I have a question- suppose under the new rules the listing agents’ real estate firm shows you a house then you want to put offer on it. If you didn’t sign a buyers form- are you bound to that agency to put in offer?
Pointing out that buyers were always paying for the buyers agent commission doesn't necessarily address the actual changes and instead causes more confusion for the buyers.
With the NAR changes, the buyers will not be able to finance the buyers agent commission so it will need to be cash out of their pocket. The way around this is to add the commission amount for the buyers agent on top of the list price. There may be other options as well but this was the option I thought of from writing the post.
This is an interesting topic. A few questions:Sellers are still paying out buyer agent commissions via seller concessions in the RPA. I don't see things changing a lot in the longer term other then more forms and disclosures needing to be signed. Every listing that I called on the listing agent said that the seller is willing to pay a seller concession for the buyer agent commission as are my sellers. Where things will change is where a home is hot and gets 5-10+ offers, the sellers will have the ability to negotiate the seller concession below the "market" buyer agent commission and on the other side where a listing has been lingering on the market for a while buyer agents may request a higher seller concession (2.5% or 3%). So in a way, the buyer agent commission has become negotiable.T
1. This has NEVER happened in California, as far as I know. In the past few years in Irvine, seller pays a TOTAL of 4%, which is split between seller's and buyer's agent. In the buyer's market, it's usually 1.5% to listing agent and 2.5% to buyer's agent. The most a California has paid for is 5% total. There are some cases where listing agent asks for 6%, but never 5% for just the listing agent. This goes as far back as when I sold my home in San Jose in 2006.This is an interesting topic. A few questions:
1. On top of the 2% seller concession paid to buyer's agent, does seller still pay 5% to his own listing agent, or half of it (2.5%)?
2. With a seller's concession, does buyer also pays buyer's agent? That is, does buyer's agent get double paid from both the buyer and the seller?
3. If the seller refuses to pay any seller's concession, how can the buyer's agent make sure that he gets paid for his work? Can he specify his commission in his Buyer Representation Agreement?
So basically the same old practice? Except that buyer's agents now need to find out other ways (such as by emails and calls) to find out how much concession each seller is willing to pay.1. This has NEVER happened in California, as far as I know. In the past few years in Irvine, seller pays a TOTAL of 4%, which is split between seller's and buyer's agent. In the buyer's market, it's usually 1.5% to listing agent and 2.5% to buyer's agent. The most a California has paid for is 5% total. There are some cases where listing agent asks for 6%, but never 5% for just the listing agent. This goes as far back as when I sold my home in San Jose in 2006.
2. Currently, in a buyer's market, the seller's concession just means that things are as they have been, meaning seller pays 4% total.
3. Buyer's agent could sign an agreement with buyer before taking on the job. Then buyer's agent would mostly steer buyer toward a seller would pay both agent's commissions. Since this information cannot be listed anymore, it's communicated via other formats. Unless, of course, buyer really really wanted to check out a certain home.
The listing agreement itself just says 4% or 5%. The split is up to the listing agent. Buyer's agent's commission usually showed in the listing itself. I don't know if it showed on MLS, but Zillow showed the % for the buyer's agent. But this part in the listing is gone now. However, listing agents can still communicate this part via text messages, etc. So yeah, it's basically just the same as before.So basically the same old practice? Except that buyer's agents now need to find out other ways (such as by emails and calls) to find out how much concession each seller is willing to pay.
In the previous listing contract, does it specify how the 4% total commission is going to be split between two agents? Or it simply specify that the listing agent's commission is 4%, and then the listing agent determines by him or herself how much h/she wants to split?
This is an interesting topic. A few questions:
1. On top of the 2% seller concession paid to buyer's agent, does seller still pay 5% to his own listing agent, or half of it (2.5%)?
2. With a seller's concession, does buyer also pays buyer's agent? That is, does buyer's agent get double paid from both the buyer and the seller?
3. If the seller refuses to pay any seller's concession, how can the buyer's agent make sure that he gets paid for his work? Can he specify his commission in his Buyer Representation Agreement?
So basically the same old practice? Except that buyer's agents now need to find out other ways (such as by emails and calls) to find out how much concession each seller is willing to pay.
In the previous listing contract, does it specify how the 4% total commission is going to be split between two agents? Or it simply specify that the listing agent's commission is 4%, and then the listing agent determines by him or herself how much h/she wants to split?