What real use are real estate agents if we can sell our home ourselves?

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What real use are real estate agents if we can sell our home ourselves?

In: Economics

46 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’m in the US. I use them to buy but never used one to sell (I’ve sold 4 in the last 12 years). It’s easy to do your own comp analysis, and there are ways to pay a flat fee for an MLS listing. Last house I sold I did Facebook advertising. It’s never taken me more than a month to sell a house, even in a slow market. Fastest was one day (although negotiations took 3 more). If you can do it yourself, why lose that extra %?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Mostly depends on how well or how much you like negotiating. I have also used a great agent who was able to get creative with moving money around when the buyer suddenly got cold feet. The process itself isn’t terribly complicated, but in certain situations it helps.

I’ve also used an agent who was a complete waste of money, so just like any service, mileage will vary.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’ve bought multiple houses WITHOUT using a realtor, and in all cases I got huge decreases in cost. Used a real estate lawyer, paid by the hour, to check over the paperwork. Organized and executed the inspections myself.

It’s not that hard at all. Real estate agents are vastly overpaid for basic home sale transactions, IMO.

Hence why companies like Redfin are doing extremely well nowadays.

Anonymous 0 Comments

In my recent personal experience, on the buying side though, my agent was invaluable in helping us understand the market, where to position ourselves during the offer, which things to concede during the offer that look good/are worthwhile to the seller but don’t impact us much. She was incredibly helpful for understanding the whole process.

I imagine on the selling side it’s a similar situation, how to position the listing, advise on quick cheap fixes to make it sell for more.

Also remember you will do this a few times in your life, they do it daily, find yourself a good agent and leverage them and their experience.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Real estate agents used to be important back before the internet. When they listed a home for sale it went in a book and cataloged. It was quite the process. But now with the internet it has made it easier for buyers and sellers to see what the market is doing. Until recently, at least in my area, realtors were the only ones with access to sale prices. So the homeowner couldn’t see what a house sold for to judge what they could get for their house, they only had the neighborhood gossip. The real estate board fought tooth and nail to keep that information secret but the government forced them to provide that information to the public. A good realtor now a days has photographers, YouTube, and social media marketing to reach as many people as possible to see your home and home stagers to make your home look top notch.You can totally sell your own home privately if you’d like but some of the top agents have a large swath of influence online and more people can see your home increasing the likelyhood that you’ll get a better offer on your property. As for the contract (agreement of purchase and sale) and negotiations, the realtor always pushes what you want. It takes the stress of negotiation directly with a buyer off your plate. So they do add value to selling your home. Now in my area commissions are 4-5% of the sale price. I just sold my house, used a realtor and had to pay 56k after tax for their services. In my opinion they get paid way too much. My house sold in 5 days. And we told her what to do.

Source: was a realtor for 10+ years.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Buying a home in another town? They provide a clear and valuable advantage. Especially if they get to know you and your family’s needs, preferences, hobbies, etc.

They can steer you towards the parts of town that are best suited for you and away from areas you may not enjoy. Personally, our agent understood the future city and commercial projects. She got us into an area that has grown into such a great part of town with new parks, restaurants, shops, etc.

We’d never had that “local” insider knowledge without her.

Anonymous 0 Comments

You CAN sell the house yourself, but the REA is like a marketplace.

Kind of like trying to sell a lamp yourself vs putting it on eBay. You put your photos up (like a viewing), you’ll reach a wider audience and put in a middle person that takes some stresses out of the money handling (for a cut)

It’s a convenience thing really. People pay for not doing the legwork themselves.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Networking and advertising to sell a house is a lot of time and effort. Many people who make a living selling homes (flippers, renovators, investors whatever) need to sell a home within a time frame or the margin isn’t early as high. If they really try to roll up their sleeves and sell it themselves, it can tack on weeks or months.

Plus with all the paperwork and prep (things like furniture arrangement) they’re actually doing a lot of work. Plus their knowledge about lease agreements is super valuable, and can get you a higher selling price or rent, since they’re probably more experienced than the person selling the home.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I guess it was designed to prevent fraud like you selling your house to yourself in order to wash money

Anonymous 0 Comments

I guess it was designed to prevent fraud like you selling your house to yourself in order to wash money