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Is it a good idea to hire a Realtor to sell my home for a 3.5% commission?

by Wade Morris Dunwoody Realtor on August 11th, 2011

I live in Southern California and I’m planning to put my house for sale soon. I saw this add in front of a house that’s for sale in my neighborhood.

HOME SELLERS

Don’t pay 6% – 5% – 4% commission to sell your home.

At —————-Realty we offer Full Service including MLS listing for 3.5%.

I know this realtor has sold several homes in my area. Is this really a good deal or are there hidden charges?

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about the author Wade Morris
I’m part owner of Home Source Group of REMAX Greater Atlanta Realtors® specializing in Atlanta Homes in Brookhaven, Chamblee, Dunwoody, and Sandy Springs. Whether you are buying or selling your home we work with resale’s, first-time home buyers, companies relocating people to Atlanta, and most home sellers in northern part of the Greater Atlanta area.
Contact Me today
678-248-3500
wade@wademorris.net
10 Comments
  1. rimoneyman permalink

    I would normally tell you that you get what you pay for. If you hire a discount Realtor you get a discount attention but if you know the guy has sold a few houses in your area why not. I would ask the Realtor what all of the fees are but if is seem OK go for it.

  2. Panther permalink

    well it doesn’t hurt to ask. Ask them for a full breakdown of their charges and what it will cost you overall. Get it in writing and then if you go with them they can’t back out.

    I have sold my home myslef. Its pretty easy to do as long as you have a good lawyer to do the paperwork for you. So I saved a bunch of money on fees. But what is a pain is showing folks around, getting it advertised etc etc . If you get the right people there then you will sell it . Getting them there is the hard part.

  3. capollar permalink

    It might be that they are going to represent the buyer and seller, in which case they only charge each of you about half of the usual commission.

    You get what you pay for, if I was selling my house, I would use the best person I could afford, that way I will get top dollar for my house.

  4. damdawg permalink

    Normally commissions are split between the buyer’s and seller’s agents. The usual split is 50/50. If this discount real estate agent accepts 3.5% then that means that the buyer’s agent will get 1.75% or half of the commission. Most agents I know will not show a house that offers less than 2.5% and in this market you want every person you can to see your home. If he wants to take 1% and offers 2.5% to the buyer’s agent it might work. Remember, you get what you pay for and most REALTORS® work very hard for their commissions and they are worth every penny.

  5. teran_realtor permalink

    As a buyer’s agent, I love it when I see listings like this. I know my buyer is gonna get a steal.

    First of all, the listing agent is offering a reduced “cooperative commission”, so most other buyers are not going to see the house. Secondly, the listing agent is taking a pay cut himself, so he just wants it sold fast and will be good at “getting the seller to sign”.

    List it and have your agent give me a call. I always have buyers needing a great deal!

  6. HMMMMMM permalink

    Many agents who use a commisssion rate in their ads engage in a bait and switch.

    Make sure that the 3.5% isn’t for his half… and then compensating another agent (who represents the buyer) isn’t actually more.

    Often times it is.

  7. Ms. Balls permalink

    Most Realtors and Real Estate Licensees are some of the hardest working folks I know. They are there to protect the interests of their clients and most do so wonderfully well. In the case you sell your home without one, then you stand the risk of accepting the fate many other inexperienced sellers accept: lawsuits.

    If you are diligent about the dentist and doctors who attend to your health needs, then it is only logical to seek out someone more experienced and is professionally trained to handle one of the largest investments most people make. In the final analysis, it could end up saving you money.

  8. tuisson permalink

    Real estate sales people won’t show your home if you don’t pay them. In a down market one time I paid a $1,000 bonus for the selling broker, and it worked. Worth it.

  9. President, www.HSAInside.com permalink

    If you live in Southern California (so do I) I would suggest not signing a contract by “any” realtor for any longer than 3months, look this has become a quick changing market- do not sign a long term contract with any realtor, unless they are going to advertise your place in the times and pay for “staging” your house. I sold 3 of my personal homes in the last 30days in an area that has slowed, I signed up with a realtor that was willing to pay for a “staging company” and also advertise for the total time I had it listed with her. You see in life you don’t get what you deserve, you get what you ‘NEGOTIATE”.. Winners negotiate better than loosers. Price at the end of the day means nothing, ROI means everything. Selling a home in November 2006 is completely different than selling your home in nov. 2005, so be strong!!!..beware the Lazy realtor, I cannot stand the ones that tell me they sold 10million in the past few years.. Look the last few years were not today, what have you sold in the last 30days is what matters.

  10. satarnag permalink

    Hi Thomas,

    I’m in Southern California and I am a broker. I offer 3% as one of my options to list a property. Just know that the listing agent is going to keep a certain percentage and offer the rest for the buyer’s agent.

    I’m in Orange, San Diego and Riverside County. If you can hold off on selling your house for 3-5 years, I suggest you do so (I bet you never heard a real estate professional tell you that before!). If you need to sell, make sure you’re not tied into a long contract. Contact me and I will work something out with you and go over all your options. It’s my company so I can be flexible in determining your needs and resolving them.

    I also am fluent in all aspects of real estate, from negotiating short sales to managing property. There’s nothing that I can’t do.

    Regards

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