The reality is realtors are well protected in the sale of the home for many reasons that are defined in the legal documentation required and not in the closing process.
Given the point I'm curious now of how many individual realtors take the blame in a sale after the fact? It is generally the seller who's on the hook and is directly sued from what I've seen. Maybe this is incorrect but it's rarely the middle man stepping in to take the bullet.
In fact I have a personal example where an agency did not do due diligence on behalf of me and shifted the blame to me leaving me holding the bag of potentially being out 5 figures in a botched purchase. Not until I threatened to take legal action against both agencies (never sign arbitration BTW) did both of then come to the plate to decide on how to avoid that as both agencies had points of blame.
Regardless, even though the realtors were to blame neither of them seemed concerned and ultimately the claim was handled by the agencies at a higher level than the individuals to blame.
There is an argument of diminishing return on the value of realtors however I wouldn't paint it with such a broad stroke. That being said I do believe it's s scam that realtors in a legacy mindset are offended when negotiating their rate comes up - regardless of their work put into the sale of the home. Many flat out will not even hear the argument and seem entitled to it while being unable to defend the rationalization of.
> Maybe this is incorrect but it's rarely the middle man stepping in to take the bullet.
Yes, the seller is the party responsible. However, if he hired an agent and was relying on the agent's advice, the seller can sue the agent. That is the difference between hiring an agent and doing it yourself. You are basically paying the brokerage to insure you against sticking your foot in your mouth, and the brokerage -- to limit their liability in the first place -- gives you an agent who tells you how not to screw yourself.
As you yourself said, once you threatened to sue, the agencies started getting stuff done. That's the point. If you didn't use them, you would have no one to shift the blame to.
> That being said I do believe it's s scam that realtors in a legacy mindset are offended when negotiating their rate comes up - regardless of their work put into the sale of the home
As someone who believes in the free market, I of course do not object to wanting to negotiate rates, but if no agent is willing to do it, well then, they're just charging what the market will bear. You are, of course, free to sell your home and take on the liability yourself.
> As someone who believes in the free market, I of course do not object to wanting to negotiate rates, but if no agent is willing to do it, well then, they're just charging what the market will bear. You are, of course, free to sell your home and take on the liability yourself.
This is exactly why I've sold my homes FSBO with an actual real estate lawyer. Real estate agents are rarely lawyers and their training sometimes seems to give them the idea they are legal experts - they are not. The point I was making was that the agents both made mistakes and neither were held accountable. The reason the agencies stepped in was to fix the mistakes (legal mistakes) that were made. There are other ways to sell a house that do not require an agent that do protect you as a seller (or a buyer). I don't use agents anymore because of this and I've had nothing but a more positive experience given that the information from the buy side is much more accessible, and cheaper. I know what I'm looking for and I'm well capable of setting up searches to find that. Realty agencies know this and are trying to protect their vested interest by playing new games like "premarket" opportunities. I don't see how they're progressing the experience, but are only making moves to protect a legacy model. Very similar to how ridesharing has been, overall, positive disruption.
Some states actually require a lawyer in the process as well. So not only is the RE agent holding out their hand for their 3%, there’s a lawyer that wants a couple grand for what is usually filling out boilerplate. Not only that, but you can also find states where the agents aren’t legally allowed to tell you what is a “good” neighborhood or school district.
I would rather pay an RE agent by the hour to show me houses than this percentage nonsense. Zillow/Google street view helps to drop most of the false positives, and the agent can help me focus on real candidates.
Given the point I'm curious now of how many individual realtors take the blame in a sale after the fact? It is generally the seller who's on the hook and is directly sued from what I've seen. Maybe this is incorrect but it's rarely the middle man stepping in to take the bullet.
In fact I have a personal example where an agency did not do due diligence on behalf of me and shifted the blame to me leaving me holding the bag of potentially being out 5 figures in a botched purchase. Not until I threatened to take legal action against both agencies (never sign arbitration BTW) did both of then come to the plate to decide on how to avoid that as both agencies had points of blame.
Regardless, even though the realtors were to blame neither of them seemed concerned and ultimately the claim was handled by the agencies at a higher level than the individuals to blame.
There is an argument of diminishing return on the value of realtors however I wouldn't paint it with such a broad stroke. That being said I do believe it's s scam that realtors in a legacy mindset are offended when negotiating their rate comes up - regardless of their work put into the sale of the home. Many flat out will not even hear the argument and seem entitled to it while being unable to defend the rationalization of.