Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A renter's perspective. We just rented a unit where the landlord used an agent to list and I can tell you it got our landlord less money then he would have been able to get if he listed it himself. The guy didn't post any interior pictures of the unit, which was underpriced for what it was (after seeing 20+ places you get a sense for these things). AND the agent was so bad he almost blew the deal several times. My DH, a former broker, is actually filing a complaint.
LOL. DC?
Anonymous wrote:A renter's perspective. We just rented a unit where the landlord used an agent to list and I can tell you it got our landlord less money then he would have been able to get if he listed it himself. The guy didn't post any interior pictures of the unit, which was underpriced for what it was (after seeing 20+ places you get a sense for these things). AND the agent was so bad he almost blew the deal several times. My DH, a former broker, is actually filing a complaint.
Anonymous wrote:[quote=Anonymous
Isn't there some value though that the client will use your services later when they buy?
We used a Realtor to find our current rental and she was fantastic. We are moving out of the area for a short stint and when we come back, I fully plan on calling her up to help us find a house. I also would be more than happy to refer my friends to her for their buying or selling needs.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an agent who has done rentals. They suck. They aren't worth it because it ends up being so little money.
You get a client. You show them 5-7 places, they find a place for around $2000 a month. The listing agent usually keeps 65% of the commission, so 35% of $2000 is $700, which I then have to split with my broker. So I get about $475 to spend a couple days showing places with a tenant, doing the lease, application, running checks around town for all of it, dealing with a non-responsive listing agent. It's not fun. It's definitely more than a few hours work. More like 7 hours. Not worth it. And that's why I don't do rentals or only do them if someone really begs me. It's not just the money, it's the opportunity cost of what I could have been doing with my day - even if that means spending it with my kids. Much more valuable to me then the $250 I'll have post-taxes and expenses.
The renters didn't have an agent. But that reminds me that they paid first month's rent to the agent too, so that makes it about $500/ hr.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an agent who has done rentals. They suck. They aren't worth it because it ends up being so little money.
You get a client. You show them 5-7 places, they find a place for around $2000 a month. The listing agent usually keeps 65% of the commission, so 35% of $2000 is $700, which I then have to split with my broker. So I get about $475 to spend a couple days showing places with a tenant, doing the lease, application, running checks around town for all of it, dealing with a non-responsive listing agent. It's not fun. It's definitely more than a few hours work. More like 7 hours. Not worth it. And that's why I don't do rentals or only do them if someone really begs me. It's not just the money, it's the opportunity cost of what I could have been doing with my day - even if that means spending it with my kids. Much more valuable to me then the $250 I'll have post-taxes and expenses.
This is when your client is the renter. The listing agent would get 1300 for posting a few places and running credit checks or showing the place. If someone shows up that is not represented does the listing agent get the entire 2000? Then it's nothing to sneeze at.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an agent who has done rentals. They suck. They aren't worth it because it ends up being so little money.
You get a client. You show them 5-7 places, they find a place for around $2000 a month. The listing agent usually keeps 65% of the commission, so 35% of $2000 is $700, which I then have to split with my broker. So I get about $475 to spend a couple days showing places with a tenant, doing the lease, application, running checks around town for all of it, dealing with a non-responsive listing agent. It's not fun. It's definitely more than a few hours work. More like 7 hours. Not worth it. And that's why I don't do rentals or only do them if someone really begs me. It's not just the money, it's the opportunity cost of what I could have been doing with my day - even if that means spending it with my kids. Much more valuable to me then the $250 I'll have post-taxes and expenses.