Real Estate Agents

Real Estate Agents

We are just starting this venture. Could someone tell me please what percentage your real estate agents receive from the sale? thank you.

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Agents

Unless it is a FSBO, the buyer doesn't pay the commission. Even then, if the agent is good, he/she will get the seller to pay the commission and it is usually 3%. On the sellers side, if it is listed, it is typically 6%.


3 percent

It's 3 percent in our company for both buying/selling.


dont worry about it

The seller always pays the comission.

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Advice about agents

Thank you sir..you have

Thank you sir..you have clearly explained about the experience which you have faced in this field..but is that compulsory to pay commission?

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real estate agent..

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3 ways to pay lower real-estate commissions

Gone are the days when selling your home meant a stark choice between paying a hefty 6% commission to your real estate agent or going it completely alone on the For Sale by Owner route. Today, you have a number of options that fall somewhere in between. They include:

• Negotiating down your agent's cut;
• Paying a la carte for the services you need.

All of the options have this in common: They're designed to keep more money in your pocket.

Commissions have fallen in recent years to an average 5.1% nationwide. And as the market cools, commissions will be under more pressure.

Here's a quick rundown of how each commission-cutting option works.

Negotiating your agent's rate
In a typical home sale, agents for buyers and sellers each take a commission of roughly 2.5% to 3%, for a total cost of 5% to 6%, paid out of the seller's proceeds. But as agents compete with discount brokers and flat-fee services, some are becoming more amenable to reducing their cut to 2% or less. (It doesn't hurt, either, that record home prices mean agents are often still making a comfortable living on their listings.)
What's your home worth?

To get a reduced commission:
• First, ask several agents in your area to prepare a free market report, estimating the sales price of your home.
• Interview each agent. Tell them how much you are expecting to make from the sale of the house and ask if they will lower their commission to the percentage you want.

If your home is at the upper end of the market, you're more likely to have luck; Realtors are more willing to come down to 3% or 4% on $1 million homes, experts say. But even if your suburban ranch falls squarely in the middle of the market, there's no harm in trying.

"No one gets upset with you for asking," says Kasy Gott, a certified financial planner with Kochis Fitz, a San Francisco financial planning firm.

If you're turned down, simply thank the agent for their report and let them know you'll be putting your home on the market with someone else in the next couple weeks. It might be enough to sway them. If not, consider one of the other following ways to cut costs.

Full service at a discount
Sometimes, you can take advantage of discounts and rebates by going with a big chain. ZipRealty, a full-service real estate company based in Emeryville, Calif., generally gives sellers 1% off standard market commissions in their area, which the company says often amounts to a 20% savings. It also gives buyers a 20% rebate on commissions, which can be issued in the form of a check or applied to closing costs. If you use them to both buy and sell your home, you stand to save another 5%. ZipRealty, formed in 1999, now operates in 17 major cities and employs 1,450 agents.

Other chains are offering non-cash rebates, such as frequent-flyer miles. If you use a real estate agent sponsored by LendingTree and its sister company RealEstate.com, for example, you can receive rebates for airline miles or gift cards from Costco or Home Depot.

"(Consumers) are getting the rebate for something they would be doing anyway," says Mindy Duquette, spokeswoman for RealEstate.com.

Ben Shapiro in the Hancock Park area of Los Angeles offers to give a portion of his commission to a local private preschool. It's worth noting, however, that about a dozen states, including Alabama, New York and Oregon, have passed laws limiting the ability of agents to give rebates or offer services at low fixed fees to home sellers.

FSBOs — with help
When real estate brokers told Rosemarie Falcone she should list her Victorian home in White Plains, N.Y., for $650,000, the 49-year-old art director decided she could do better — alone.

Falcone listed her three-bedroom house through ForSaleByOwner.com, a national real estate Web site that offers access to the local Multiple Listing Service (MLS) through a local real estate broker who charges a flat fee. After running her first open house and printing marketing fliers, she managed a bidding war between three families and sold the property in April for $743,000.
Home affordability calculator
Combined annual income $
Other monthly obligations $
Cash for down payment $

Even better, Falcone only paid about $800 to ForSaleByOwner, saving more than $30,000 in broker's commissions. "I just thought, 'My God, this is a no-brainer. I can sell this home,'" she says.

If you're similarly comfortable handling part of the process, there's no shortage of sites and services willing to help you. Some will charge an hourly fee for services such as advising on price and preparing closing documents. You just need to figure out what part of the real estate transaction you can manage on your own and what help you might want to pay for, such as marketing.

Help-U-Sell Real Estate, with more than 1,000 offices nationwide, is one of the fastest growing franchises that provide a menu of fee-for-service options, including MLS listings, access to licensed real estate brokers and marketing help.

Tips for going it alone
Going it alone — even for part of the transaction — presents its own challenges, of course. First and foremost, you need to have time to show the home. Falcone, who saved $30,000 in commissions, had left her job to start a new life in Florida so she had availability and she likes interacting with new people. Another must: prepping your home for sale, including depersonalizing the space and removing clutter. dvrana


Real Estate Agents Share

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