https://www.cnn.com/2024/03/15/economy/nar-realtor-commissions-settlement/index.html
Real Estate disruption is here?
Real Estate disruption is here?
Here is a great example of OFF MLS advertising to buyers agents. This is what you will see more of starting in July 2024Houston Lee said:
That is a very misleading title on that linked article. 6% commissions are not gone at all. The commissions for selling your home have always been negotiable.
The only thing that the NAR settlement means is that starting in mid-July 2024, the MLS will not be showing the commission structure for buyers agents on the MLS. Shared compensation for the Listing Agent and the Buying Agent is still able to be done. But, how much that is will now need to be communicated off the MLS and in another way. A simple text or call to the Listing Agent to ask what the Buyer Agent compensation is an easy enough task.
In the agreement NAR doesn't admit any wrongdoing but agrees to remove the comp from the MLS. To your point, Buyer's agents now have to enter into agreements with clients. They can still do the same arrangements but I think removing the Buyer's agent comp will put pressure on the parties to actually negotiate their own commissions. While the existing agreements aren't considered illegal, I suspect if we don't see any material changes to the structure of the market, you will see another antitrust lawsuit against the largest brokerages in a few years.Carnwellag2 said:
yes there are work arounds - but understand why there was a settlement - it was because the practice is illegal.
so yes - you will be able to find an alternate way to engage in an illegal practice - but the bigger question is should you?
also - the new regulation will require that the buyer and buyers agent enter into an agreement that probably will include compensation,
Your statement is wrong. There is nothing illegal going on. Commissions have always been negotiable. And there is nothing wrong with Realtors demanding the traditional 6% for listings and sharing that with Buyers Agents. As a seller, you WANT buyers agents to know their compensation and you WANT them to bring their clients to see your home because you will know that the buyers agent is bringing a qualified buyer that can complete the transaction. There is nothing illegal with a seller telling the world what they are willing to pay a buyers agent.Carnwellag2 said:
yes there are work arounds - but understand why there was a settlement - it was because the practice is illegal.
so yes - you will be able to find an alternate way to engage in an illegal practice - but the bigger question is should you?
also - the new regulation will require that the buyer and buyers agent enter into an agreement that probably will include compensation,
Quote:
Also. As a listing agent or a buyers agent, I can easily break down the cost of my services for each task I complete during the transaction process. I can show line by line the true cost of all the work done on the behalf of the client. In most cases those individual charges would add up to a lot more than the 3% commission earned. So, if a seller or a buyer wants to negotiate to pay less, they will get less services and less tasks done by their agent. But, that just means the client will have to do that work on their own. You get what you pay for…
You misunderstand. I am talking about the cost of services for the seller or buyer (what agents would charge if the services were broken down a la carte) Not, the cost to the agent. You pay a guy that comes out to your home to fix your washing machine a visit/service charge of $50-$100. Just to come out. What would it look like if you had to pay a Realtor for their time per hour? It might cost you $100 to $200 just to go tour a house.ktownag08 said:Quote:
Also. As a listing agent or a buyers agent, I can easily break down the cost of my services for each task I complete during the transaction process. I can show line by line the true cost of all the work done on the behalf of the client. In most cases those individual charges would add up to a lot more than the 3% commission earned. So, if a seller or a buyer wants to negotiate to pay less, they will get less services and less tasks done by their agent. But, that just means the client will have to do that work on their own. You get what you pay for…
For sake of discussion, I'm curious about the comment above. I'm not arguing for/against the 6% structure, but seeking to understand what you said.
If cost of services is more than the 3% commission, why would people be realtors? I get there's a volume component, but if each deal is at or near par that's a lot of deals needed to make a living.
Also, do the services provided materially change depending upon property price? A 300k property then "costs" 9k in services and a 500k property costs 15k. Does it really cost 6k more to sell/buy a property that's 200k more?
SteveBott said:
What is illegal? Negotiating a contract with terms both parties agree to? And that agreement contains commissions to both the buyer and seller agent?
What this settlement does is open the negotiations. The problem was what was seen as price fixing by the MLS. Now it's all negotiable.
We in mortgage have always negotiated. Nothing new to us.
correct - that is why they settled. However, if the practice doesn't change materially, then there will be more lawsuits. What we saw for years were buyer's agents not representing their clients with the their clients best interest in mind. (i.e. not showing properties that weren't financially beneficial to the buyers agent; no real incentive to negotiate a lower price).themissinglink said:In the agreement NAR doesn't admit any wrongdoing but agrees to remove the comp from the MLS. To your point, Buyer's agents now have to enter into agreements with clients. They can still do the same arrangements but I think removing the Buyer's agent comp will put pressure on the parties to actually negotiate their own commissions. While the existing agreements aren't considered illegal, I suspect if we don't see any material changes to the structure of the market, you will see another antitrust lawsuit against the largest brokerages in a few years.Carnwellag2 said:
yes there are work arounds - but understand why there was a settlement - it was because the practice is illegal.
so yes - you will be able to find an alternate way to engage in an illegal practice - but the bigger question is should you?
also - the new regulation will require that the buyer and buyers agent enter into an agreement that probably will include compensation,
It is not. You have always been able to negotiate the percentage. Sellers are still going to need to find someone to list their house if they want increase exposure. I am not a realtor but there are many people buying or selling homes that absolutely need expertise and assistance.aggies4life said:
https://www.cnn.com/2024/03/15/economy/nar-realtor-commissions-settlement/index.html
Real Estate disruption is here?
Disagree with #3. Agents representing buyers must present an offer unless it does not meet a seller's stipulation. Not every realtor is as unethical as you present. What is your empirical data that validates illegal steering? Actually, several other of your points are also not accurate.SteveBott said:
I've heard that a thousand times and always false. Realtors used every trick on the book to protect 6%. You name the excuse and I've heard it. Here is a few:
1 buyer that 3% is paid by the seller. False.
2 my head broker won't let me negotiate. Probably true but find a new realtor
3 listing agent to seller…if you don't offer 3% no agent will bring a buyer. True because of illegal steering
4 buyer agent-my commission is free. False
5 our fees are fixed. False
I could go on. Now all the realtors are coming into my world
Medaggie said:
I think this change will move to put pressure on RE agents to negotiate % commission.
Americans have accepted that 3% buyer and seller commissions were standard but there will be some pressure to advertise lower %s.
I think overall RE agents make a fair living. They are like doctors in a sense where good payers covers for bad payers (medicare/medicaid, unisured). Taking care of bad payers are money losers but balanced by good payers. If doctors all had good payers, many would be making 3x what they do now which is too high IMO.
Just like doctors, some RE clients require tens/hundreds of showings without ever buying. They are balanced out by clients who know what they want just looking at the MLS listings.
I am the latter and just seems unfair to me to pay for the "bad" payers.
I just bought close to a 1M property. I found it on MLS, asked my RE agent for one showing, put in an offer the next day, closed in 40 days. I called up the inspector, met him there, and got the report. I used the same mortgage broker for my past 10 closings. I signed all the docusign paperwork and provided all information quickly to both sides. I went to closing and completed it in 15 minutes without needing the agent at closing. To be fair, I bet my RE didn't spend more than 10 hours on me. I am just about as low maintenance and the dream client. Getting 3% or close to 30K for maybe 10 hours of work seems high. I get that he has other clients who he probably spent 10x the amount of time without every buying anything.
My CPA charges me 6k to file all of my taxes b/c its complicated. It would be silly for him to charge 6k to someone who has only a W2 job that turbotax could do in 30 minutes. This is the issue buyers have. An experienced investment buyer should not pay the same as a new home buyer requiring 10+ showings and handholding throughout the process.
Maybe RE agents can move to a more fee for service model. A showing is $100. Putting in an offer is $200. At closing, 1%. So even if a buyer never purchases something, they are still paying the RE agent for their showing time.