667 933,333
Shawn Malhotra 5/6/2024 (5) 5/6/2024 579,290 7,999,995
57,377 229,508 459,016
Jonathan Mildenhall 3/7/2024 (6) 3/7/2024 553,797 6,999,994
82,148 328,593 657,186
Heather Lovier 3/7/2024 (6) 3/7/2024 158,227 1,999,989
8/26/2024 (7) 8/26/2024 60,153 1,249,979
100,000 400,000 800,000

(1) Represents possible payouts for the Company financial performance metrics (representing two-thirds of the target value) under our 2024 AIP. Threshold performance

reflects earned performance at the threshold level for one of the two Company financial performance metric s. The remaining one-third of the target value of the 2024 AIP

relates to a discretionary payout (Company scorecard) and therefore is not reflected here. Actual bonuses earned for 2024 are disclosed in the “Non-Equity Incentive Plan

Compensation” column of the 2024 summary compensation table.

(2) Represents grants of PSUs with 50% of the PSUs vesting based on the Company’s TSR performance compared to the TSR peer group, 40% of the PSUs vesting based

on achievement of financial performance goals relating to Refinance Market Growth and 10% of the PSUs vesting based on achievement of financial performance goals

relating to Purchase Market Growth. See “Compensation discussion and analysis - 2024 executive compensation program and pay - Long-term equity awards” for further

information regarding the long-term incentive program .

(3) The grant date fair values in this column are calculated as disclosed in the 2024 summary compensation table above. The grant date fair value per share was $12.72 on

March 8, 2024, $13.81 on May 6, 2024, $12.64 on March 7, 2024 and $20.78 on August 26, 2024 (the closing price per share of the Company’s Class A common stock

on the NYSE on each date, respectively).

(4) Represents grants of RSUs that vest in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 8 and September 8 beginning on September 8, 2024.

(5) Represents grant of RSUs that vest in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive November 6 and May 6 beginning on November 6, 2024, for

Shawn’s new hire equity award.

(6) Represents grants of RSUs that vest in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 7 and September 7 beginning on September 7, 2024,

for Jonathan’s new hire equity award and Heather’s annual equity award.

(7) Represents grants of RSUs that vest in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 7 and September 7 beginning on March 7, 2025,

for Heather’s equity award granted in conjunction with her promotio n .

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Narrative disclosure to summary compensation table and grants of

plan-based awards table

Employment agreements

In 2020, Brian entered into an employment agreement with Holdings , and in connection with his promotion in 2022, he

entered into an amendment to his employment agreement with Holdings to reflect his appointment as Chief Financial

Officer and Treasurer effective November 15, 2022.

In connection with his initial appointment as Chief Executive Officer, Varun entered into an employment agreement and

offer letter with Holdings, effective September 5, 2023. Throughout this proxy statement, the term “employment

agreement” is used to describe terms set forth in either his employment agreement or offer letter, as applicable. His

employment agreement provides for (1) an annual base salary of $1.25 million and a target bonus of 150% of his base

salary for each calendar year (with a guaranteed payment of the target payout subject to pro-ration for 2023), (2) a one-

time signing bonus of $2 million and (3) eligibility to receive a grant of RSUs and PSUs in 2024, in an aggregate number

of shares (at target for the PSUs) based on $16.875 million divided by the 30-day trailing average stock price ending on

September 5, 2023.

In connection with his appointment as Chief Marketing Officer, Jonathan entered into an employment agreement and offer

letter with Holdings effective January 8, 2024. Throughout this proxy statement, the term “employment agreement” is used

to describe terms set forth in either his employment agreement or offer letter, as applicable. His employment agreement

provides for (1) an annual base salary of $670,000 and a target bonus of 50% of his base salary for each calendar year,

(2) a one-time signing bonus of $2.02 million and (3) eligibility to receive a grant of RSUs in March 2024, in an aggregate

number of shares based on $7 million divided by the closing stock price on the grant date. As previously noted, the

Compensation Committee approved a target bonus of 75% of Jonathan’s base salary on August 26, 2024, following his

appointment by the Board as a new executive officer on June 20, 2024.

In connection with his appointment as Chief Technology Officer, Shawn entered into an employment agreement and offer

letter with Holdings effective May 6, 2024. Throughout this proxy statement, the term “employment agreement” is used to

describe terms set forth in either his employment agreement or offer letter, as applicable. His employment agreement

provides for (1) an annual b ase salary of $700,000 and a target bonus of 50% of his base salary for each calendar year,

(2) a one-time signing bonus of $2 million and (3) a grant of RSUs, in an aggregate number of shares based on $8 million

divided by the closing stock price on the grant date. As previously noted, the Compensation Committee approved a target

bonus of 75% of Shawn’s base salary on August 26, 2024, following his appointment by the Board as a new executive

officer on June 20, 2024.

In connection with her promotion to Chief Operating Officer, Heather entered into an employment agreement with

Holdings effective June 20, 2024.

Pursuant to each employment agreement, such NEOs are paid an annual base salary and are eligible to receive an

annual bonus based on the satisfaction of business objectives and/or other criteria as determined in the sole discretion

of our Compensation Committee. The employment agreements also include post-termination restrictive covenant

provisions, including perpetual non-disclosure of confidential information, non-competition for 18 months, non-solicitation

of employees’ customers, clients and vendors for 18 months and perpetual non-disparagement covenants.

See “ – Potential payments upon termination of employment or Change in Control of the Company ” for a description

of the potential payments and benefits payable to our NEOs following a termination under their employment agreements

and otherwise.

Annual base salary

For 2024, the amounts reported in the Salary column reflect the actual salary paid to the NEOs in 2024. For Brian,

the amount reported reflects his base salary through August 26, 2024 and his base salary thereafter in connection with

the expansion of his responsibilities to include leading corporate strategy & development. For Shawn and Jonathan,

the amounts reported reflect their base salaries beginning on their hiring dates on May 6, 2024 and January 8, 2024,

respectively. For Heather, the amount reported reflects her base salary rates from January 1, 2024 through February 18,

2024 and February 19, 2024 through August 26, 2024 and her base salary thereafter in connection with her promotion.

Annual cash bonuses

In 2024, target bonuses were set for the NEOs as a percentage of base salary to be earned pursuant to the terms of the

AIP. In February 2025, the Compensation Committee determined that the 2024 bonuses would be paid out at 139% (as a

percentage of target bonus) based upon actual performance achieved in 2024. As a result, the amounts reported for 2024

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in the Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation column reflect the applicable target bonus of each NEO multiplied by the

actual performance achieved of 139%. For Brian and Heather, the target bonuses (as a percentage of base salary) were

determined using their respective new base salary rates following the increases in their base salaries, retroactive for the

full year. For Shawn and Jonathan, the amounts reflect pro rata target bonuses based on actual base salary earned from

their employment start dates on May 6, 2024 and January 8, 2024, respectively.

In 2022 and 2023, there were no pre-set performance goals that were required to be satisfied for the annual discretionary

cash bonus. Therefore, such amounts are included in the Bonus column of the Summary Compensation Table.

For 2022, there were no annual discretionary bonuses that were earned in connection with service as an executive officer.

Brian earned a discretionary Drive bonuses in connection with his service prior to his 2022 promotion, prorated for the

time spent in such prior role in 2022. For Brian, the amount for 2022 reported also includes a one-time cash bonus of

$325,000 in connection with his promotion.

Equity awards

For 2024, the amounts reported in the Stock Awards column reflect the grant date fair values of RSU and PSU awards

granted under our 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan, which grant date fair values were calculated as disclosed in the footnote

3 of the 2024 Summary Compensation Table and in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 and applicable SEC rules.

The grant date fair value of awards reflects an estimate as of the grant date or service inception date, as applicable, and

may not correspond to the actual value that will be realized by our NEOs. Furthermore, with respect to Varun’s 2024

annual equity awards, his employment agreement provides that the applicable grant value of such RSUs and target PSUs

would be divided by the 30-day trailing average stock price ending on September 5, 2023, his employment start date, to

determine the applicable number of shares for his respective RSU and PSU grants rather than using of the date of grant

as is calculated in the Summary Compensation Table above. The 30-day trailing average stock price end on September

5, 2023 was $10.81 whereas the actual stock price on the date of grant was $12.72, which reflects a higher value in the

Summary Compensation Table above. On March 8, 2024, Varun and Brian were granted annual equity awards consisting

of RSUs and PSUs earned upon the achievement of performance objectives based on rTSR, Refinance Market Growth

and Purchase Market Growth. Shawn was granted an equity award consisting solely of RSUs on May 6, 2024, in

connection with his hiring as a replacement of him forgoing the vesting and earnings of certain outstanding equity awards

from his prior position. Jonathan was granted an equity award consisting solely of RSUs on March 7, 2024, in connection

with his hiring as an inducement to join the Company. On March 7, 2024, prior to her appointment as an executive officer,

Heather was granted an annual equity award consisting solely of RSUs. On August 26, 2024, Heather was granted an

additional one-time equity award consisting solely of RSUs in recognition of her promotion to Chief Operating Officer.

All RSUs vest semiannually over three years, subject to continued employment on the applicable vesting date.

For 2023 and 2022, the amounts reported in the Stock Awards column reflect the grant date fair value of RSU awards

granted on March 3, 2023 and March 7, 2022, respectively, under our 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan. For 2022, the grant

date fair value includes $1.01 per share for the special dividend effective shortly following the grant date. The RSUs vest

in three equal installments on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date, subject to continued employment on

the applicable vesting date. All RSUs are credited with dividend equivalent rights that are accrued and paid in cash at

settlement following the vesting date. To the extent the RSUs vest, the cash amount paid is equal to the dividends

declared per share of our Class A common stock over the vesting period, multiplied by the number of vested RSUs.

No dividends are paid on unvested RSUs.

In January 2022, Brian’s 2019 RHI RSUs were amended (the “January 2022 Amendment”) to allow for cash settlement of

the portion of such RHI RSUs that vested on October 31, 2021 but were not previously settled, in an amount equal to the

fair market value as of the vesting date of such RHI RSUs. Brian received a cash payment of $1,340,000 (less applicable

withholding taxes) in connection with such cash settlement. For Brian, the amount reported in the Stock Awards column

for 2022 includes the incremental fair value of $880,000 (which was calculated based on the settlement value less the

initial grant date value) recognized as accounting expense by the Company in 2022 in connection with this award

modification in accordance with ASC 718. The January 2022 Amendment was approved by the board of directors of RHI.

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Outstanding equity awards at December 31, 2024

The following table provides information about the outstanding Company equity

awards held by our NEOs as of December 31, 2024.

Name Grant date Option awards — Number of securities underlying unexercised options exercisable (#) Number of securities underlying unexercised options unexercisable (#) Option exercise price ($) Option expiration date Stock awards — Number of shares or units of stock that have not vested (#) Market value of shares or units of stock that have not vested ($) (8) Equity incentive plan awards: number of unearned shares, units or other rights that have not vested (#) (9) Equity incentive plan awards: market or payout value of unearned shares, units or other rights that have not vested ($) (10)
Varun Krishna 3/8/2024 (1) 650,210 7,321,365 585,189 6,589,228
Brian Brown 3/8/2024 (1) 163,784 1,844,208 147,405 1,659,780
3/3/2023 (2) 173,612 1,954,871
3/7/2022 (2) 54,201 610,303
8/5/2020 (3) 92,402 18.00 8/5/2030
Shawn Malhotra 5/6/2024 (4) 482,742 5,435,675
Jonathan Mildenhall 3/7/2024 (5) 461,498 5,196,467
Heather Lovier 8/26/2024 (6) 60,153 677,323
3/7/2024 (5) 131,856 1,484,699
9/28/2023 (7) 121,508 1,368,180
3/7/2022 (2) 12,195 137,316
8/5/2020 (3) 123,203 18.00 8/5/2030

(1) Each of these RSU awards vests in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 8 and September 8 beginning on September 8, 2024, subject to

such person’s employment continuing on such applicable vesting dates.

(2) Each of these RSU awards vests in three equal installments on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date, subject to such person’s employment continuing

on such applicable vesting dates.

(3) These stock option awards vested as to 33.33% on the first anniversary of the grant date and monthly thereafter over the next 24 months, subject to such person’s

employment continuing on such applicable vesting dates.

(4) This RSU award vests in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive November 6 and May 6 beginning on November 6, 2024, subject to such person’s

employment continuing on such applicable vesting dates.

(5) Each of these RSU awards vests in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 7 and September 7 beginning on September 7, 2024, subject to

such person’s employment continuing on such applicable vesting dates.

(6) This RSU award vests in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 7 and September 7 beginning on March 7, 2025, subject to such person’s

employment continuing on such applicable vesting dates.

(7) This RSU award vests in six equal installments semiannually on each consecutive March 7 and September 7 beginning on March 7, 2024, subject to such person’s

employment continuing on such applicable vesting dates.

(8) Represents the sum of (a) the product of (i) $11.26 (which was the closing price of the Company’s Class A common stock on the NYSE on December 31, 2024, the

last trading day of 2024) and (ii) the number of shares of Class A common stock underlying the RSUs, and (b) the cash dividend equivalents related to such RSUs,

as applicable. As of December 31, 2024, Brian had earned dividend equivalents on outstanding unvested RSUs from 2022 awards in the amount of $54,743.

(9) Represents outstanding Relative TSR, Refinance Market Growth and Purchase Market Growth PSUs with performance conditions that have not yet been satisfied. The

number of PSUs has been calculated for purposes of this table based on the assumption that target performance, threshold performance and threshold performance will

be achieved for the 2024 rTSR, Purchase Market Growth and Refinance Market Growth, respectively. For additional information on the performance metric design, goals

and corresponding payout levels of the award, see “Compensation discussion and analysis – 2024 executive compensation program and pay – Long-term equity awards.”

(10) Represents the product of (i) $11.26 (which was the closing price of the Company’s Class A common stock on the NYSE on December 31, 2024, the last trading day of

2024) and (ii) the applicable number of shares of Class A common stock underlying the PSUs.

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Option exercises and stock vested in 2024

The following table sets forth information regarding the value realized by each of our

NEOs on the vesting of stock awards in 2024. The number of shares acquired and

the value realized for each award excludes the payment of any fees, commissions or

taxes. In 2024, no stock options were exercised by our NEOs.

Name Number of shares acquired on vesting (#) Value realized on vesting ($) (1)
Varun Krishna 130,042 2,511,111
Brian Brown 173,761 2,489,529
Shawn Malhotra 96,548 1,520,631
Jonathan Mildenhall 92,299 1,782,294
Heather Lovier 99,318 1,646,199

(1) Based on the number of RSUs vested multiplied by the closing price of the Company’s Class A common stock on the NYSE on the vesting date, plus the amount of

dividend equivalent rights attached to the RSUs (which were payable in cash at the time the vested RSUs were settled).

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Potential payments upon termination of employment or Change in

Control of the Company

Equity awards

The award agreements for the RSU awards granted in 2022, 2023 and 2024 provide that in the event of a Change in

Control, the awards will, to the extent unvested, become immediately vested if either (a) the officer’s employment is

terminated by the Company without Cause or by the officer for Good Reason within 18 months following the effective

date of the Change in Control or (b) if the RSU or option awards are not continued, assumed or substituted. In addition,

the RSU awards granted in 2022, 2023 and 2024 provide that in the event of the officer’s termination of employment due

to the officer’s death or disability, the unvested RSUs then held by the officer immediately become fully vested. The RSU

award agreements also include restrictive covenants (non-competition and non-solicitation) and confidentiality protections

for specified periods, and the awards will be immediately forfeited if any such provision is violated.

The award agreements for the PSU awards granted in 2024 provide that in the event of a Change in Control, the earned

portion of the awards will, to the extent unvested, become immediately vested if either (a) the officer’s employment is

terminated by the Company without Cause or by the officer for Good Reason within 18 months following the effective date

of the Change in Control or (b) if the PSU awards are not continued, assumed or substituted. The amount of PSUs earned

will be determined by the Compensation Committee as of the date of the change of control or, if not determined, at target

performance. The award agreements also include restrictive covenants (non-competition and non-solicitation) and

confidentiality protections for specified periods, and the awards will be immediately forfeited if any such provision is

violated. In addition, the PSU awards granted in 2024 provide that in the event of the officer’s termination of employment

due to the officer’s death or disability, the PSUs then held by the officer remain outstanding and eligible to become earned

following the applicable performance period, provided that the number of PSUs eligible for vesting based on the number of

days of the applicable performance period prior to the officer’s termination due to death or disability. Any PSUs that do not

vest as a result of the officer’s termination due to death or disability are forfeited. The PSU award agreements also include

restrictive covenants (non-competition and non-solicitation) and confidentiality protections for specified periods, and the

awards will be immediately forfeited if any such provision is violated.

The stock option award agreements provide that, upon termination without Cause, vested stock options will remain

exercisable after the termination date until the earlier of 90 days following such termination or the expiration date of

the stock options.

In December 2020, upon recommendation of our Compensation Committee, our Board determined to modify the equity

awards granted in 2020, including the awards to our NEOs, to provide for immediate vesting of the unvested portion of the

RSU or stock option award at the time of termination of employment due to death or disability , with the stock option award

remaining exercisable until the earlier of one year following such termination and the expiration date of the stock option.

The RSUs granted in 2022 and 2023 also provide for immediate vesting of the unvested portion of the RSU at the time of

termination of employment due to death or disability.

All RSUs are credited with dividend equivalent rights that are accrued and paid in cash at settlement following the vesting

date. To the extent the RSUs vest, the cash amount paid is equal to the dividends declared per share of our Class A

common stock over the vesting period, multiplied by the number of vested RSUs. No dividends are paid on unvested

RSUs.

All PSUs are credited with dividend equivalent rights that are accrued as to 100% of the PSUs outstanding on the dividend

payment date and paid in connection with the settlement of the underlying PSUs (with such dividend equivalent rights

paying out at 0% to 200% of the target based on the actual amount of PSUs earned). Dividend equivalent rights accrued

on PSUs are paid in cash or, if approved by the Compensation Committee, in the form of additional stock units at

settlement following the vesting date. No dividends are paid on unvested PSUs.

Cause means:

• The officer’s conviction of, or entry of a plea of no contest to a felony;

• The officer’s gross negligence or willful misconduct, or a willful failure to attempt in good faith to substantially

perform such person’s duties;

• The officer’s material breach of a material provision of an employment agreement or offer letter or any

non- competition, non-disclosure or non-solicitation agreement;

• The officer’s material violation of the Company’s material written policies;

• The officer’s fraud or misappropriation, embezzlement or material misuse of the Company’s funds or property; or

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• Willful or reckless misconduct in respect of the officer’s obligations to the Company or its affiliates or other acts of

misconduct by the officer occurring during the course of the officer’s employment or service that results in or could

reasonably be expected to result in material damage to the Company’s property, business or reputation.

Good Reason means, absent the officer’s written consent:

• A material diminution in the officer’s authority, duties or responsibilities;

• A material diminution in the officer’s base salary other than a general reduction in base salary that affects all

similarly situated team members; or

• A relocation of the officer’s principal place of employment by more than 50 miles from the officer’s current principal

place of employment, unless the new principal place of employment is closer to the officer’s home address or the

position is virtual.

Change in Control means the first to occur of any of the following events:

• The acquisition by any person or group, or persons acting jointly or in concert, of beneficial ownership of 50%

or more of the combined voting power of the outstanding voting securities of the Company entitled to vote in the

election of directors (the “Outstanding Company Voting Securities”), excluding any acquisition by the Company

or any of its affiliates, Permitted Holders (as defined below) or any of their respective affiliates or by any employee

benefit plan sponsored or maintained by the Company or any of its affiliates;

• A change in the composition of our Board such that members of our Board during any consecutive 24-month

period (including any person becoming a director through election or nomination approved by such incumbent

directors, but excluding any individual becoming a director as a result of an election contest, or as a result of a

solicitation of proxies by or on behalf of any person other than our Board) cease to constitute a majority of our

Board;

• The approval by the stockholders of the Company of a plan of complete dissolution or liquidation of the Company;

and

• The consummation of a reorganization, recapitalization, merger, amalgamation, consolidation, statutory share

exchange or similar form of corporate transaction involving the Company, or sale, transfer or other disposition of

all or substantially all of the business or assets of the Company to an entity that is not an affiliate of the Company

or Permitted Holders, unless immediately following such business combination or sale:

(A) The Outstanding Company Voting Securities that were outstanding immediately prior to such business

combination or sale (or shares into which the Outstanding Company Voting Securities were converted) represent

more than 50% of the total voting power of the entity resulting from such business combination or the acquiring

entity in such sale (in either case, the “Surviving Company”), or the ultimate parent entity that has beneficial

ownership of sufficient voting power to elect a majority of our board of directors of the Surviving Company (the

“Parent Company”), and such voting power among the holders thereof is in substantially the same proportion as

the voting power of the Outstanding Company Voting Securities among the holders thereof immediately prior to

such business combination or sale; and

(B) No person (other than RHI, Permitted Holders or any employee benefit plan sponsored or maintained by

the Surviving Company or the Parent Company) is or becomes the beneficial owner of 50% or more of the total

voting power of the outstanding voting securities eligible to elect members of our board of directors of the Parent

Company (or, if there is no Parent Company, the Surviving Company).

Permitted Holders means each of:

• Dan Gilbert, his spouse, children, lineal descendants or the estates, heirs, executors, personal representatives,

successors or administrators, or any trust established for the benefit of (or any charitable trust or non-profit entity

established by) any such Gilbert family member, or any trustee, protector or similar person of such trust or non-

profit entity or any person controlling, controlled by or under common control with any such person;

• Jay Farner, his children, lineal descendants or heirs, or any trust established for the benefit of (or any charitable

trust or non-profit entity established by) any such Farner family member, or any trustee, protector or similar person

of such trust or non-profit entity or any person controlling, controlled by or under common control with any such

person;

• RHI and any of its subsidiaries;

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• Any person who is acting solely as an underwriter in connection with a public or private offering of equity interests

of the Company or any of its direct or indirect parent companies, acting in such capacity; and

• Any group the members of which include any of the Permitted Holders specified in the first three bullets of the

Permitted Holders definition immediately above that hold or acquire beneficial ownership of the voting stock of the

Company so long as (1) each member has voting rights proportional to the percentage of ownership interests held

or acquired by such member (or more favorable voting rights, in the case of any Permitted Holders specified in

clauses (i), (ii) and (iii)) and (2) no person or other group beneficially owns more than 50% on a fully diluted basis

of the voting stock held by the Permitted Holder group.

Employment agreements

Holdings entered into an employment agreement and offer letter with Varun in connection with his appointment as Chief

Executive Officer, effective September 5, 2023. Holdings also entered into employment agreements and offer letters with

Jonathan and Shawn in connection with their respective appointments as Chief Marketing Officer, effective January 8,

2024, and Chief Technology Officer, effective May 6, 2024. Other than as set forth below, such employment agreements

do not include severance or change in control benefits.

Varun’s employment agreement provides eligibility for severance benefits in the event he is terminated without Cause,

or resigns for Good Reason (as defined in the employment agreement), including (i) a lump sum cash payment equal

to two times his salary, (ii) 18 months of health benefits, (iii) 12 months accelerated vesting of time-based RSUs and (iv)

pro-rated vesting of PSUs (dependent on actual performance).

Jonathan’s and Shawn’s employment agreements each provide eligibility for severance benefits in the event they are

terminated without Cause, or resign for Good Reason (as defined in each employment agreement), including (i) a lump

sum cash payment equal to one times base salary, (ii) 12 months of health benefits and (iii) 12 months accelerated

vesting of time-based RSUs.

In 2020, Brian entered into an employment agreement with Holdings, and in connection with his promotion in 2022, he

entered into an amendment to his employment agreement with Holdings to reflect his appointment as Chief Financial

Officer and Treasurer effective as of November 15, 2022. Heather entered into an employment agreement with Holdings

in connection with her promotion as Chief Operating Officer effective as of June 20, 2024. Brian’s and Heather’s

employment agreements do not include severance or change in control benefits.

Change in control and severance payments table

The table below reflects the severance payments, health benefits and accelerated vesting of outstanding equity awards

the applicable NEO would have received upon the following events a s of December 31, 2024, pursuant to the NEO award

agreements and employment agreements, as applicable:

• Termination of employment due to death or disability; or

• A Change in Control in which the RSU and PSU awards are not continued, assumed or substituted, or a Change

in Control within 18 months of termination of the officer’s employment by the Company without Cause or by the

officer for Good Reason; or

• Termination without Cause, or resignation for Good Reason.

These estimates do not reflect the actual amounts that would be paid to such persons, which would only be known at

the time that they become eligible for payment and would only be payable if the specified event occurs. The value of the

RSUs and PSUs also include the dividend equivalent rights that are settled in cash upon the vesting and settlement of the

RSUs and PSUs. Brian’s and Heather’s employment agreements do not include severance or change in control benefits.

2025 Proxy Report • 75 of 112

Name Payments upon termination Termination due to death or disability ($) (1) Change in control and termination (for good reason or without cause) ($) (1) Termination without cause or for good reason ($)
Varun Krishna Severance amount 2,518,612 (2)
Equity incentives (vesting accelerated) 10,249,910 16,107,002 5,857,092 (4)
Total 10,249,910 16,107,002 8,375,704
Brian Brown Severance amount
Equity incentives (vesting accelerated) 4,224,381 5,699,741
Total 4,224,381 5,699,741
Shawn Malhotra Severance amount 712,408 (3)
Equity incentives (vesting accelerated) 5,435,675 5,435,675 2,174,261 (4)
Total 5,435,675 5,435,675 2,886,669
Jonathan Mildenhall Severance amount 682,408 (3)
Equity incentives (vesting accelerated) 5,196,467 5,196,467 2,078,573 (4)
Total 5,196,467 5,196,467 2,760,981
Heather Lovier Severance amount
Equity incentives (vesting accelerated) 3,679,834 3,679,834
Total 3,679,834 3,679,834

(1) Represents the acceleration of unvested equity per the award agreements. For RSUs, the number of RSUs accelerated is multiplied by $11.26, the

closing price of our common stock on December 31, 2024. For PSUs, the number of PSUs accelerated at target is multiplied by $11.26, the closing

price of our common stock on December 31, 2024.

(2) Represents cash severance benefits per the employment agreement including two times annual base salary and 18 months of health benefits.

(3) Represents cash severance benefits per the employment agreements including one times annual base salary and 12 months of health benefits.

(4) Represents the acceleration of unvested equity per the employment agreements, as applicable. Assumes PSUs that vest will be valued at target.

2025 Proxy Report • 76 of 112

Pay versus performance

The following information about the relationship between executive compensation

actually paid (“CAP”) and certain financial performance of the Company is required

by Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K. The disclosure in this “ Pay versus performance ”

section does not reflect our Compensation Committee’s process for compensation

setting and should be read in connection with the “ Compensation discussion and

analysis ” section of this proxy statement, which contains important information

regarding our compensation philosophy, objectives and design, compensation-setting

process and NEO compensation program components. The SEC-defined CAP data

set forth in the table below also does not reflect amounts actually realized by our

NEOs, and our Compensation Committee has not used or considered CAP previously

in establishing the NEO compensation program. A significant portion of the CAP

amounts shown relate to changes in values of unvested awards over the course of

the reporting year. These unvested awards remain subject to forfeiture conditions

and possible future declines in value based on changes in our stock price during

the vesting period. The ultimate values actually realized by our NEOs from unvested

equity awards, if any, will not be determined until the awards fully vest.

Pay versus performance t able

Year Summary compensation table total for PEO (Jay) ($) (1) Compensation actually paid to PEO (Jay) ($) (2) Summary compensation table total for PEO (Bill) ($) (1) Compensation actually paid to PEO (Bill) ($) (2) Summary compensation table total for PEO Varun) ($) (1) Compensation actually paid to PEO (Varun) ($) (2)
2024 25,887,926 22,799,341
2023 334,552 ( 5,669,619 ) 6,764,191 10,972,359 3,445,914 3,445,914
2022 9,468,874 2,137,238
2021 1,603,475 ( 5,046,699 )
2020 51,727,166 56,595,857
Year Average summary compensation table to for non-PEO NEOs ($) (3) Average compensation actually paid to non-PEO NEOs ($) (4) Value of initial fixed $100 investment based on: Net income (loss) (millions) ($) (7) Relative TSR (percentile) (8)
Total shareholder return ($) (5) Peer group total shareholder return ($) (6)
2024 8,441,736 7,502,530 59 120 640 69
2023 2,904,895 2,905,919 76 58 ( 390 ) 56
2022 2,505,493 684,915 37 33 700 25
2021 863,279 ( 1,418,642 ) 68 64 6,100 7
2020 8,044,681 9,715,309 94 177 9,400 4

(1) The amounts reported in this column represent the amounts reported in the “Total” column of the 2024 Summary Compensation Table for each of Jay , Bill and Varun for

the years in which they served as PEO. For the years reported in the table, Jay was our PEO from 2020 to June 2023, Bill was our PEO from June 2023 to September

2023, and Varun was our PEO from September 2023 to December 2024.

(2) The amounts reported in this column represent CAP for each of Jay, Bill and Varun for the years in which they served as PEO as required by Item 402(v) of Regulation

S-K. The reported amounts do not reflect the actual compensation earned by or paid to Jay, Bill or Varun during any applicable year. To determine CAP, the adjustments

below were made to Jay’s, Bill’s and Varun’s total compensation, as applicable. Defined benefit and actuarial pension plan adjustments were not relevant for any

applicable year.

2025 Proxy Report • 77 of 112

Year Reported summary compensation table total for PEO ($) Reported value of equity awards ($) (a) Equity award adjustments ($) (b) Compensation actually paid to PEO ($)
Varun Krishna
2024 25,887,926 ( 21,995,304 ) 18,906,719 22,799,341
2023 3,445,914 3,445,914
Jay Farner
2023 334,552 ( 6,004,171 ) ( 5,669,619 )
2022 9,468,874 ( 8,656,917 ) 1,325,281 2,137,238
2021 1,603,475 ( 6,650,174 ) ( 5,046,699 )
2020 51,727,166 ( 20,400,000 ) 25,268,691 56,595,857
Bill Emerson
2023 6,764,191 ( 5,999,996 ) 10,208,164 10,972,359

(a) The amounts reported in this column represent the grant date fair value of all equity awards granted in the applicable year, which are the amounts reported in the

“Stock Awards” and “Option Awards” columns in the 2024 Summary Compensation Table for such year.

(b) The amounts reported in this column represent the equity award adjustments required by Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K, which include: (i) the year-end fair value

of any equity awards granted in the applicable year that are outstanding and unvested as of the end of the year; (ii) the amount of change as of the end of the

applicable year (from the end of the prior year) in fair value of any awards granted in prior years that are outstanding and unvested as of the end of the applicable

year; (iii) for awards that are granted in the applicable year and vest in the same year, the fair value as of the vesting date; (iv) for awards granted in prior years

that vest in the applicable year, the amount equal to the change in fair value from the end of the prior year to the vesting date; (v) for awards granted in prior years

that are determined to fail to meet the applicable vesting conditions during the applicable year, a deduction for the amount equal to the fair value at the end of the

prior year; and (vi) the dollar value of any dividends or other earnings paid on stock or option awards in the applicable year prior to the vesting date that are not

otherwise reflected in the fair value of such award or included in any other component of total compensation for the applicable year. The fair values of RSUs

included in the CAP for our PEO and the Average CAP for our other NEOs are calculated at the required measurement dates, consistent with the approach used

to value the awards at the grant date as described in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for 2024. The valuation assumptions used to calculate fair values did not

materially differ from those disclosed at the time of grant. Any changes to the RSU fair values from the grant date (for current year grants) and from prior year-end

(for prior year grants) are based on our updated stock price at the respective measurement dates. The fair values of PSUs included in the CAP for our PEO and

the Average CAP for our other NEOs are calculated at the required measurement dates, consistent with the approach used to value the awards at the service

inception date as described in the 2024 Summary Compensation Table.

Accordingly, the following reflects the amounts deducted or added in calculating the equity award adjustments for each of Jay, Bill and Varun for the years in which

they served as PEO. All outstanding equity awards held by Jay were forfeited in connection with his retirement in June 2023. Varun joined Company in September

2023 and did not receive any equity awards in 2023.

Year Year end fair value of equity awards granted in the year ($) Year over year change in fair value of outstanding and unvested equity awards ($) Fair value as of vesting date of equity awards granted and vested in the year ($) Year over year change in fair value of equity awards granted in prior years that vested in the year ($) Fair value at the end of the prior year of equity awards that failed to meet vesting conditions in the year ($) Value of dividends or other earnings paid on stock or option swards not otherwise reflected in fair value or total compensation ($) Total equity award adjustments ($)
Varun Krishna
2024 16,395,608 2,511,111 18,906,719
2023
Jay Farner
2023 136,646 ( 6,140,817 ) ( 6,004,171 )
2022 5,209,760 ( 2,381,129 ) ( 1,503,350 ) 1,325,281
2021 ( 5,224,369 ) ( 1,425,805 ) ( 6,650,174 )
2020 25,268,691 25,268,691
Bill Emerson
2023 10,055,549 91,219 61,396 10,208,164

(3) The amounts reported in this column represent the average of the amounts reported for the Company’s NEOs as a group (excluding Varun, Bill and Jay) in the “Total”

column of the Summary Compensation Table in each applicable year. Our NEOs (excluding Varun, Bill and Jay) included for purposes of calculating the average amounts

in each applicable year are as follows: (i) for 2024, Brian Brown, Shawn Malhotra, Jonathan Mildenhall and Heather Lovier (ii) for 2023, Brian Brown, Tina V. John and

Bob Walters; (iii) for 2022, Bob Walters, Brian Brown, Tina V. John, Julie Booth and Angelo Vitale; and (iv) for 2021 and 2020, Bob, Julie and Angelo.

(4) The dollar amounts reported in this column represent the average CAP for the NEOs as a group (excluding Varun, Bill and Jay), for each corresponding year computed as

required by Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K. The reported amounts do not reflect the actual compensation earned by or paid to the NEOs as a group (excluding Varun, Bill

and Jay) during any applicable year. To determine CAP, the adjustments below were made to the average total compensation for the NEOs as a group (excluding Jay),

using the same methodology described above in footnote 2. Defined benefit and actuarial pension plan adjustments were not relevant for any applicable year, and no

equity awards were granted to our NEOs in 2021.

Year Average reported summary compensation table total for non-PEO named executive officers ($) Average reported value of equity awards ($) Average equity award adjustments ($) (a) Average compensation actually paid to non-PEO named executive officers ($)
2024 8,441,736 ( 5,947,605 ) 5,008,399 7,502,530
2023 2,904,895 ( 2,333,333 ) 2,334,357 2,905,919
2022 2,505,493 ( 1,839,594 ) 19,016 684,915

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2021 863,279 ( 2,281,921 ) ( 1,418,642 )
2020 8,044,681 ( 6,999,999 ) 8,670,627 9,715,309

(a) The amounts deducted or added in calculating the total average equity award adjustments are as follows:

Year Average year end fair value of equity awards granted in the year ($) Y ear over year average change in fair value of outstanding and unvested equity awards ($) A verage fair value as of vesting date of equity awards granted and vested in the year ($) Y ear over year average change in fair value of equity awards granted in prior years that vested in the year ($) (i) A verage fair value at the end of the prior year of equity awards that failed to meet vesting conditions in the year ($) A verage value of dividends or other earnings paid on stock or option awards not otherwise reflected in fair value or total compensation ($) T otal average equity award adjustments ($)
2024 4,231,027 ( 291,020 ) 1,111,167 ( 42,775 ) 5,008,399
2023 2,234,568 270,280 263,653 ( 434,144 ) 2,334,357
2022 1,107,073 ( 642,359 ) ( 445,698 ) 19,016
2021 ( 1,792,674 ) ( 489,247 ) ( 2,281,921 )
2020 8,670,627 8,670,627

(i) For 2022, includes for Brian Brown, the fair value of the modified 2019 RHI RSU at the date of modification less the fair value of the original 2019

RHI RSU on December 31, 2021.

(5) The cumulative TSR depicts a hypothetical $100 investment in our common stock. The amounts reported in this column represent the Company’s cumulative TSR, which

is calculated by dividing the sum of the cumulative amount of dividends for the measurement period, assuming dividend reinvestment, and the difference between the

Company’s share price at the end of the measurement period by the Company’s share price at the beginning of the measurement period (the closing price as of initial

post-IPO trading date).

(6) The cumulative TSR depicts a hypothetical $100 investment in our common stock. The Company utilized a selected peer group for purposes of its TSR benchmarking

(the “PVP Peer Group”). Our PVP Peer Group is comprised of PennyMac Financial Services Inc, Rithm Capital Corp, Mr. Cooper Group Inc., Anywhere Real Estate Inc.,

Zillow Group Inc Class C, Redfin Corp, Stewart Information Services Corp, SoFi Technologies Inc, Guild Holdings Company, Compass, Inc., loanDepot, Inc., UWM

Holdings Corporation, and Blend Labs, Inc. Certain companies were not publicly traded companies at inception date, and these companies were added and reweighted to

the peer group to the most recent quarter subsequent to their respective IPO dates.

(7) The amounts reported in this column represent net income (loss) reflected in the Company’s audited financial statements for the applicable year.

(8) Relative TSR measures the Company’s TSR at the end of the performance period, where performance is determined by the ranking (as a percentile) of the Company’s

TSR versus a custom peer group, provided that payout is capped if the Company has absolute negative TSR at the end of the performance period. See “Compensation

discussion and analysis — 2024 executive compensation program and pay — Long-term equity awards” for the definition of TSR and the companies included in the TSR

peer group.

2025 Proxy Report • 79 of 112

Financial performance measures

We have presented Relative TSR as the Company-selected measure in the table above in accordance with Item 402(v)

of Regulation S-K. While the Company uses numerous financial and non-financial performance measures for the purpose

of evaluating performance for the Company’s compensation programs, the Company has determined that Relative TSR

is the financial performance measure that, in the Company’s assessment, represents the most important performance

measure used by the Company to link CAP for the Company’s NEOs to Company performance for the most recently

completed year that is not otherwise required to be disclosed in the pay versus performance table above. In identifying

Relative TSR as the most important performance measure used by the Company to link CAP for the NEOs to

performance for 2024, we considered that 50% of the target value of the 2024 equity awards granted to our NEOs was

delivered via PSUs, with 50% of the target value of such PSUs being earned based on our three-year Relative TSR.

We may determine a different financial performance measure to be the most important financial performance measure

in future years.

Analysis of the information presented in the pay versus performance table

As described in “Compensation discussion and analysis,” a significant portion of the NEO pay is performance-based

and at-risk, consistent with the compensation philosophy established by the Compensation Committee. Our NEO

compensation program rewards the achievement of specific short- and long-term financial and other goals, which

are aligned with our operational and strategic goals. The most important financial performance measures used by the

Company to link CAP for the Company’s NEOs to the Company’s performance for the most recently completed year

are shown below.

Most important performance measures
Adjusted EBITDA Refinance Mortgage Market Share Growth
Adjusted Revenue Purchase Mortgage Market Share Growth
Relative Total Shareholder Return (1)

(1) Reflects the Company’s TSR compared to a peer group established by the Compensation Committee.

Our Compensation Committee has not used or considered CAP previously in establishing the NEO compensation

program. The Company is providing the following graphs of the relationships between the information presented in the

Pay Versus Performance Table in accordance with Item 402(v) of Regulation S-K. CAP for our PEO and other NEOs

were significantly impacted by our equity grant practices to such persons – in 2020, there were significant IPO-related

equity awards; in 2021, there were no equity awards; in 2022, there were our initial annual equity awards of RSUs, which

were continued in 2023; and in 2024, we significantly revised our long-term incentive program as well as granted one-time

equity awards to our new-hire NEOs.

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C AP and cumulative TSR

The CAP for our PEO and the average CAP for the other NEOs as a group for 2020, 2021, 2022,2023 and 2024 is

presented in comparison to our cumulative TSR for such years in the table below .

2025 Proxy Report • 81 of 112

CAP and net income (loss)

The CAP for our PEO and the average CAP for the other NEOs as a group for 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024

is presented in comparison to our net income (loss) for such years in the table bel ow .

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Cumulative TSR of the Company and relative TSR against the TSR peer group

The CAP for our PEO and the average CAP for the other NEOs as a group for 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024

is presented in comparison to our relative TSR performance for such years in the table below.

2025 Proxy Report • 83 of 112

Cumulative TSR of the Company and cumulative TSR of the Peer Groups

The following graph shows the relationship of the Company’s cumulative TSR compared to the PVP Peer Grou p .

This Pay Versus Performance section is not “soliciting material,” is not deemed filed with the SEC and is not to be incorporated by reference into any of the Company’s filings

under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, whether made before or after the date of this proxy statement and

irrespective of any general incorporation language therein.

2025 Proxy Report • 84 of 112

CEO pay ratio

We are required to calculate and disclose the annual total compensation paid to our median employee, as well as the ratio

of the annual total compensation paid to the median employee as compared to the annual total compensation paid to our

CEO. The following describes our methodology for identifying and calculating the total compensation paid to our median

employee and the resulting CEO pay ratio.

Pay ratio

After applying the methodology described below, we concluded that our median employee in 2024 worked in Rocket

Experience at Rocket LLC with 2024 annual total compensation of $99,760. The median employee’s compensation was

calculated in the same manner used to calculate Varun’s compensation in the Summary Compensation Table. Varun’s

annual total compensation was $25,887,926 for purposes of the CEO pay ratio in 2024, as reported in the Summary

Compensation Table. Based on the described methodology, our 2024 CEO to median employee pay ratio was 260:1.

This information is being provided for compliance purposes only. Neither our Compensation Committee nor management

of the Company used this pay ratio in making compensation decisions for 2024. This pay ratio is a reasonable estimate

calculated in a manner consistent with SEC rules based on the methodology described herein. Our pay ratios may not be

comparable to the pay ratios of other companies because the SEC rules permit a variety of methodologies, estimates,

adjustments and assumptions.

Measurement date and employee population

We determined to voluntarily update our median employee for 2024. As such, we identified the median employee using a

measurement date of December 31, 2024, as of when we employed approximately 14,263 team members in the United

States and Canada.

Consistently applied compensation measure

The applicable rules require us to identify the median employee by use of a “consistently applied compensation measure,”

or CACM. For 2024, we chose a CACM based on W-2 wages for employees in the United States and T4 wages for

employees in Canada. Canadian dollars were converted to U.S. dollars using an average conversion rate for 2024. For

employees that worked in both the United States and Canada, we combined the W-2 and T4 wages, where appropriate,

when identifying the median employee. We did not annualize the compensation paid to partial-year employees or

employees who were on an unpaid leave of absence, and we did not utilize any cost-of-living adjustments. We did not

exclude any foreign team members in our calculation.

2025 Proxy Report • 85 of 112

Certain relationships and related person transactions

Policies and procedures for related person transactions

We have adopted a written Related Person Transaction Policy (the “RPT policy”), which addresses the review, approval,

ratification and disclosure of all related person transactions by our Audit Committee (or other specified persons). In

accordance with the RPT policy, our Audit Committee has overall responsibility for the implementation of, and compliance

with, the RPT policy. Our Audit Committee approved updates to the RPT policy effective January 2024 to revise certain

pre-approval categories and dollar thresholds and to conform to revised NYSE requirements.

For purposes of the RPT policy, a related person transaction is a transaction, arrangement or relationship (or any series

of similar transactions, arrangements or relationships) in which we were, are or will be a participant and in which any

related person (as defined in the RPT policy) had, has or will have a direct or indirect material interest. A related person

transaction does not include any employment relationship or transaction involving an executive officer and any related

compensation resulting solely from such employment relationship or transaction that has been disclosed pursuant to Item

402 of Regulation S-K of the Exchange Act.

The RPT policy requires that notice of a proposed related person transaction be provided to our legal team prior

to entry into such transaction. If our legal team determines that such transaction is a related person transaction (and not

subject to the specified pre-approved exceptions approved by our Audit Committee, as discussed below), the proposed

transaction will be submitted for consideration (a) to our Audit Committee at its next meeting, (b) if not practicable or

desirable to wait until the next Audit Committee meeting, to the Chair of our Audit Committee, or (c) to a different group

of independent directors as determined by our Board (each, an “RPT Approval Person”).

An RPT Approval Person may approve only those related person transactions that are in, or not inconsistent with,

our best interests and the best interests of our stockholders. In the event that we become aware of a related person

transaction that has not been previously reviewed, approved or ratified under the RPT policy and that is ongoing or

is completed (including any transaction that was not considered a related person transaction at the time it was entered

into, but subsequently is), the transaction will be submitted to an RPT Approval Person so that it may determine whether

to continue, modify or terminate the related person transaction.

The RPT policy also provides that our Audit Committee/an RPT Approval Person review certain previously approved

or ratified related person transactions that are ongoing and have a remaining term of more than twelve months to

determine whether the related person transaction remains in our best interests and the best interests of our stockholders.

Additionally, we will make periodic inquiries of directors and executive officers with respect to any potential related person

transaction of which they may be a party or of which they may be aware.

The RPT policy provides that any related person transactions that do not exceed $120,000 in the aggregate in any

fiscal year will be deemed pre-approved. In addition, each of the following related person transactions will be deemed

pre-approved or ratified by our Audit Committee under the terms of the RPT policy, even if the aggregate amount involved

will exceed $120,000, which are reported to our Audit Committee at the following meeting

• Any transaction where the related person’s interest derives solely from such person’s position as a director

of another corporation or organization that is a party to the transaction;

• Any transaction involving a related person or associated entity where the rates or charges involved are determined

by competitive bids;

• If previously approved by our Board or a Board Committee, any transaction or decision that involves providing

compensation or benefits to a director or executive officer of the Company or any of its subsidiaries in connection

with such director’s or executive officer’s duties with the Company or its subsidiaries or the hiring, promotion or

retention of any such director or executive officer;

• Any transaction where the related person’s interest arises solely from the ownership of the Company’s

common stock and all holders of the Company’s common stock received the same benefit on a pro rata

basis (e.g. dividends, stock repurchases, rights offerings);

• Any indemnification payments or advancement of expenses made to a related person pursuant to the

Company’s Certificate of Incorporation, bylaws or an agreement approved by our Board;

• Transactions involving a related person that (i) occur in the ordinary course of business, (ii) are on terms that are

comparable to the terms available to an unrelated third party or to team members generally, (iii) have fees (or

revenue, as applicable) for any single related person transaction or series of related person transactions that do

not exceed $500,000 annually, (iv) the fees (or revenue, as applicable) for any single related person transaction

2025 Proxy Report • 86 of 112

with a multi-year contract term do not exceed an aggregate total of $1,000,000, and (v) where those transactions

can be generally categorized into one or more of the following descriptions of services or goods:

• Professional services provided by Company subsidiaries to related persons, including technology services,

information security services and support, human resources services, legal services, data governance and

analytics, advisory services, the procurement of goods, services and materials, including vendor engagement

and risk management, accounting and finance services, marketing services and telemarketing services, and

associated third-party costs, deliverables fees and special event charges;

◦ Transactions involving the receipt of professional services, including consultant and advisory services, physical

security services, design services and video production services;

◦ Transactions involving the receipt of technology services, including website and application development, use of

technology platforms, technology training and training products, data protection services, discover analytics and

data strategy services, data source support and technical support services;

◦ Transactions pertaining to advertising, marketing placement services, online contest and events sweepstakes,

sponsorships and naming rights with related persons;

◦ Transactions involving the purchase of meals and catering services, event venue rental, hotel guest rooms and

venue rental, purchase of branded or luxury goods for Company team members, and the procurement of goods

associated with services provided to the Company;

◦ The Company may provide or facilitate elective benefits involving related persons for team members including

such benefit resources as childcare, wellness centers and virtual tutoring programs;

◦ The Company may share team members between related persons as necessary to perform business

operations, with the fees to be equivalent to the allocated cost of the team members involved; and

◦ Any real estate related transaction involving a related person where the transaction can be generally

categorized into the following transaction types: (i) direct leases of space for operations; (ii) subleasing of the

Company’s space to related persons; (iii) construction management or consulting services; (iv) procurement

of parking spaces; and (v) other landlord services and fees including building utilities, HVAC, common area

maintenance, maintenance fees including landlord labor and direct pass-through expenses, and other landlord

service fees in coordination with existing lease agreements.

In addition to requirements under the RPT policy, the Company has internal related person transaction identification and

assessment procedures to ensure appropriate monitoring and reporting of related person transactions. These procedures

are managed by team members in our finance and legal teams.

Board overlap with RHI

Certain of our executive officers and the directors affiliated with RHI own equity interests in RHI. Furthermore, three

members of our Board (Dan Gilbert, Jennifer Gilbert and Matthew Rizik) continue to be directors of RHI and two members

of our Board (Dan and Matthew) continue to be officers of RHI. The overlap and the ownership of RHI equity interests

may lead to actual or apparent conflicts of interest with respect to matters involving or affecting the Company and the RHI

Affiliated Entities. For example, there could be a conflict of interest if there are issues or disputes under the commercial

arrangements that exist between us and the RHI Affiliated Entities or if we or one of the RHI Affiliated Entities look at

acquisition or investment opportunities that may be suitable for both companies. This proxy section provides more

information on the transactions and relationships between the Company and the RHI Affiliated Entities and our policies

concerning related person transactions.

On March 9, 2025, we entered into a Transaction Agreement to collapse our current Up-C structure, pursuant to which

RHI will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company and RHI shareholders will become direct stockholders of

the Company. See “ About Rocket Companies— The Up-C Collapse” and “ — Related person transactions—

Transaction Agreement. ”

Corporate opportunity

Our Certificate of Incorporation provides that none of the RHI Affiliated Entities nor any officer, director, member, partner

or team member of any RHI Affiliated Entity (each, an “RHI Party”) has any duty to refrain from engaging in the same

or similar business activities or lines of business, doing business with any of our clients or suppliers or employing or

otherwise engaging or soliciting for employment any of our directors, officers or team members. None of our directors

or officers will be liable to us or to any of our subsidiaries or stockholders for breach of any fiduciary or other duty under

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statutory or common law, as a director or officer or controlling stockholder or otherwise, by reason of any such activities,

or for the presentation or direction to, or participation in, any such activities by any RHI Party.

In our Certificate of Incorporation, to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, we renounce any interest or expectancy

that we have in any business opportunity, transaction or other matter in which any RHI Party participates or desires or

seeks to participate in. This applies even if the opportunity is one that we might reasonably be deemed to have pursued

or had the ability or desire to pursue if granted the opportunity to do so. To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law,

each such RHI Party has no duty to communicate or offer such business opportunity to us. Further, each such RHI Party

is not liable to us or any of our stockholders for breach of any fiduciary or other duty under statutory or common law, as

a director or officer or controlling stockholder, or otherwise, by reason of the fact that such RHI Party pursues or acquires

such business opportunity, directs such business opportunity to another person, or fails to present such business

opportunity, or information regarding such business opportunity, to us.

The Exchange Agreement (as defined below) specifies that we will not amend the provisions of our Certificate of

Incorporation renouncing corporate opportunities without the consent of RHI as long as RHI holds any Holdings Units.

Following the Up-C Collapse and as a result of the related amendment and restatement of our Certificate of Incorporation,

the provisions of our Certificate of Incorporation renouncing corporate opportunities will not apply to the RHI Parties,

but instead to RHI II (as defined below) and any of its officers, directors, members, partners, employees or its affiliates.

Additionally, in connection with the Up-C Collapse, the Exchange Agreement will be terminated, with such termination

being retroactively effective as of March 9, 2025. In connection with the termination of the Exchange Agreement, we

will enter into a letter agreement with Dan Gilbert that will specify that we will not amend the provisions of our restated

Certificate of Incorporation renouncing corporate opportunities without prior written consent of RHI II as long as any

equityholder of RHI II holds any shares of our common stock. For more information, see “— Related person

transactions— Exchange Agreement ”.

Notwithstanding the above, our Certificate of Incorporation does not renounce any interest or expectancy we may have

in any business opportunity, transaction or other matter that is offered to an RHI Party who is one of our directors or

officers and who is offered such opportunity solely in such person’s capacity as one of our directors or officers, as

reasonably determined by such RHI Party.

Related person transactions

The following is a description of related party transactions in existence since the

beginning of 2024. All of the transactions described below were approved or ratified

by our Audit Committee in accordance with the RPT policy or deemed pre-approved

under the terms of the RPT policy.

Rock Holdings Inc.

RHI, our principal stockholder, is the controlling majority stockholder of several other businesses, including a technology

services provider (Detroit Labs) and a comprehensive organizational people directory (Sift Enterprises). Our executive

officers and directors who are affiliated with RHI own common equity interests in RHI. Dan Gilbert, our founder and

Chairman, is the majority stockholder of RHI and serves as the CEO and President of RHI and as the chairman of RHI’s

board of directors.

Dan Gilbert was appointed Chief Executive Officer of RHI on March 27, 2023. Among our other directors, Dan Gilbert,

Jennifer Gilbert and Matthew Rizik continue to serve as directors of RHI and certain of our other affiliates. Bill Emerson

served as Vice Chairman of RHI until May 2023, which is a strategic advisory role without authority over operations.

Additionally, Matthew continues to serve as an officer of RHI and certain of its subsidiaries and affiliates, including as

Chief Executive Officer of ROCK (appointed in February 2023).

In addition to RHI, Dan is the majority or controlling shareholder of a number of other entities with which we have

historically entered into transactions and agreements, including the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers, the real estate investment

firm Bedrock and the unicorn online startup StockX. For more information on Dan, see “ Proposal no. 1 - Election of

Class II directors – Director backgrounds and qualifications .”

In connection with the Up-C Collapse, we will acquire RHI, and RHI will no longer be our principal stockholder.

For more information, see “ About Rocket Companies—The Up-C Collapse” and “ —Transaction Agreement ”.

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Operating Agreement of Rocket, LLC

In connection with the reorganization transactions, the Company, Holdings, RHI and Dan Gilbert entered into the

Amended and Restated RKT Holdings Operating Agreement (the “Holdings Operating Agreement”). In accordance with

the terms of the Holdings Operating Agreement, we operate our business through Holdings and its subsidiaries. Pursuant

to the terms of the Holdings Operating Agreement, so long as affiliates of RHI and its related parties continue to own any

Holdings Units, shares of our Class A common stock or securities exchangeable or convertible into shares of our Class A

common stock, we will not, without the prior written consent of such holders, (i) engage in any business activity other than

the management and ownership of Holdings and its subsidiaries or (ii) own any assets other than securities of Holdings

and its subsidiaries and/or any cash or other property or assets distributed by or otherwise received from Holdings and

its subsidiaries, unless we determine in good faith that such actions or ownership are in the best interest of Holdings.

As the sole managing member of Holdings, we have control over all of the affairs and decision making of Holdings.

As such, through our officers and directors, we are responsible for all operational and administrative decisions of

Holdings and the day-to-day management of Holdings’ business. We will fund any dividends to our stockholders by

causing Holdings to make distributions to its equityholders, RHI, Dan Gilbert and us, subject to the limitations imposed

by our debt documents.

The holders of Holdings Units will generally incur U.S. federal, state and local income taxes on their proportionate share

of any net taxable income of Holdings. Net profits and net losses of Holdings will generally be allocated to its members

pro rata in accordance with the percentages of their respective ownership of Holdings Units, though certain non-pro

rata adjustments will be made to reflect tax depreciation, amortization and other allocations. The Holdings Operating

Agreement provides for cash distributions to the holders of Holdings Units for purposes of funding their tax obligations in

respect of the taxable income of Holdings that is allocated to them. Under the Holdings Operating Agreement, these tax

distributions will be computed based on Holdings’ estimate of the net taxable income of Holdings allocable per Holdings

Units multiplied by an assumed tax rate equal to the highest effective marginal combined U.S. federal, state and local

income tax rate prescribed for an individual or corporate resident in Michigan, New York City or California (taking into

account the non-deductibility of certain expenses and the character of our income). Future tax distribution calculations

may be adjusted based on changes in relevant tax laws.

The Holdings Operating Agreement provides that, except as otherwise determined by us, if at any time we issue a share

of our Class A common stock or Class B common stock, other than pursuant to an issuance and distribution to holders of

shares of our common stock of rights to purchase our equity securities under a “poison pill” or similar stockholders rights

plan or pursuant to an employee benefit plan, the net proceeds received by us with respect to such share, if any, will be

concurrently invested in Holdings (unless such shares were issued by us solely to fund (i) our ongoing operations or pay

our expenses or other obligations or (ii) the purchase Holdings Units from a member of Holdings (in which case such net

proceeds will instead be transferred to the selling member as consideration for such purchase)) and Holdings will issue to

us Holdings Units.

Similarly, except as otherwise determined by us, Holdings will not issue any additional Holdings Units to us unless we

issue or sell an equal number of shares of our Class A common stock or Class B common stock. Conversely, if at any

time any shares of our Class A common stock or Class B common stock are redeemed, repurchased or otherwise

acquired, Holdings will redeem, repurchase or otherwise acquire an equal number of Holdings Units held by us, upon

the same terms and for the same price per security, as the shares of our Class A common stock or Class B common

stock are redeemed, repurchased or otherwise acquired. In addition, Holdings will not affect any subdivision (by any

unit split, unit distribution, reclassification, reorganization, recapitalization or otherwise) or combination (by reverse unit

split, reclassification, reorganization, recapitalization or otherwise) of the Holdings Units unless it is accompanied by

substantively identical subdivision or combination, as applicable, of each class of our common stock, and we will not

affect any subdivision or combination of any class of our common stock unless it is accompanied by a substantively

identical subdivision or combination, as applicable, of the Holdings Units.

Subject to certain exceptions, Holdings will indemnify all of its members, and their officers and other related parties,

against all losses or expenses arising from claims or other legal proceedings in which such person (in its capacity as

such) may be involved or become subject to in connection with Holdings’ business or affairs or the Holdings Operating

Agreement or any related document.

Holdings may be dissolved only upon the first to occur of (i) the sale of substantially all of its assets or (ii) as determined

by us. Upon dissolution, Holdings will be liquidated and the proceeds from any liquidation will be applied and distributed

as follows: (a) first, to creditors (including creditors who are members or affiliates of members) in satisfaction of all of

Holdings’ liabilities (whether by payment or by making reasonable provision for payment of such liabilities, including the

setting up of any reasonably necessary reserves); and (b) second, to its members in proportion to their Holdings Units

(after giving effect to any obligations of Holdings to make tax distributions).

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Exchange Agreement

At the closing of our initial public offering on August 10, 2020 (“IPO”), we entered into an Exchange Agreement (the

“Exchange Agreement”) with RHI and Dan Gilbert, pursuant to which each of RHI and Dan Gilbert (or certain transferees

thereof) has the right to exchange its or his Holdings Units (along with corresponding shares of our Class D common

stock or Class C common stock), for, at our option (as the sole managing member of Holdings), (i) shares of our Class B

common stock or Class A common stock, as applicable, on a one-for-one basis or (ii) cash from a substantially concurrent

public offering or private sale (based on the price of our Class A common stock in such public offering or private sale),

subject to customary conversion rate adjustments for stock splits, stock dividends and reclassifications.

The Exchange Agreement provides that, in the event that a tender offer, share exchange offer, issuer bid, take-over

bid, recapitalization or similar transaction with respect to our Class A common stock is proposed by us or to us or our

stockholders and approved by our Board or is otherwise consented to or approved by our Board, RHI and Dan Gilbert

will be permitted to participate in such offer by delivery of a notice of exchange that is effective immediately prior to the

consummation of such offer.

In the case of any such offer proposed by us, we must use our reasonable best efforts to enable and permit RHI and Dan

Gilbert to participate in such offer to the same extent or on an economically equivalent basis as the holders of shares of

our Class A common stock without discrimination. In addition, we must use our reasonable best efforts to ensure that RHI

and Dan Gilbert may participate in each such offer without being required to exchange Holdings Units and corresponding

shares of our Class D common stock. The Exchange Agreement further provides that RHI and Dan Gilbert are not

required to participate in any such offer that would be tax-free to holders of shares of our Class A common stock without

their prior consent.

The Exchange Agreement also sets forth certain information rights granted to RHI and specifies that we will not amend

the provisions of our Certificate of Incorporation renouncing corporate opportunities without the consent of RHI for so

long as RHI holds any Holdings Units.

In connection with the Up-C Collapse, the Exchange Agreement will be terminated, with such termination being

retroactively effective as of March 9, 2025. In connection with the termination of the Exchange Agreement, we will

enter into a letter agreement with Dan Gilbert for the purpose of preserving certain of the information rights and other

rights provided for in the Exchange Agreement. For more information about the Up-C Collapse, see “ — Related

person transactions— Transaction Agreement .”

Registration Rights Agreement

Prior to the consummation of our IPO, we entered into a registration rights agreement (the “Registration Rights

Agreement”) with RHI, Dan Gilbert and certain of his affiliates (each, a “Registration Party”), pursuant to which each

Registration Party is entitled to demand the registration of the sale of certain or all of our Class A common stock that

it beneficially owns. Among other things, under the terms of the Registration Rights Agreement:

• If we propose to file certain types of registration statements under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the

“Securities Act”), with respect to an offering of equity securities, we must use our reasonable best efforts to offer

each Registration Party the opportunity to register the sale of all or part of its shares on the terms and conditions

set forth in the Registration Rights Agreement (customarily known as “piggyback rights”); and

• Each Registration Party has the right, subject to certain conditions and exceptions, to request that we file (i)

registration statements with the SEC for one or more underwritten offerings of all or part of our shares of Class A

common stock that it beneficially owns and/or (ii) a shelf registration statement that includes all or part of our

shares of Class A common stock that it beneficially owns as soon as we become eligible to register the sale of

our securities on Form S-3 under the Securities Act. We are required to cause any such registration statements

to be filed with the SEC, and to become effective, as promptly as reasonably practicable.

All expenses of registration under the Registration Rights Agreement, including the legal fees of one counsel retained

by or on behalf of the Registration Parties, will be paid by us.

The registration rights granted in the Registration Rights Agreement are subject to customary restrictions such as

minimums, blackout periods and, if a registration is underwritten, any limitations on the number of shares to be included

in the underwritten offering as reasonably advised by the managing underwriter. The Registration Rights Agreement also

contains customary indemnification and contribution provisions and is governed by New York law.

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Tax Receivable Agreement

The purchase of Holdings Units (along with corresponding shares of our Class D common stock) from RHI using the net

proceeds from our IPO, future exchanges by RHI or Dan Gilbert (or its transferees or other assignees) of Holdings Units

and corresponding shares of Class D common stock or Class C common stock for shares of our Class B common stock

or Class A common stock, and future purchases of Holdings Units (along with the corresponding shares of our Class D

common stock or Class C common stock) from RHI or Dan Gilbert (or its transferees or other assignees) are expected

to produce favorable tax attributes for us. These tax attributes would not be available to us in the absence of those

transactions. We expect both the existing and anticipated tax basis adjustments to reduce the amount of tax that we

would otherwise be required to pay in the future.

We entered into a tax receivable agreement with RHI and Dan Gilbert that provides for the payment by us to RHI and

Dan Gilbert (or their transferees of Holdings Units or other assignees) of 90% of the amount of cash savings, if any, in

U.S. federal, state and local income tax or franchise tax that we actually realize (computed using simplifying assumptions

to address the impact of state and local taxes) as a result of:

• Certain increases in our allocable share of the tax basis in Holdings’ assets resulting from (a) the purchases of

Holdings Units (along with the corresponding shares of our Class D common stock or Class C common stock)

from RHI and Dan Gilbert (or their transferees or other assignees) using the net proceeds from our IPO, or in any

future offering, (b) exchanges by RHI and Dan Gilbert (or their transferees or other assignees) of Holdings Units

(along with the corresponding shares of our Class D common stock or Class C common stock) for cash or shares

of our Class B common stock or Class A common stock, as applicable, or (c) payments under the tax receivable

agreements;

• Tax benefits related to imputed interest deemed arising as a result of payments made under the tax receivable

agreement; and

• Any disproportionate allocations of tax benefits to Holdings as a result of section 704(c) of the Code that relate

to the reorganization transactions.

The tax receivable agreement makes certain simplifying assumptions regarding the determination of the cash savings

that we realize or are deemed to realize from the covered tax attributes, which may result in payments pursuant to the

tax receivable agreement in excess of those that would result if such assumptions were not made.

The actual tax benefit, as well as the amount and timing of any payments under the tax receivable agreement, will vary

depending upon a number of factors. These factors include, among others, the timing of exchanges by or purchases from

RHI and Dan Gilbert, the price of our Class A common stock at the time of the exchanges or purchases, the extent to

which such exchanges are taxable, the amount and timing of the taxable income we generate in the future and the tax

rate then applicable and the portion of our payments under the tax receivable agreement constituting imputed interest.

There is a possibility that under certain circumstances not all of the 90% of the applicable cash savings will be paid to the

selling or exchanging holder of Holdings Units at the time described above. If we determine that such circumstances apply

and all or a portion of such applicable tax savings is in doubt, we will pay to the holders of such Holdings Units the amount

attributable to the portion of the applicable tax savings that we determine is not in doubt and pay the remainder at such

time as we reasonably determine the actual tax savings or that the amount is no longer in doubt.

Future payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement could be substantial. Of the estimated $570.44 million Tax

Receivable Agreement liability to be recorded after the Up-C Collapse and pending Redfin Acquisition and Mr. Cooper

Acquisition, we estimate that, as a result of the amount of the increases in the tax basis in Holdings’ assets from the

purchase of Holdings Units (along with the corresponding shares of the Class D common stock) in connection with the

IPO, the over-allotment option (Greenshoe), and the RHI March 2021 paired interest exchange, assuming no material

changes in the relevant tax law and that we will have sufficient taxable income to utilize all of the

tax attributes covered by the Tax Receivable Agreement when they are first available to be utilized under applicable law,

future payments to RHI, RHI II (as defined below) and Dan Gilbert under the Tax Receivable Agreement would aggregate

to approximately $570.21 million over the next 20 years and for yearly payments over that time to range between zero to

$105.47 million per year. The payments under the Tax Receivable Agreement are not conditioned upon RHI’s, RHI II’s or

Dan Gilbert’s continued ownership of us.

In addition, RHI and Dan Gilbert (or their transferees or other assignees) will not reimburse us for any payments

previously made if any covered tax benefits are subsequently disallowed. However, any excess payments made to

RHI, RHI II and Dan Gilbert (or such holder’s transferees or assignees) will be netted against future payments that would

otherwise be made under the tax receivable agreement with RHI, RHI II and Dan Gilbert, if any, after our determination of

such excess. We could make payments to RHI, RHI II and Dan Gilbert under the tax receivable agreement that are

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greater than our actual cash tax savings and may not be able to recoup those payments, which could negatively impact

our liquidity.

In addition, the tax receivable agreement provides that in the case of a change in control of the Company or a material

breach of our obligations under the tax receivable agreement, we will be required to make a payment to RHI, RHI II and

Dan Gilbert in an amount equal to the present value of future payments (calculated using a discount rate equal to the

lesser of 6.50% or a rate based on the benchmark rate used to determine pricing or interest rates in a majority of our then-

outstanding repurchase or warehouse agreements or other financing arrangements providing for the financing of

mortgage loans plus 100 basis points, which may differ from our, or a potential acquirer’s, then-current cost of capital)

under the tax receivable agreement, which payment would be based on certain assumptions, including those relating

to our future taxable income.

In these situations, our obligations under the tax receivable agreement could have a substantial negative impact on our,

or a potential acquirer’s, liquidity and could have the effect of delaying, deferring, modifying or preventing certain mergers,

asset sales, other forms of business combinations or other changes of control. These provisions of the tax receivable

agreement may result in situations where RHI, RHI II and Dan Gilbert have interests that differ from or are in addition to

those of our other stockholders. In addition, we could be required to make payments under the tax receivable agreement

that are substantial, significantly in advance of any potential actual realization of such further tax benefits, and in excess

of our, or a potential acquirer’s, actual cash savings in income tax.

Decisions we make in the course of running our business, such as with respect to mergers, asset sales, other forms of

business combinations or other changes in control, may influence the timing and amount of payments made under the

tax receivable agreement. For example, the earlier disposition of assets following an exchange or purchase of Holdings

Units and the corresponding Class D common stock or Class C common stock may accelerate payments under the tax

receivable agreement and increase the present value of such payments, and the disposition of assets before such an

exchange or purchase may increase the tax liability of RHI, RHI II and Dan Gilbert without giving rise to any rights to

receive payments under the tax receivable agreement. Such effects may result in differences or conflicts of interest

between the interests of RHI, RHI II and Dan Gilbert and the interests of other stockholders.

Finally, because we are a holding company with no operations of our own, our ability to make payments under the tax

receivable agreement is dependent on the ability of our subsidiaries to make distributions to us. Our debt agreements

restrict the ability of our subsidiaries to make distributions to us, which could affect our ability to make payments under

the tax receivable agreement. To the extent that we are unable to make payments under the tax receivable agreement

as a result of restrictions in our debt agreements, such payments will be deferred and will accrue interest until paid,

which could negatively impact our results of operations and could also affect our liquidity in periods in which such

payments are made.

Pursuant to the Transaction Agreement, we will enter into an amendment to the tax receivable agreement with RHI and

Dan Gilbert to provide that the terms of the tax receivable agreement will not apply to any exchanges, including for the

avoidance doubt, the DG Exchange (as defined and described below in the description of the Transaction Agreement),

that occur on or following March 9, 2025. As part of RHI’s internal reorganization described below, RHI will contribute

its rights to receive payments under the tax receivable agreement in respect of RHI’s prior exchanges to RHI II, LLC,

a Michigan limited liability company and a direct wholly owned subsidiary of RHI (“RHI II”), and RHI II will complete a

joinder to the tax receivable agreement and become party to the tax receivable agreement.

Following the Up-C Collapse, we will only make payments under the tax receivable agreement to those holders

of Holdings Units (or their transferees) who have already effected exchanges of Holdings Units (along with the

corresponding shares of our Class D common stock or Class C common stock) for cash or shares of our Class B

common stock or Class A common stock, as applicable, prior to the date of the Transaction Agreement. Holders that

have not already effected such exchanges prior to the date of the Transaction Agreement, or holders that have only

effected such exchanges with respect to some of their Holdings Units, will not be entitled to any future payments under

the tax receivable agreement in respect of any Holdings Units not exchanged or deemed exchanged prior to the date

of the Transaction Agreement.

The Up-C Collapse will not result in any early termination payments under the tax receivable agreement. Payments

under the tax receivable agreement will continue to be made with respect to exchanges that occurred before the date

of the Transaction Agreement and no changes will be made to the methodology for calculating payments under the tax

receivable agreement with respect to such exchanges. For more information about the Up-C Collapse, see “ – Related

person transactions — Transaction Agreement .”

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Transaction Agreement

On March 9, 2025, we entered into a Transaction Agreement with RHI, Eclipse Sub, Inc., a Michigan corporation and

our direct wholly owned subsidiary (“Merger Sub 1”), Rocket GP, LLC, a Michigan limited liability company and our direct

wholly owned subsidiary (“Merger Sub 2”), Dan Gilbert and RHI II to effectuate the Up-C Collapse. Under our existing

organizational structure, we are a holding company and our principal asset is our ownership of Holdings Units. We are

also the sole managing member of Holdings. Our public stockholders hold all of the issued and outstanding shares of

Class A common stock, which are entitled to one vote per share on all matters submitted to a vote of stockholders and

have economic rights (including rights to dividends and distributions upon liquidation by the Company). RHI and Dan

Gilbert hold (a) all of the issued and outstanding shares of our Class D common stock, which are entitled to ten votes

per share on all matters submitted to a vote of stockholders, but have no economic rights, and (b) an equal number of

Holdings Units, which have economic rights (including rights to dividends and distributions upon liquidation by Holdings),

but have no voting rights. Our Certificate of Incorporation provides that, at any time when the aggregate voting power of

the RHI Securities would be equal to or greater than 79% of the total voting power of our outstanding stock, the number

of votes per share of each RHI Security will be reduced such that the aggregate voting power of all of the RHI Securities

is equal to 79%.

Following the Up-C Collapse, the public stockholders will continue to hold the issued and outstanding Class A common

stock. As part of the Up-C Collapse, (a) each RHI shareholder, in consideration for its voting common shares of RHI,

par value $0.01 (the “RHI Shares”), will receive a number of newly issued shares of the Class L common stock equal

to (1) the number of RHI Shares held by such RHI shareholder multiplied by (2) the ratio of the number of shares of

Class D common stock, owned by RHI to the number of all outstanding RHI Shares, which is currently estimated to be

56.54 shares of Class L common stock per each RHI Share, and (b) Dan Gilbert, in consideration for his Class D common

stock and paired Holdings Units, will receive a number of newly issued shares of the Class L common stock equivalent to

one share of Class L common stock for each share of Class D common stock held by Dan Gilbert. The shares of Class L

common stock will be entitled to one vote per share on all matters submitted to a vote of stockholders and will have

economic rights equivalent to the economic rights of Class A common stock (including rights to dividends and distributions

upon our liquidation). As a result, Dan Gilbert and the other RHI shareholders will no longer have economic rights through

their Holdings Units and will instead participate, together with our public stockholders, directly in the economics of the

Company through their ownership of common stock. Subject to certain limited exceptions, Dan Gilbert and the other RHI

shareholders will be prohibited from transferring or otherwise disposing of (a) any shares of Class L common stock prior

to the first anniversary of the closing date of the Up-C collapse (the “Up-C Closing Date”) and (b) 50% of the shares of

Class L common stock prior to the second anniversary of the Up-C Closing Date (all such periods together, the “Lock-up

Periods”). Following the second anniversary of the Up-C Closing Date, no shares of Class L common stock will be subject

to a Lock-Up Period. Additionally, the Company’s Certificate of Incorporation following the Up-C Collapse will provide that,

at any time when the aggregate voting power of our outstanding Class L common stock would be equal to or greater than

79% of the total voting power of our outstanding stock, the number of votes per share of each share of Class L common

stock will be reduced such that the aggregate voting power of all shares of Class L common stock is equal to 79%.

Following the expiration or waiver of the Lock-up Periods, each share of Class L common stock (i) may be converted at

any time, at the option of the holder, into one share of Class A common stock and (ii) will automatically convert into one

share of Class A common stock immediately prior to any transfer of such share except for certain permitted transfers that

will be described in our Certificate of Incorporation. In addition, upon the later to occur of (A) the expiration or waiver of the

Lock-up Periods and (B) the date that the outstanding shares of Class L common stock no longer represent at least 79%

of the total voting power of the issued and outstanding shares of our common stock, all shares of Class L common stock

will automatically convert to newly issued shares of Class A common stock.

The Up-C Collapse will be effected pursuant to the terms of the Transaction Agreement, which has been approved by

the Company’s board of directors and, pursuant to our RPT policy, the Audit Committee. Following the Up-C Collapse,

we expect Dan Gilbert to directly hold more than a majority of the combined voting power on all matters submitted to

a vote of stockholders. As a result, we expect to continue to remain a “controlled company” within the meaning of the

NYSE rules.

The Up-C Collapse does not require any amendments to the terms of the Class A common stock. Following the Up-C

Collapse, we will only have two classes of common stock, Class A common stock and Class L common stock, as opposed

to the four classes (Class A common stock, Class B common stock, Class C common stock and Class D common stock)

that are authorized today. The Up-C Collapse will not affect any of our existing equity awards or the 2020 Omnibus

Incentive Plan.

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Under the terms of the Transaction Agreement:

• We agreed to pay a special dividend of $0.80 per share (the “Special Dividend”) to the holders of record of the

Class A Common Stock with a record date as of the close of business on March 20, 2025, and such payment

was made on April 3, 2025;

• RHI will effect an internal reorganization pursuant to which RHI will contribute all assets and liabilities of RHI

(other than its Holdings Units, its shares of Class D common stock and equity interests in each of Rocket

Community Fund, LLC, Woodward Insurance Holdings LLC and Woodward Insurance LLC) to RHI II and

distribute the interests in RHI II to the holders of RHI Shares;

• We will effect an internal reorganization pursuant to which (i) we will form Rocket LP, LLC as a Michigan limited

liability company and a direct wholly owned subsidiary of the Company (“Rocket Sub”) and will contribute two

percent (2%) of our total outstanding Holdings Units to Rocket Sub, (ii) Rocket, as the sole managing member

of Holdings, will cause Holdings to form Eclipse Merger Limited Partnership as a Michigan limited partnership

and wholly owned subsidiary of Holdings (“Holdings LP”), (iii) we will contribute our Holdings Units to Merger Sub

2, following which Merger Sub 2 will become the sole managing member of Holdings and (iv) Holdings will merge

with and into Holdings LP, following which, (x) the separate existence of Holdings as a limited liability company

will cease and Holdings LP will continue as the surviving entity and will be named “Rocket Limited Partnership”,

(y) Merger Sub 2 will be appointed as the general partner of Holdings LP and (z) each issued and outstanding

Holdings Unit will be exchanged for a number of fully paid and nonassessable partnership units of Holdings LP;

• We will, in accordance with the terms of the Transaction Agreement, amend and restate our Certificate of

Incorporation, to among other things, provide for a new class of Class L common stock, par value $0.0001

(the “Class L common stock”) and eliminate all references to our Class B common stock and Class C common

stock, and file a certificate of retirement and a restated certificate of incorporation to eliminate all references to

the Class D common stock;

• The Company, RHI, Dan Gilbert and Holdings LP will terminate the Exchange Agreement, with such termination

being retroactively effective as of the date of the Transaction Agreement;

• We will enter into a letter agreement with Dan Gilbert for the purpose of preserving certain of the information rights

and other rights provided for in the Exchange Agreement;

• Dan Gilbert will terminate the Rock Acquisition Corporation Shareholders Agreement, dated as of October 31,

2002, by and among RHI and its stockholders, as amended by the First Amendment to Rock Holdings, Inc.

Shareholders Agreement, dated as of March 1, 2018, in accordance with the terms therein;

• We will enter into an indemnity agreement with RHI II, pursuant to which, among other things, RHI II will indemnify

us for liabilities of RHI that are not related to the our business and certain other matters;

• Prior to the First Merger (as defined below), RHI will use reasonable best efforts to cause the employees of Rocket

Community Fund, LLC or other service providers who are not exclusively dedicated to the initiatives of Rocket to

transfer to RHI, II or another entity that will not be acquired by Rocket in connection with the Up-C Collapse ;

• Merger Sub 1 will merge with and into RHI (the “First Merger”), with RHI as the surviving entity in the First Merger

and remaining our direct wholly owned subsidiary, in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Michigan

Business Corporation Act (the “MBCA”). In the First Merger, each RHI Share, will be exchanged for the right to

receive a number of fully paid and nonassessable shares of Class L common stock. As a result, RHI’s

equityholders, directors and officers will cease to own RHI Shares;

• RHI will then merge with and into Merger Sub 2 (the “Second Merger” and together with the First Merger, the

“Mergers”), with Merger Sub 2 as the surviving entity in the Second Merger and remaining our direct wholly owned

2025 Proxy Report • 94 of 112

subsidiary, in accordance with the applicable provisions of the MBCA and the Michigan Limited Liability Company

Act. In the Second Merger, each RHI Share will be converted into a substantially equivalent equity interest in

Merger Sub 2;

• Following the Second Merger (the “DG Exchange Effective Time”), (i) Dan Gilbert will contribute and transfer

to the Company his Holdings Units and shares of Class D common stock in exchange for the issuance to Dan

Gilbert of a number of fully paid and nonassessable shares of Class L common stock on a one-to-one basis

(the “DG Exchange”) and (ii) we will contribute the Holdings Units received in the DG Exchange to Merger Sub 2;

• Rocket, RHI and Dan Gilbert will enter into an amendment to the tax receivable agreement to provide that the

terms of the tax receivable agreement will not apply to any exchanges, including for the avoidance of doubt,

the DG Exchange, that occur on or following the date of the Transaction Agreement; and

• We will cause Merger Sub 2, as the general partner of Holdings LP, to take all action necessary to amend and

restate the amended and restated limited partnership of agreement of Holdings LP to remove provisions that are

no longer relevant following the Up-C Collapse given that Holdings LP will become a wholly owned subsidiary of

the Company.

In connection with the Up-C Collapse, our board of directors authorized and declared a Special Dividend of $0.80 per

share to the holders of our Class A common stock. The Special Dividend was paid on April 3, 2025 to holders of the

Class A common stock of record as of the close of business on March 20, 2025. The Special Dividend was paid prior to

the Up-C Collapse so no dividend will be payable with respect to the shares of the Class L common stock to be received

by Dan Gilbert and other RHI stockholders in the Up-C Collapse, as those stockholders previously received the economic

benefit of such distribution on account of their Holdings Units.

Indemnification Agreements

We entered into an indemnification agreement with each of our executive officers and directors that provides, in general,

that we will indemnify them to the fullest extent permitted by law in connection with their service to us or on our behalf.

Transactions with RHI and other related parties

From time to time, we have entered into various transactions and agreements with RHI, its subsidiaries, and certain other

affiliates of Dan Gilbert, our founder and Chairman, and certain other affiliates of our director Jennifer Gilbert. In doing so,

we have enhanced our operations by looking at, and taking advantage of, opportunities not only with third parties but also

with our affiliated entities. We intend to continue taking advantage of such opportunities with RHI and other affiliates of our

directors and officers in accordance with our RPT policy (see “ – Policies and procedures for related person

transactions ”). The following transactions disclosed are rounded to the nearest million dollars as indicated.

Services provided by the Company to affiliates

We have entered into transactions and agreements to provide certain support services to RHI, its subsidiaries and

certain other affiliates of Dan Gilbert and Jennifer Gilbert, including Bedrock, ROCK and Rock Events at fees that reflect

the cost of services provided by us plus, in certain circumstances, a reasonable margin. These services primarily include

technology services (e.g., infrastructure, platform interface, data and server support), information security services

and support, human resources services (e.g., providing skilled recruiters and recruiting support, payroll and benefits

administration and support), legal services (e.g., support and advice on transactional matters, employment law, and

litigation), data governance and analytics, advisory services (e.g., strategic consulting, tax services and advice, and

security services), the procurement of goods, services and materials, including vendor engagement and risk management

(e.g., technology development and data acquisition services), accounting and finance services (e.g., providing accounting

and financial reporting services), marketing services, and telemarketing services (collectively, the “Provided Services”).

We intend to continue providing the Provided Services and our subsidiaries Rocket Mortgage, LLC and Rocket, LLC

have entered into agreements for Provided Services with certain affiliates. Fees for the Provided Services amounted

to $6.1 million in the year ended December 31, 2024.

We also charge the recipient of the Provided Services for all documented out of pocket third party costs and expenses

we incur for such services, which in some cases are net settled against pass through costs these related parties have

charged us. In the year ended December 31, 2024, we charged $12.4 million, net, for such costs and expenses. Out of

2025 Proxy Report • 95 of 112

these pass through costs, a substantial majority relates to payroll and benefits payments we administered on behalf

of our affiliates.

Services acquired by the Company from affiliates

We have entered into transactions and agreements to receive certain services from certain subsidiaries of RHI and

affiliates of Dan Gilbert and Jennifer Gilbert, including ROCK, Sift LLC, Rock Security LLC, Pophouse, and Bedrock

at fees that reflect the cost of services acquired by us plus, in certain circumstances, a reasonable margin. These

services primarily include consultant services, data protection services, data source support and technical support

services, physical security services, professional services to assist customers in customizing software, discovery

analytics and data strategy services, business consulting, design and process improvement consulting services,

and catering and event services (the “Received Services”). We intend to continue receiving the Received Services.

In connection with the Received Services, we paid fees and out of pocket costs and expenses incurred by the service

providers for such services in an amount of $21.2 million in the year ended December 31, 2024.

Real estate transactions

Certain of our subsidiaries, including Rocket Mortgage, are parties to lease agreements for certain of our offices,

including our headquarters in Detroit, with various affiliates of Bedrock and other affiliates of Dan Gilbert. The lease

agreements have terms ranging between one and 10 years. Under each agreement, our subsidiaries are required to

pay specified rent, as well as common area maintenance fees, costs for office services (e.g. for consumed electricity)

and property maintenance costs. Additionally, we paid for the renovation and expansion of certain of the properties

subject to these agreements. During the year ended December 31, 2024, we made cash payments totaling $73.5 million

for these properties. During the year ended December 31, 2024, we received payment related to tenant improvement

allowance from our related party landlords in the amount of $1.1 million. Upon renewal, any lease will be approved

pursuant to the terms of our RPT policy (see “ − Policies and procedures for related person transactions ”).

In addition to the parking spaces we obtain under our lease agreements, we also acquire additional parking rights from

Bedrock or through an agent of Bedrock at properties owned by Bedrock. During the year ended December 31, 2024,

we made cash payments totaling $14.8 million for these additional parking rights.

Naming rights agreement for Rocket Arena

On July 1, 2017, we entered into an agreement with Cleveland Cavaliers Holdings, LLC and certain of its affiliates

(collectively, the “Cavaliers”), to obtain the naming rights for a professional sports arena. The agreement terminates

in 2034. Dan Gilbert is the majority owner of the Cavaliers. Under the terms of the agreement, the Cavaliers must

place signage on and in the arena in agreed upon locations and provide for advertising spots on radio and television

broadcasts as well as certain other advertising benefits. We paid the Cavaliers $11.1 million in the year ended

December 31, 2024 under this agreement.

Guarantees

Rocket Mortgage has entered into a Master Commercial Card Agreement with JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (“JPM”)

pursuant to which Rocket Mortgage and its affiliates may use cards issued by JPM. Rocket Mortgage is responsible as

a primary obligor for all obligations of these affiliates under this agreement. At December 31, 2024, the amounts due by

those affiliates under this agreement was $0.2 million.

Charitable donations

During the year ended December 31, 2024, we paid to the Rocket Community Fund an aggregate of $13.3 million

pursuant to an Intercompany Services Agreement in which these funds are used to make donations to charitable

entities and to make other investments in the communities in which we operate.

Loans from affiliates

RHI/RM Line Of Credit . RHI and Rocket Mortgage are parties to an agreement for an uncommitted unsecured line

of credit, dated June 9, 2017, as further amended and restated on September 16, 2021 (the “RHI/RM Line of Credit”),

which provides for financing from RHI to Rocket Mortgage of up to $2 billion. The RHI/RM Line of Credit matures on

July 27, 2025. Historically, Rocket Mortgage has periodically borrowed funds under the RHI/RM Line of Credit to repay

other indebtedness that accrued interest at a higher rate. In its discretion, RHI may determine not to advance funds

for any reason.

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Borrowings under the RHI/RM Line of Credit bear interest at a rate per annum of the applicable base rate, plus a spread

of 1.25%. The negative covenants of the RHI/RM Line of Credit restrict the ability of Rocket Mortgage to incur debt and

create liens on certain assets. The RHI/RM Line of Credit also contains customary events of default. There were no

outstanding principal amounts due to RHI as of December 31, 2024. There were no amounts outstanding under the

RHI/RM Line of Credit, no interest accrued, and no repayments made during the year ended December 31, 2024.

RHI/RTIC Debenture . RHI and Rocket Title Insurance Company (“RTIC”) are parties to a surplus debenture, effective

as of December 28, 2015, as further amended and restated on July 31, 2023 (the “RHI/RTIC Debenture”), pursuant to

which RTIC is indebted to RHI for an aggregate principal amount of $21.5 million. The RHI/RTIC Debenture matures on

December 31, 2030. Interest under the RHI/RTIC Debenture accrues at an annual rate of 8.0%. Principal and interest

under the RHI/RTIC Debenture are due and payable quarterly. Any unpaid amounts of principal and interest will be due

and payable upon the maturity of the RHI/RTIC Debenture.

At December 31, 2024, the principal under the RHI/RTIC Debenture was $21.5 million. In the year ended December 31,

2024, the total amount of interest accrued under the RHI/RTIC Debenture was $1.7 million. In the year ended December

31, 2024, RTIC repaid an aggregate of $3.5 million. Subsequent to December 31, 2024, the aggregate amount due to RHI

of $28.8 million was paid in full.

Other transactions

Rocket, LLC and an affiliate of Dan Gilbert entered into a loan promissory note, effective January 22, 2024, which outlines

terms for repayment of amounts loaned to the affiliate for $1 million. In the year ended December 31, 2024, the total

amount of interest accrued under the promissory note was $0.1 million and the total aggregate amount of principal and

interest repaid was $0.9 million

Affiliates of Dan Gilbert own or owned several hotels in the Detroit and Cleveland area, including the Shinola Hotel,

ROOST and The Ritz Carlton, Cleveland, the watch manufacturer Shinola Detroit, and event venue facilities in Detroit.

From time to time, we buy products and services from these companies in the ordinary course of our business. The

amounts involved in such transactions for the year ended December 31, 2024 were $3.9 million.

One immediate family member of our directors was a regular, full time team member of the Company during all or a

portion of 2024. The Company paid annual compensation, including base salary, bonus, equity awards and company

paid benefits, of $0.2 million for 2024.

Matthew Rizik has an agreement to provide consulting services to the Company and Holdings. For services in 2024,

he received equity compensation having aggregate grant date fair values of $4.7 million.

2025 Proxy Report • 97 of 112

Security ownership of certain beneficial owners and

management

The following table sets forth the beneficial ownership of our Class A common stock as of May 20, 2025, the record

date for the 2025 annual meeting, by:

• Each person, or group of affiliated persons, who we know to beneficially own more than 5% of any class or

series of our capital stock;

• Each of our named executive officers;

• Each of our directors and director nominees; and

• All of our executive officers and directors as a group.

In August 2020, we entered into the Exchange Agreement with RHI and Dan Gilbert, pursuant to which each of RHI and

Dan Gilbert (or certain transferees thereof) will have the right to exchange its or his Holdings Units (along with corresponding

shares of our Class D common stock or Class C common stock), for, at our option (as the sole managing member of

Holdings), (i) shares of our Class B common stock or Class A common stock, as applicable, on a one-for-one basis or

(ii) cash from a substantially concurrent public offering or private sale (based on the price of our Class A common stock

in such public offering or private sale), subject to customary conversion rate adjustments for stock splits, stock dividends

and reclassifications. The percentages of ownership and combined voting power set forth below are based on 151,353,832

shares of our Class A common stock and 1,848,879,483 Holdings Units and shares of our Class D common stock issued and

outstanding as of May 20, 2025.

The amounts of Class A common stock beneficially owned are reported on the basis of the regulations of the SEC governing

the determination of beneficial ownership of securities. Under these rules, a person is deemed to be a beneficial owner of a

security if that person has or shares voting power, which includes the power to vote or to direct the voting of such security,

or investment power, which includes the power to dispose of or to direct the disposition of such security. A person is also

deemed a beneficial owner of any securities of which that person has a right to acquire beneficial ownership within 60 days

of May 20, 2025. Under these rules, more than one person may be deemed to be a beneficial owner of the same securities.

As of the record date, only shares of Class A common stock and Class D common stock are outstanding. However, because

each of RHI and Dan Gilbert has the right at any time to (a) exchange any Holdings Units (together with a corresponding

number of shares of Class D common stock) for , at our option (as the sole managing member of Holdings), (i) shares of

our Class B common stock on a one-for-one basis or (ii) cash from a substantially concurrent public offering or private sale

(based on the price of our Class A common stock in such public offering or private sale), subject to customary conversion

rate adjustments for stock splits, stock dividends and reclassifications and (b) convert shares of Class D common stock into

a shares of Class C common stock on a one-for-one basis, our Class B common stock and Class C common stock is currently

beneficially owned by each of RHI and Dan Gilbert. The number of shares of Class B common stock and Class C common

stock and the percentage beneficially owned by each of RHI and Dan Gilbert are equal to the amounts reported for the Class

D common stock in the following table, assuming that all Holdings Units (together with the corresponding shares of Class D

common stock) have been exchanged for shares of Class B common stock on a one-for-one basis or shares of Class D

common stock have been converted into shares of Class C common stock on a one-for-one basis, as applicable.

Except as otherwise indicated and subject to applicable community property laws, each owner has sole voting and investment

power with respect to the securities listed. U nless otherwise indicated, the address for each beneficial owner listed below is

1050 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226.

Name and address of beneficial owner Class A Common St owned directly or indirectly (1) Class D Common Stock owned directly or indirectly (1) Combined voting power (1)(3) Class A Common Stock beneficially owned (on a fully exchanged and converted basis) (1)(2)
Number Percentage Number Percentage Percentage Number Percentage
5% Equityholders
Rock Holdings Inc. (4) 1,847,777,661 99.9 % 79.0 % 1,847,777,661 92.4 %
VA Partners I, LLC (5) 15,125,609 9.9 % 2.0 % 15,125,609 0.8 %
Boston Partners (6) 13,615,609 9.0 % 1.8 % 13,615,609 0.7 %

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The Vanguard Group (7) 11,702,838 7.7 % 1.5 % 11,702,838 0.6 %
JPMorgan Chase (8) 10,761,186 7.1 % 1.4 % 10,761,186 0.5 %
FMR LLC (9) 8,427,850 5.6 % 1.1 % 8,427,850 0.4 %
Directors and Named Executive Officers
Bill Emerson (10) 444,283 * * 444,283 *
Dan Gilbert (4)(11) 1,848,879,483 100 % 79.0 % 1,848,879,483 92.4 %
Jennifer Gilbert
Jonathan Mariner (12) 70,284 * * 70,284 *
Alex Rampell (13) 22,623 * * 22,623 *
Matthew Rizik (14) 770,441 * * 770,441 *
Suzanne Shank (15) 87,542 * * 87,542 *
Nancy Tellem (16) 122,542 * * 122,542 *
Varun Krishna 143,566 * * 143,566 *
Brian Brown (17) 473,693 * * 473,693 *
Shawn Malhotra 140,602 * * 140,602 *
Jonathan Mildenhall 91,684 * * 91,684 *
Heather Lovier (18) 344,817 * * 344,817 *
All directors and executive officers as a group (14 persons) (19) 3,071,123 2.0 % 1,848,879,483 100 % 80.8 % 1,851,950,606 92.6 %
  • Less than one percent.

(1) Except as described by the Voting Limitation, each holder of Class B common stock and Class D common stock is entitled to 10 votes per share and each holder of Class A

common stock and Class C common stock is entitled to one vote per share on all matters submitted to our stockholders for a vote. Our Class C common stock and Class D

common stock do not have any of the economic rights (including rights to dividends and distributions upon liquidation) associated with our Class A common stock and Class B

common stock. Without the Voting Limitation, RHI would have approximately 99% of the combined voting power of our common stock. Each share of our Class B common

stock and Class D common stock, as applicable, will automatically convert into one share of Class A common stock or Class C common stock, as applicable, (a) immediately

prior to any sale or other transfer of such share by a holder of such share, subject to certain limited exceptions, such as transfers to permitted transferees, or (b) if the RHI

Parties own less than 10% of our issued and outstanding common stock.

(2) The numbers of shares of Class A common stock beneficially owned and percentages of beneficial ownership reported assume that (a) all Holdings Units (together with the

corresponding shares of Class D common stock) have been exchanged for shares of Class B common stock and (b) all shares of Class B common stock have been converted

into shares of Class A common stock.

(3) Percentage of voting power represents voting power with respect to all shares of our Class A common stock, Class B common stock, Class C common stock and Class D

common stock voting together as a single class.

(4) Based on a Schedule 13G/A (Amendment No. 2) filed with the SEC on February 10, 2022. RHI beneficially owns 1,847,777,661 Holdings Units and an equal number of

shares of Class D common stock. The address for RHI is 1090 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48226.

(5) Based on a Schedule 13D filed with the SEC on May 15, 2025. VA Partners I, LLC reported shared voting power of 15,125,609 shares of Class A common stock and shared

dispositive power for 15,125,609 shares of Class A common stock. The address for VA Partners I, LLC is One Letterman Drive, Building D, 4 th FL, San Francisco, CA 94129.

(6) Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on May 12, 2025. Boston Partners reported sole voting power for 12,725,297 shares of Class A common stock and sole

dispositive power for 13,615,609 shares of Class A common stock. The address for Boston Partners is One Beacon Street 30 th FL, Boston, MA 02108.

(7) Based on a Schedule 13G/A (Amendment No. 3) filed with the SEC on February 13, 2024. The Vanguard Group reported shared voting power for 42,625 shares of Class A

common stock, sole dispositive power for 11,550,638 shares of Class A common stock and shared dispositive power for 152,200 shares of Class A common stock. The

address for The Vanguard Group is 100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, Pennsylvania 19355.

(8) Based on a Schedule 13G/A (Amendment No. 1) filed with the SEC on April 22, 2025. JPMorgan Chase reported sole voting power for 10,308,107 shares of Class A

common stock, sole dispositive power for 10,759,331 shares of Class A common stock and shared dispositive power for 162 shares of Class A common stock. The address

for JPMorgan Chase is 383 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10179.

(9) Based on a Schedule13G filed with the SEC on May 12, 2025. FMR LLC reported sole voting power for 8,399,212 shares of Class A common stock and sole dispositive power

for 8,427,850 shares of Class A common stock. The address for FMR LLC is 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.

(10) Includes 38,501 shares of Class A common stock that Bill could acquire through the exercise of stock options.

(11) Dan Gilbert holds 1,847,777,661 Holdings Units and an equal number of shares of Class D common stock. Dan is the majority shareholder of RHI and has shared voting

and dispositive control, and beneficial ownership, with respect to the Holdings Units and shares of Class D common stock held of record by RHI. See footnote 4 above.

(12) Includes 15,034 shares of Class A common stock that Jonathan could acquire through RSUs scheduled to vest within 60 days of May 20, 2025.

(13) Includes 5,668 shares of Class A common stock that Alex could acquire through RSUs scheduled to vest within 60 days of May 20, 2025.

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(14) Includes 30,801 shares of Class A common stock that Matthew could acquire through the exercise of stock options.

(15) Includes 15,034 shares of Class A common stock that Suzanne could acquire through RSUs scheduled to vest within 60 days of May 20, 2025.

(16) I ncludes (a) 35,000 shares of Class A common stock held by Nancy’s spouse and (b) 15,034 shares of Class A common stock that Nancy could acquire through RSUs

scheduled to vest within 60 days of May 20, 2025.

(17) Includes 92,402 shares of Class A common stock that Brian could acquire through the exercise of stock options.

(18) Includes 123,203 shares of Class A common stock that Heather could acquire through the exercise of stock options.

(19) Includes (a) 408,110 shares of Class A common stock that the directors and executive officers as a group could acquire through the exercise of stock options within 60 days of

May 20, 2025 and (b) 50,770 shares of Class A common stock that the directors and executive officers as a group could acquire through RSUs scheduled to vest within

60 days of May 20, 2025.

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Proposal no. 2 — ratification of appointment of independent

registered public accounting firm for 2025

Our Audit Committee has unanimously reappointed Ernst & Young as the independent registered public accounting firm

to audit the Company’s consolidated financial statements as of and for the year ending December 31, 2025 and report on

the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025. Although

stockholder approval is not required for such appointment, our Audit Committee will take the outcome of the vote on this

proposal into consideration when appointing our independent registered public accounting firm in the future. At the 2024

annual meeting of stockholders, stockholders voted more than 99% in favor of the proposal to ratify the appointment of

Ernst & Young as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for 2024.

Ernst & Young served as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm during 2024 and, in that capacity,

rendered a report on the Company’s consolidated financial statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2024

and on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024. Ernst &

Young has served as the independent auditor of the Company or RHI and its subsidiaries since 1999.

Support for recommendation

In determining that retaining Ernst & Young for 2025 was in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders, our

Audit Committee reviewed:

• Ernst & Young’s performance on the Company’s audit and non-audit work for the year ended December 31, 2024

and recent prior years, and management’s assessment of such performance;

• Ernst & Young’s qualifications, independence, capabilities and expertise, evident through its audit planning and

reports, industry knowledge, use of technology to improve efficiencies, resources and staffing, objectivity and

professional skepticism;

• External data on audit quality and performance, including results of recent PCAOB reports on Ernst & Young and

peer firms and improvements made from period to period;

• The terms of the audit engagement, including the reasonableness of audit and non-audit fees charged taking into

account the breadth and complexity of services provided, as well as the efficiency achieved in performing such

services;

• The quality of Ernst & Young’s communications to and interactions with our Audit Committee at meetings and our

Audit Committee Chair between meetings; and

• The benefits of having a long-tenured auditor and the institutional knowledge gained from prior years of

engagement.

In accordance with SEC rules, the maximum number of consecutive years of service for lead and concurring review audit

partners for public companies is five years. Our prior lead audit partner’s five-year term ended in 2025 and our new lead

audit partner began serving a five-year term in 2025. In connection with the transition in lead audit partners, our Audit

Committee obtained significant input from management and Ernst & Young before selecting our new lead audit partner.

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Non-binding vote

Our Audit Committee is responsible for selecting the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, and

stockholder approval is not required to appoint Ernst & Young as our independent registered public accounting firm.

However, our Audit Committee will take the outcome of the vote on this proposal into consideration when appointing

our independent registered public accounting firm in the future. Our Audit Committee may retain another independent

registered public accounting firm at any time if it concludes that such change would be in the best interest of the

Company’s stockholders, even if the stockholders approve this proposal.

Inquiries of Ernst & Young at annual meeting

Ernst & Young will be present at the annual meeting and available to respond to appropriate questions and may make

a statement if they so desire.

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Audit Committee report

Key responsibility of oversight

On behalf of our Board, our Audit Committee provides independent oversight of:

• The reliability and integrity of the Company’s accounting policies and financial statements;

• The Company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;

• The qualifications, scope of work, performance and independence of Ernst & Young LLP, the

Company’s independent registered public accounting firm;

• The performance of the Company’s internal audit function and its system of internal controls;

• Compliance with the Code of Conduct and Ethics and implementation and effectiveness of the

Company’s compliance and ethics programs; and

• The Company’s major financial risk exposures, and management’s risk assessment and risk management policies.

Required communications with Audit Committee

As part of its oversight of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, our

Audit Committee reviewed and discussed with management and Ernst & Young, the Company’s audited consolidated

financial statements and related footnotes for the year ended December 31, 2024 and Ernst & Young’s report on those

financial statements. In addition, our Audit Committee reviewed and discussed the Company’s internal control assessment

process, and management’s assessment of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting and Ernst & Young’s

attestation thereof, each as of December 31, 2024.

Our Audit Committee has discussed with Ernst & Young the matters required to be discussed by the applicable

requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“PCAOB”) and the SEC. In addition to the matters

noted above, these required communications included Ernst & Young’s perspective on the quality (not merely the

acceptability) of the Company’s accounting principles, the reasonableness of significant estimates and judgments made

by management, and the disclosures in the audited consolidated financial statements, including the disclosures relating

to critical audit matters addressed in Ernst & Young’s audit report. Our Audit Committee also received the written

disclosures and a letter from Ernst & Young required by the applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding Ernst &

Young’s communications with our Audit Committee concerning independence. Our Audit Committee has discussed and

confirmed with Ernst & Young its independence with respect to the Company, which included considering whether Ernst

& Young’s provision of non-audit services was compatible with its independence.

Audit Committee recommendation

Based upon these reviews and discussions, our Audit Committee recommended to our Board that the Company’s audited

consolidated financial statements be included in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024

to be filed with the SEC. Our Audit Committee also appointed Ernst & Young to serve as the Company’s independent

registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2025.

This report has been furnished by the members of our Audit Committee of our Board.

Audit Committee

• Jonathan Mariner, Chair

• Suzanne Shank

• Nancy Tellem

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Audit Committee matters

Pre-approval policies and procedures

Our Audit Committee has the sole authority to review in advance, and pre-approve ( which may be pursuant to pre-

approval policies and procedures ) all audit and non-audit services to be provided by the Company’s independent

auditors and to approve all related fees and other terms of engagement to ensure that the provision of these services

do not impair the independence of the Company’s independent audit firm from the Company and its subsidiaries.

All of the services rendered by Ernst & Young to the Company and its subsidiaries during 2024 were pre-approved by

our Audit Committee.

Independent registered public accounting firm fees

Our Audit Committee retained Ernst & Young to audit the Company’s consolidated financial statements as of and for

the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023 and report on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over

financial reporting as of December 31, 2024. Fees billed for services rendered by Ernst & Young for each of 2024 and

2023 are set forth below.

Type of Service 2024 ($ in thousands) 2023 ($ in thousands)
Audit Fees (1) 5,125 4,417
Audit-Related Fees (2) 1,372 1,170
Tax Fees (3) 157 180
All Other Fees
Total 6,654 5,767

(1) Audit Fees for professional services associated with the annual audit of our consolidated financial statements and the financial statements of certain subsidiaries, the

reviews of our quarterly condensed consolidated financial statements and the issuance of consents and comfort letters in connection with registration statement filings

with the SEC. Audit Fees also include the issuance of opinions on the effectiveness over the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

(2) Audit-Related Fees consist of fees billed for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of our consolidated

financial statements and are not reported under Audit Fees. These services consisted of attestation and compliance reports, including internal control-related

engagements and servicer compliance related engagements.

(3) Tax Fees consist of fees billed for tax advisory and compliance services provided to certain subsidiaries of the Company.

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Questions and answers about the proxy materials and 2025

annual meeting

When will the 2025 annual meeting be held?

The annual meeting will be held virtually via a live webcast on Wednesday, June 11, 2025, at 1:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight

Time, at www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RKT2025 .

How do I attend the 2025 annual meeting?

You can attend the annual meeting online, vote your shares electronically and submit questions during the annual meeting

by visiting www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RKT2025 . You will not be able to attend the annual meeting in person. The

live webcast of the annual meeting will begin promptly at 1:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time on Wednesday, June 11, 2025.

All stockholders may attend and listen to the live webcast of the annual meeting.

You may electronically vote your shares and submit questions at the annual meeting by using the 16-digit control number

that is printed in the box on your proxy card. If you lose your 16-digit control number, you may join the annual meeting

as a guest, but you will not be able to vote, ask questions or access the list of stockholders as of the record date. If your

shares are held in street name and you did not receive a 16-digit control number, you may be able to gain access to

and vote at the annual meeting by logging into your bank or brokerage firm’s website and selecting the stockholder

communications mailbox to access the meeting. Instructions should also be provided on the voting instruction card

provided by your bank or brokerage firm.

We recommend that you log in at least 15 minutes before the annual meeting begins to ensure ample time to complete

the check-in procedures. A replay of the annual meeting audio webcast will be available on our website for approximately

one year following the annual meeting.

We will have technicians ready to assist you with any technical difficulties you may have accessing the virtual meeting

website. If you encounter any difficulties accessing the virtual meeting website, please call the technical support number

that will be posted on the annual meeting log-in page.

You do not need to attend the annual meeting to vote. Even if you plan to attend the annual meeting, please submit your

vote in advance as instructed in this proxy statement.

How will the virtual meeting format impact stockholder viewing and

participation at the 2025 annual meeting?

The virtual meeting format for the annual meeting will enable participation by our stockholders from anywhere in the

world at little to no cost, which we believe enhances stockholder access to the annual meeting and communication with

management and our Board. We have structured the virtual annual meeting to afford stockholders an opportunity to

participate substantially as they would in an in-person meeting. We will answer any timely submitted and relevant

questions on a matter to be voted on at the annual meeting before voting is closed on the matter, as time allows.

Following adjournment of the formal business of the annual meeting, we will address appropriate questions from

stockholders regarding the Company as time allows.

The Company requests that stockholders submit questions in advance of the annual meeting by sending questions

to [email protected]. During the annual meeting, questions relating to stockholder proposals or the Company may be

submitted in the field provided on the virtual meeting website at or before the time the questions are to be discussed.

If we receive substantially similar questions, we may group those questions together and provide a single response to

avoid repetition.

While we will try to answer as many appropriate questions as we can during the time allotted for questions during the

annual meeting, we may not have the time to respond to all questions submitted. If we are unable to answer all questions,

stockholders may submit questions after the annual meeting to [email protected].

Additional information regarding the rules and procedures for how the Company will run the annual meeting and

stockholder participation in the annual meeting will be provided in our meeting rules of conduct, which stockholders

can view during the meeting at the virtual meeting website. The rules of conduct are designed to allow us to conduct

an orderly meeting in fairness to all stockholders.

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Why am I receiving these materials?

You have received this proxy statement and related materials because at the close of business on the record date, you

owned shares of the Company’s common stock and our Board is soliciting your proxy to vote your shares of common

stock at the annual meeting. This proxy statement summarizes information relevant to your vote.

Who can vote at the 2025 annual meeting?

All stockholders of record of our common stock on the record date and beneficial owners of our common stock on the

record date holding a valid proxy for the annual meeting from their broker, bank or other nominee giving them the right

to vote the shares, are entitled to attend and vote at the annual meeting.

Except as described further below, each holder of Class B common stock and Class D common stock is entitled to 10

votes per share and each holder of Class A common stock and Class C common stock is entitled to one vote per share

on all matters submitted to our stockholders for a vote. All classes of our common stock with voting rights will vote

together as a single class on all matters described in this proxy statement. As of the record date, there were

2,000,233,315 shares of common stock outstanding, consisting of 151,353,832 shares of Class A common stock and

1,848,879,483 shares of Class D common stock. As of the record date, all of our outstanding Class D common stock is

held by RHI and Dan Gilbert. There are no outstanding shares of Class B common stock or Class C common stock.

The voting limitation in our Certificate of Incorporation (the “Voting Limitation”) provides that, at any time when the

aggregate voting power of the RHI Securities would be equal to or greater than 79% of the total voting power of our

outstanding stock, the number of votes per share of each RHI security will be reduced such that the aggregate voting

power of all of the RHI Securities is equal to 79%.

As a result of the Voting Limitation, as of the record date, (a) each outstanding share of Class D common stock held

by RHI is entitled to 0.33 votes per share, representing an aggregate of 79.0% of the combined voting power of our

outstanding common stock, (b) each outstanding share of Class D common stock held by Dan Gilbert is entitled to 10

votes per share, representing an aggregate of 1.4% of the combined voting power of our outstanding common stock and

(c) each outstanding share of Class A common stock is entitled to one vote per share, representing an aggregate of 21.0%

of the combined voting power of our outstanding common stock. Because each holder of Class B common stock and

Class D common stock is entitled to 10 votes per share, RHI will continue to have such control as long as it owns at least

10% of our issued and outstanding common stock. Without the Voting Limitation, RHI would have approximately 99% of

the combined voting power of our common stock.

What votes need to be present to hold the 2025 annual meeting?

Holders of a majority of the voting power of all shares of common stock outstanding on the record date and entitled

to vote at the meeting must be present at the annual meeting, by remote communication or represented by proxy, to

constitute a quorum for the transaction of any business. Proxies marked with abstentions or instructions to withhold

votes, as well as broker non-votes (defined below), will be counted as present in determining whether or not there is

a quorum. In the absence of a quorum, the holders of a majority of the voting power of the shares of stock present

at the meeting may adjourn or postpone such meeting to another time or place.

What is the difference between holding shares of common stock as a

stockholder of record and as a beneficial owner?

If your shares of common stock are registered directly in your name with the Company’s transfer agent, Computershare

Trust Company N.A., you are considered the stockholder of record with respect to those shares and the proxy materials

were sent directly to you.

If your shares of common stock are held with a broker, bank or other nominee, you are considered the beneficial owner

with respect to those shares. Your broker, bank or other holder of record who is considered the stockholder of record with

respect to those shares has forwarded to you a notice directing you to the website where you can access the proxy

materials. As the beneficial owner, you have the right to direct your broker, bank or other nominee on how to vote your

shares. Your broker, bank or nominee has enclosed voting instructions for you to use in directing the broker, bank or

nominee on how to vote your shares.

How can I obtain proxy materials via email?

If you request proxy materials by e-mail, please send a blank e-mail including in the subject line the information that is

printed in the box provided in your Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials to [email protected] .

Requests, instructions and other inquiries sent to this e-mail address will NOT be forwarded to your investment advisor.

Please make the request as instructed above on or before June 4, 2024 to facilitate timely delivery of the proxy materials.

2025 Proxy Report • 106 of 112

The brokerage firm, bank or other holder of record who is considered the stockholder of record will provide each beneficial

owner with instructions on how to request an e-mail copy of our proxy materials.

To enroll in the electronic delivery service for future stockholder meetings, use your Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy

Materials (or proxy card or voting instruction card, if you received printed copies of the proxy materials) to register online

at www.proxyvote.com and, when prompted, indicate that you agree to receive or access stockholder communications

electronically in future years.

How do I vote if I am a stockholder of record?

If you are a stockholder of record, you may vote your shares using one of the following methods (please also see the

information provided above and below concerning the difference in how to vote if you hold shares beneficially through

a brokerage firm, bank or other nominee instead of as the registered holder – beneficial holders should follow the voting

instructions provided by their respective nominees):

Over the internet . Go To www.proxyvote.com . You can use the internet 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to submit

your voting instructions and for electronic delivery of information up until 11:59 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, on June 10,

  1. Have your proxy card in hand when you access the website and follow the instructions to obtain your records and

vote.

By telephone . Call 1-800-690-6903. You can use any touch-tone telephone to transmit your voting instructions up until

11:59 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, on June 10, 2025. Have your proxy card in hand when you call and follow the

instructions.

By mail . You may submit your vote by completing, signing and mailing your proxy card and returning it in the postage-paid

envelope to Vote Processing, c/o Broadridge, 51 Mercedes Way, Edgewood, New York 11717. Sign your name exactly as

it appears on the proxy card. We must receive proxy cards submitted by mail no later than June 10, 2025 to be voted at

the annual meeting.

During the annual meeting . Visit www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RKT2025 . Stockholders of record may attend the

annual meeting via the internet and vote electronically during the annual meeting. Have available the information that is

printed in the box provided in your proxy card in hand when you access the website and follow the instructions to vote.

If, prior to the annual meeting, you vote over the internet or by telephone, your electronic vote authorizes the

named proxies in the same manner as if you signed, dated and returned a proxy card. If, prior to the annual

meeting, you vote over the internet or by telephone, do not return a proxy card or vote at the annual meeting

unless you intend to revoke your previously submitted proxy.

How do I vote if I am a beneficial owner?

As a beneficial owner, you have the right to direct your broker, bank or other nominee how to vote your shares by following

the instructions that your broker, bank or other nominee sent to you. You will receive voting instructions for each account

that you have with a broker, bank or other nominee. Please instruct your broker, bank or other nominee how to vote your

shares using the voting instruction card you received from them. Please return your completed voting instruction card to

your broker, bank or other nominee. If your broker, bank or other nominee permits you to provide voting instructions via

the internet or by telephone, you may vote that way as well. As a beneficial owner, if you wish to change the directions

that you have provided to your broker, bank or other nominee, you should follow the instructions that your broker, bank

or other nominee sent to you.

If you do not direct your broker, bank or other nominee how to vote your shares, the broker, bank or other nominee

will determine if it has the discretionary authority to vote on each applicable matter. Under applicable law, if you are

a beneficial owner, your broker, bank or other nominee only has discretion to vote on certain routine matters without

your voting instructions. The proposal to ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young as our independent registered public

accounting firm is considered a routine matter. For all other matters at the annual meeting, your broker, bank or other

nominee will be unable to vote on your behalf if you do not instruct them how to vote your shares and, if you do not

provide voting instructions, your shares will be considered broker non-votes. Therefore, it is very important for you to

vote your shares for each proposal.

2025 Proxy Report • 107 of 112

What can I do if I change my mind after I vote?

If you are a stockholder of record, you may change your voting instructions and revoke your proxy before it is exercised

by doing any one of the following:

• Timely written notice of revocation to our Corporate Secretary at 1050 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226.

• A timely later-dated vote by telephone or on the internet or timely delivery of a valid, later-dated proxy.

• Participating in the annual meeting live via the internet and voting again.

Only the latest validly executed proxy that you submit will be counted. Your attendance at the annual meeting in person

will not cause your previously granted proxy to be revoked unless you vote in person.

If you are a beneficial owner of shares but not the stockholder of record, you may submit new voting instructions by

contacting your broker, bank or other nominee.

What matters am I voting on, how may I vote on each matter, and how

does our Board recommend that I vote on each matter?

Subject to revocation, all forms of proxy that are properly completed and timely received will be voted in accordance

with the instructions you give. If no instructions are given (except in the case of broker non-votes), the persons named

as proxies will vote the shares of common stock in accordance with the recommendations of our Board. The following

table sets forth each of the proposals you are being asked to vote on, how you may vote on each proposal and how our

Board recommends that you vote on each proposal.

Proposal 1 Election Of Class II Directors
How may I vote? How does our Board recommend that I vote?
FOR the election of all Class II director nominees named here WITHHOLD authority to vote for all such Class II director nominees FOR the election of all such Class II director nominees other than any nominees with respect to whom the authority to vote is specifically withheld by indicating in the space provided on the proxy Our Board recommends that you vote FOR all Class II director nominees named herein
Proposal 2 Ratification of appointment of Ernst & Young as independent registered public accounting firm for 2025
How may I vote? How does our Board recommend that I vote?
FOR or AGAINST the ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2025 You may indicate that you wish to ABSTAIN from voting on the matter Our Board recommends that you vote FOR the ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2025

2025 Proxy Report • 108 of 112

What is the voting requirement to approve each of the proposals?

Proposal Required Vote Treatment And Effect Of Vote — For Withhold/ Against Abstain Broker Non- Votes
1 Election Of Class II Directors Plurality of the votes cast For the director nominee(s) Against the director nominee(s) Not a vote cast
2 Ratification Of Appointment Of The Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm Majority of the voting power of shares of stock present or represented and entitled to vote For the proposal Against the proposal Against the proposal None (brokers have discretionary authority)

Although the advisory vote in Proposal 2 is not binding, our Board and the Audit Committee will take your vote into

consideration in determining future activities.

If any other matter is properly submitted to the stockholders at the annual meeting, its adoption generally will require the

affirmative vote of the majority of the voting power of shares of stock present by remote communication or represented by

proxy and entitled to vote on the matter. As of the date of this proxy statement, our Board knows of no matter that will be

presented for action by the stockholders at the annual meeting other than those discussed in this proxy statement, and

we have not received notice of any other matters that may properly be presented at the annual meeting. If any other

matter requiring a vote of the stockholders properly comes before the annual meeting, the individuals acting under the

proxies solicited by our Board will vote and act as our Board recommends or, if our Board gives no recommendation,

according to their best judgments in light of the conditions then prevailing, to the extent permitted under applicable law.

What does it mean if I receive more than one proxy card or voting

instruction card?

If you receive more than one proxy card or voting instruction card, it means that you have multiple accounts with banks,

brokers, other nominees and/or our transfer agent. Please take action with respect to each proxy card and voting

instruction card that you receive.

Who will count the votes and where can I find the voting results?

The Inspector of Elections appointed at the annual meeting will tabulate the voting results. We intend to disclose the final

voting results in a current report on Form 8-K within four business days of the annual meeting. To the extent final voting

results are not then available, we will report preliminary voting results in a current report on Form 8-K within four business

days of the annual meeting and report the final voting results in a current report on Form 8-K as soon as they are

available.

Who will pay the costs of soliciting these proxies?

We will bear the entire cost of solicitation of proxies, including preparation, assembly, printing and mailing of this proxy

statement, the proxy card, and any additional information furnished to stockholders. We will furnish copies of solicitation

materials to banks, brokers and other nominees holding shares of voting stock beneficially owned by others to forward to

such beneficial owners. We may reimburse persons representing beneficial owners of voting stock for their reasonable

costs of forwarding solicitation materials to such beneficial owners. Original solicitation of proxies may be supplemented

by electronic means, mail, facsimile, telephone or personal solicitation by our directors, officers or other team members.

Has the Company taken steps to eliminate the receipt of duplicative

proxy materials?

In order to reduce expenses, we are taking advantage of certain SEC rules, commonly known as householding, that

permit us to send a single annual report and/or a single proxy statement to multiple stockholders of record who share an

address, unless we have received contrary instructions from one or more of the stockholders. A stockholder of record at a

shared address may call Broadridge, toll free, 1-866-540-7095, or write to Broadridge, Householding Department, 51

Mercedes Way, Edgewood, New York 11717, to: (i) request additional copies of the annual report and/or proxy statement;

(ii) notify the Company that such stockholder of record wishes to receive a separate annual report to stockholders and/or

proxy statement, as applicable, in the future; or (iii) notify the Company that such stockholder of record wishes to receive a

2025 Proxy Report • 109 of 112

single annual report to stockholders and/or proxy statement, as applicable, in the future. The Company undertakes to

deliver promptly, upon written or oral request, separate copies of such additional proxy materials to a stockholder that

previously elected to receive a single copy of materials with one or more other stockholders.

If you are a beneficial owner, you may revoke your consent to householding by notifying your broker, bank or other

nominee.

Will a list of Company stockholders be available to inspect?

A list of our stockholders as of the record date will be available for inspection at our corporate headquarters during

ordinary business hours throughout the 10-day period prior to the annual meetin g.

Who should I contact if I have questions?

If you have any questions about the annual meeting, please contact our Corporate Secretary by telephone at (313)

373-7990. If you have any questions about your ownership of our common stock, please contact our transfer agent,

Computershare Trust Company N.A., at PO Box 43006 Providence, RI 02940-3006, by telephone (800) 736-3001 or visit

http://www.computershare.com/investor , or contact your broker, bank or other nominee.

2025 Proxy Report • 110 of 112

Other matters

Securities authorized for issuance under equity compensation plans

The following sets forth the aggregate information regarding our equity compensation

plans in effect as of December 31, 2024 :

Plan Category Number of Securities to Be Issued upon Exercise of Outstanding Options, Warrants, and Rights (#)(a) Weighted-Average Exercise Price of Outstanding Options, Warrants, and Rights ($)(b)(1) Number of Securities Remaining Available for Future Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans (Excluding Securities Reflected in Column (a)(#) (c)
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders:
2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan
– Stock options 14,552,254 17.98
– RSUs (1) 21,892,391
– PSUs (1) 1,055,408
2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan Total 37,500,053 111,747,297 (2)
Team Member Stock Purchase Plan (TMSPP) 7,627,478
Total equity compensation plans approved by security holders 37,500,053 119,374,775
Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders
Total 37,500,053 17.98 119,374,775

(1) No exercise price is provided for the RSUs and PSUs or factored into the total weighted average exercise price because they are converted into common stock on a

one-for-one basis at no additional cost.

(2) Represents shares available for future issuance under the 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan as of December 31, 2024. Pursuant to the terms of the 2020 Omnibus Incentive

Plan approved by stockholders, on the first day of each fiscal year beginning in 2021 and ending in 2025, the 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan provides for an annual

automatic increase of the maximum number of shares available for issuance under such plan by the lesser of (i) 1% of the total number of shares outstanding on the last

day of the immediately preceding fiscal year on a fully diluted basis taking into account the conversion of all shares of our Class D common stock and assuming that all

shares available for issuance under the 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan and the TMSPP are issued and outstanding and (ii) such number of shares determined by our

Board. Pursuant to this provision, on January 1, 2024, 21,304,777 new shares became available for issuance under the 2020 Omnibus Incentive Plan.

Presentation of stockholder proposals and director nominations at

2026 annual meeting

Stockholders who wish to nominate persons for election to our Board or propose other matters to be considered at our

2026 annual meeting of stockholders (other than Rule 14a-8 stockholder proposals, discussed below) must provide us

advance notice of the director nomination or stockholder proposal, as well as the information specified in our bylaws. This

notice must be received by the Company’s Corporate Secretary at the principal executive offices of the Company no

earlier than February 11, 2026 and no later than March 13, 2026. Stockholders are advised to review our bylaws, which

contain the requirements for advance notice of director nominations and stockholder proposals.

The requirements for advance notice of stockholder proposals under our bylaws do not apply to proposals properly

submitted under Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange Act. The deadline for stockholders to submit proposals to be included in

our proxy statement for our 2026 annual meeting of stockholders under Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange Act is January 29,

2025 . However, if the date of the 2026 annual meeting of stockholders is changed by more than 30 days from the date of

the previous year’s meeting, then the deadline is a reasonable time before we begin to print and send our proxy statement

for the 2026 annual meeting of stockholders. Proposals by stockholders must comply with all requirements of applicable

2025 Proxy Report • 111 of 112

rules of the SEC, including Rule 14a-8, and be mailed to the Company’s Secretary at the principal executive offices of the

Company on a timely basis. In addition, stockholders who intend to solicit proxies in support of director nominees other

than the Company’s nominees must also comply with the additional requirements of Rule 14a-19(b) of the Exchange Act,

to the extent applicable.

Submitting a stockholder proposal does not guarantee that we will include it in the Company’s proxy statement. We

reserve the right to reject, rule out of order or take other appropriate action with respect to any director nomination or

stockholder proposal that does not comply with our bylaws, Rule 14a-8 or Rule 14a-19(b), as applicable, and other

applicable requirements.

Delinquent Section 16(a) reports

Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires our directors, our executive officers and persons who beneficially own more

than 10% of a registered class of our equity securities (“insiders”) to file reports with the SEC regarding their pecuniary

interest in our equity securities and any changes thereto. Based on our review of the insiders’ forms filed with the SEC

during 2024 and representations made by the directors and executive officers, one transaction involving the withholding

of shares of our common stock upon the vesting of RSUs was filed late on a Form 4 for Noah Edwards due to an

administrative oversight.

Access to reports and other information

We file or furnish our Annual Report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, proxy

statements and other documents electronically with the SEC under the Exchange Act. You may obtain such reports from

the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov .

Our Investor Relations website is ir.rocketcompanies.com . Our Annual Report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form

10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, proxy statements and other documents filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or

15(d) of the Exchange Act are available on our website as soon as reasonably practicable after we electronically file such

material with, or furnish it to, the SEC. Our Corporate Governance Guidelines, Code of Conduct and Ethics and Board

Committee charters are also available on our website. We will provide, free of charge, a copy of any of our corporate

documents listed above upon written request to our Corporate Secretary at 1050 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226.

Our website or the websites of other third parties noted herein and the information contained on, or that can be accessed

through, such websites will not be deemed to be incorporated by reference in, and are not considered part of, this proxy

statement.

Forward-looking statements

This proxy statement contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933,

as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which involve risks and uncertainties.

These forward-looking statements are generally identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, including the terms

“anticipate,” “believe,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “may,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “target,”

“will,” “would” and, in each case, their negative or other various or comparable terminology. All statements other than

statements of historical facts contained in this proxy statement, including statements regarding the Up-C Collapse, the

Redfin Acquisition, the Mr. Cooper Acquisition, our future business strategy, financial performance, expected market

growth, macroeconomic environment, compensation programs and the conversion of equity interests and issuance of

common stock contemplated by the Transaction Agreement are forward-looking statements.

These forward-looking statements reflect our views with respect to future events as of the date of this document and are

based on our management’s current expectations, estimates, forecasts, projections, assumptions, beliefs and information.

Although management believes that the expectations reflected in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it

can give no assurance that these expectations will prove to be correct. All such forward-looking statements are subject to

risks and uncertainties, many of which are outside of our control, and could cause future events or results to be materially

different from those stated or implied in this document. It is not possible to predict or identify all such risks, including those

described under the heading “Item 1A. Risk Factors” of our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and subsequent

reports that we file with the SEC.

Our forward-looking statements made herein are made only as of the date of this proxy statement. We expressly

disclaim any intent, obligation or undertaking to update or revise any forward-looking statements made herein to reflect

any change in our expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any

such statements are based. All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements attributable to us or persons

acting on our behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by the cautionary statements contained in this proxy statement

and other reports filed with the SEC.

2025 Proxy Report • 112 of 112


Your cooperation in giving this matter your immediate attention and in voting your proxies promptly is appreciated.

By Order of our Board of Directors,

TINA V. JOHN

Corporate Secretary at Rocket Companies

Detroit, Michigan

May 29, 2025