Anonymous wrote:RE agents gets paid crazy amount of commission for having no skin in the game. In addition, I have found them really dishonest and would do anything to get a deal done; no wonder there is no trust in the community.
Everywhere else in the developed word pays 1-2% commission so why we need to pay 5-6%.
Anonymous wrote:It should be easier to sue the agents if you find them doing something fishy. The market should be open and any agent should be free to charge lower commission if possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you prattling on about? A “few hours of work?” What are you smoking that gives you such delusions?
GMAFB
We went to open houses allllll on our own accord. Zillow and Redfin made that information easy to find. Our agent showed us two houses during times that weren't during open houses, that was it. We put in an offer on a house after looking at an open house. The RE agent pretty much filled in a boilerplate template for a contract with our names and that was it. There's no way he spent more than 24 hours let alone a full work week worth of work into our purchase. The RE fees for both sellers and buyers will total to something like $30k+. For what? Consumers doing all of the work online and filling out a template offer sheet with a few clicks of a button? The brokers just used rocket mortgage to get us a mortgage.....I could have done that. Almost $40k in added in total fees for almost no added value. The internet has made the RE biz a dinosaur of the past. You can easily find comps and all of the meta data for evaluating properties easily online with a little bit of effort. It's sooooooo ridiculous what Americans pay in fees compared to the rest of the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that it is corruption. They buy influence in the political process to protect their guild.
Not unlike the American Bar Association, the American Medical Association, the American Bankers Association, the various teachers unions, and that gem of all AIPAC.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that it is corruption. They buy influence in the political process to protect their guild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The DoJ is coming after you next:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/warning-to-the-real-estate-cartel-11625783854
Finally, hopefully consumers can get away from this ridiculous system that compensates brokers exorbitant sums of money for only a few hours of work. TBH, a vast majority of the process could probably be largely automated for a $20 fee anyway. Ridiculous US consumers have so much wealth destroyed from insane fees, or are forced to buy less because of fees.
Funny, I did a 5 hour home inspection today with a lawyer who is involved in this case. Guess, I don't have to day anything else, and we will forgot about the twenty plus hours I spent with him at other houses, working out finances, and two previous pre inspections.
Funny how you cherry picked and only highlighted this one transaction. Are you suggesting there are no transactions that take less than 20 hours beginning to end? I’ve purchased/sold several homes both with realtors and on my own with a flat fee attorney. Realtor fees should be by the hour. $750 an hour will motivate buyers to be more precise with their search.
More like 75 cents an hour. We handed our agent the key to our house and she had it painted, floors refinished, deck and some other repairs done, had a new garage door installed, carpet cleaned in the basement, and had windows and house cleaned. She had the house staged and had photos, floorplans, and a tour done. She spent three hours sitting on her ass at an an open house and then made us respond to offers a few days later. She didn’t do anything after that except meet the appraiser, termite inspector, and our movers. She spent maybe a couple hours making sure the movers got everything out of the house and then took all our old paint to the County. She spent a lot of time with the settlement because we were in two places. For that she made over $9,000. She should have gotten $750 for the little she did. My neighbors were all impressed but she didn’t do any of the work
Aren't you funny. I've bought and sold many houses and have employed different agents for everyone. I have never had an agent do any of these things you've documented. I had to deal with our appraiser who made a serious mistake in our documentation in which he left information on a page related to a different house. My agent did nothing. No one I know has ever had an agent do more than the minimum. Anyone can become a agent.
PP’s description sounds a bit over the top, but last time we sold, our agent took care of hiring painters, somebody to put in new countertops, photos, staging, new carpets, cleaning, re-glazing the tub, and probably other stuff I’m forgetting. We paid her 2.5% of the sale price (the buyer’s agent got the other half). I still think it was a lot for the work put in, but honestly, it would have taken me so much longer to find the right people to do the work and be around for all the appointments. We probably got to market earlier and sold faster because of her work.
They are charging you for it and it is not coming out of their commission. Also, not sure if you know but RE agents get referral fees to get them your business. They are getting paid from both side.
Anonymous wrote:So long overdue.
1% for seller's agent; maybe ½% for buyer's agent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The DoJ is coming after you next:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/warning-to-the-real-estate-cartel-11625783854
Finally, hopefully consumers can get away from this ridiculous system that compensates brokers exorbitant sums of money for only a few hours of work. TBH, a vast majority of the process could probably be largely automated for a $20 fee anyway. Ridiculous US consumers have so much wealth destroyed from insane fees, or are forced to buy less because of fees.
Funny, I did a 5 hour home inspection today with a lawyer who is involved in this case. Guess, I don't have to day anything else, and we will forgot about the twenty plus hours I spent with him at other houses, working out finances, and two previous pre inspections.
Funny how you cherry picked and only highlighted this one transaction. Are you suggesting there are no transactions that take less than 20 hours beginning to end? I’ve purchased/sold several homes both with realtors and on my own with a flat fee attorney. Realtor fees should be by the hour. $750 an hour will motivate buyers to be more precise with their search.
More like 75 cents an hour. We handed our agent the key to our house and she had it painted, floors refinished, deck and some other repairs done, had a new garage door installed, carpet cleaned in the basement, and had windows and house cleaned. She had the house staged and had photos, floorplans, and a tour done. She spent three hours sitting on her ass at an an open house and then made us respond to offers a few days later. She didn’t do anything after that except meet the appraiser, termite inspector, and our movers. She spent maybe a couple hours making sure the movers got everything out of the house and then took all our old paint to the County. She spent a lot of time with the settlement because we were in two places. For that she made over $9,000. She should have gotten $750 for the little she did. My neighbors were all impressed but she didn’t do any of the work
You're saying this isn't a lot of work to do and arrange? Why didn't you arrange any of these things?
Exactly. You are also missing the hours she spent on thr brochure, hiring the photographer, doing the paperwork, etc. I spent a summer working for a top agent and there was tons of behind the scenes work. She would often be responding to emails non-stop until 11 at night and start at 6 again the next am. She made it look seamless so her clients didn’t see the million fires going on behind the scenes.
That thread on sketchy sellers on the bay had hundreds of shocked responses. We saw stuff like that a lot and the agent worked to protect the clients and keep it from getting as far down the line as that one did. Not saying there are not some awful agents - there are. I do believe without the good agents you’d have a ton of stuff like that bay house issue. Also, every time I see a settlement w/ a Redfin agent, there are issues and for the most part their clients got a worse deal than if they had paid the full commission and used an agent that actually was tops in their area