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When I last bought a house, I had an agent to show me houses. Then when it came offer time, I actually had my lawyer do the final review and he essentially did the bulk of the negotiation, the agent was simply a mouth piece with access to the databases and someone the other agents would talk to. It was during the 2008 time and I placed a bid on a short sell, my lawyer gave me distinctly different advice than the agent did (a personal friend, no less) the seller made some demands that he wanted in the contract and the agent simply wasn't capable of giving sound advice about it. Probably saved me about $50,000.

The big problem is agents are incentivized to have sales in the market. If you sell your house for $100,000 vs $110,000 is could make a difference of months and they're paid nearly the same even though it's a pretty large difference to the seller. To many of the people "helping" you sell, it's better for you to take less money now than 10% more in 3 months. Nevermind the roles they helped play in the big 2008 crisis... And this is a profession that has a claimed "code of ethics"




What were the demands the seller wanted in the contract? And what was the bad advice that your agent gave? Just curious.


Most people can't afford to have a lawyer go over their home purchase/sales contract. They have to rely on their agent. So some training and insurance is absolutely better than nothing, which is what the comment I was replying to suggested.


I’ve been quoted $500 an hour and $750 an hour from various attorneys. I think that’s pretty easy to swing on a $100,000 house.


Sure, for a single hour. A real estate contract is dozens of pages long, and a good attorney would review all of those.

$500/hour for one hour? Doable for most people.

$5000+? That changes the economics of buying, especially if we're talking a $100k house, since that $100k is spread out over 30 years but the lawyer's bill is due in 30 days.


For contract reviews I've only been quoted 1-3 hours. Nowhere near $5,000.




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