Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   'the villages' real estate commissions reduced............. (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/villages-real-estate-commissions-reduced-310028/)

stadry 08-13-2020 07:01 AM

'the villages' real estate commissions reduced.............
 
understand its been cut from 6% to 5% - anyone else hear the same ? reason not given

Toymeister 08-13-2020 07:12 AM

If true it reflects market reality,. I've used MLS Realtors at 3% (total commission) in TV.

Stu from NYC 08-13-2020 08:53 AM

If true for MLS realtors would think they would not promote a 3% commission house as hard as a 6% one.

Toymeister 08-13-2020 09:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stu from NYC (Post 1816768)
If true for MLS realtors would think they would not promote a 3% commission house as hard as a 6% one.

Well, you are talking to me. Do you want to see my listing agreement for 3% or do you want the Realtors name (PM me) so you can verify to your satisfaction?

The way any MLS listing works in a two agent sale, is the selling party gets 2.5%. This is common, 3% to selling agent is not common. The listing agent under my listing agreement gets .5% not much. No ads, if you want professional pictures you can provide them. My cost for those was 200.00. You get MLS exposure, also Zillow and Trulia. On the flip side this guy gets a couple grand for a few hours work.

Most homes are not sold by the listing agent, a simple fact.

charlieo1126@gmail.com 08-13-2020 09:41 AM

Thankyou
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Toymeister (Post 1816785)
Well, you are talking to me. Do you want to see my listing agreement for 3% or do you want the Realtors name (PM me) so you can verify to your satisfaction?

The way any MLS listing works in a two agent sale, is the selling party gets 2.5%. This is common, 3% to selling agent is not common. The listing agent under my listing agreement gets .5% not much. No ads, if you want professional pictures you can provide them. My cost for those was 200.00. You get MLS exposure, also Zillow and Trulia. On the flip side this guy gets a couple grand for a few hours work.

Most homes are not sold by the listing agent, a simple fact.

maybe that stops another useless thread of rumors and fake news

Jayhawk 08-13-2020 09:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toymeister (Post 1816785)
Well, you are talking to me. Do you want to see my listing agreement for 3% or do you want the Realtors name (PM me) so you can verify to your satisfaction?

The way any MLS listing works in a two agent sale, is the selling party gets 2.5%. This is common, 3% to selling agent is not common. The listing agent under my listing agreement gets .5% not much. No ads, if you want professional pictures you can provide them. My cost for those was 200.00. You get MLS exposure, also Zillow and Trulia. On the flip side this guy gets a couple grand for a few hours work.

Most homes are not sold by the listing agent, a simple fact.

Apples to oranges. You get what you pay for, obviously.

JohnN 08-13-2020 09:52 AM

It's still a goldmine for the realtors.

vintageogauge 08-13-2020 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toymeister (Post 1816656)
If true it reflects market reality,. I've used MLS Realtors at 3% (total commission) in TV.

At 3% yours would be the last home an agent would show, they want full commissions not 1/2 commissions. Cheaper isn't always better.

manaboutown 08-13-2020 10:30 AM

Friends of mine who have bought and sold many houses related a story to me. They were being shown homes by a mother-daughter team which had a paper list of houses to show them which revealed the commission to be paid on each house. The daughter ticked off the houses to see one after another to the mother who was driving. My friend is a tall guy and he could read the list over the daughter's shoulder. They were were being shown houses from the highest to lowest commissions in order, literally.

Toymeister 08-13-2020 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vintageogauge (Post 1816821)
At 3% yours would be the last home an agent would show, they want full commissions not 1/2 commissions. Cheaper isn't always better.

Virtually all homes sold by the non listing agent are 2.5%. It does not matter if you use (insert your favorite here) realtor or mine the selling agent gets the same.

So is more expensive better? If you need hand holding yes. That covers most sellers particularly those that are prone to posting here. If you don't then, yes cheaper is better, to the tune of thousands of dollars.

graciegirl 08-13-2020 01:47 PM

Houses here are much desired. Many people find a good lawyer and list them for sale by owner. We were approached by a person wanting to buy our house and we weren't quite ready to make the permanent move to a bigger house but after thinking about it we decided to come here full time. We closed then with McLin and Burnsed. It cost us to split about $750 nine years ago.

JoMar 08-13-2020 04:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toymeister (Post 1816844)
Virtually all homes sold by the non listing agent are 2.5%. It does not matter if you use (insert your favorite here) realtor or mine the selling agent gets the same.

So is more expensive better? If you need hand holding yes. That covers most sellers particularly those that are prone to posting here. If you don't then, yes cheaper is better, to the tune of thousands of dollars.

Will be nice to know when it was listed and how long it takes to sell.

retiredguy123 08-13-2020 05:00 PM

I would be willing to list with a full priced agent, but I want them to provide a written marketing plan that they would need to implement, and I would require them to allow me to terminate their contract if I lose confidence in them. Also, if they bring you an offer that is less than full price, you have the option to renegotiate the commission at that time. The stated commission is only applicable when the buyer pays the full listing price, which doesn't usually happen. So, you can agree to a 5 or 6 percent commission, but it is only legally enforceable when the seller gets the full listing price.

Jayhawk 08-13-2020 05:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by retiredguy123 (Post 1817011)
So, you can agree to a 5 or 6 percent commission, but it is only legally enforceable when the seller gets the full listing price.

I think you skipped class in Law School when they explained contracts.

retiredguy123 08-13-2020 06:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jayhawk (Post 1817022)
I think you skipped class in Law School when they explained contracts.

Every listing contract I ever signed stated a sale price for the house. The seller is not required to sell the house for a lower price. With several houses I have sold, I renegotiated a lower commission with the listing agent in exchange for accepting a lower price. That is my understanding of how a listing contract works.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:30 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.