TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR BUSINESS. AGENTS AND SELLING BROKERS SHOULD CHARGE FOR WHAT THEY KNOW, NOT FOR WHAT THEY DO.
* * * * HARD CORE REAL ESTATE OPINION * * * *
How much a Buyer's Agent/Broker charges is not necessarily a matter of accepting the co-op offered in the MLS. If agents and brokers are comfortable letting listing agent / seller set their fee, fine. I believe that there is much more to our fees than what the co-op offers.
Some factors contributing to setting our fees:
1. Type of property involved in the transaction.
If the prospective home buyers are looking for an average home in a price range that is reasonable for the area of their search and the buyers are available to tour homes at reasonable times, are credit worthy and ready to buy, accepting the co-op, if it is within your fee range, is reasonable.
However, if the property involved is "out of the mainstream", a buyer's agent should consider a higher fee to compensate for managing a transaction on properties:
a. that are in various stages of final U&O.
b. that are offered by sellers in financial difficulty.
c. that are "out of market" for the area making appraisal difficult.
2. Credit worthiness of the buyer.
Our fees are based on a normal transaction with a buyer who is fully credit worthy.
Any time a buyer has low credit scores or where loan approval may rely on certain
performance on the part of the buyer, last minute reviews of credit, loan fees, interest
rates or appraisals could cause underwriter or investor review and rejection of a loan.
3. Complexity of the transaction from showing to settlement.
Transactions that require more experience on the part of the agent/broker will require the
agent / broker to take valuable time in research, contract preparation, negotiation,
financing, title services and other duties than would be required for a simple residential
home purchase transaction and far more than a new home sale.
Most agents and selling brokers know the duties required for the average home purchase transaction and can compute an hourly fee for average transactions. Once a transactions is "out of the mainstream" to a degree where the time to get to settlement is increased OR the degree of difficulty is higher than the average transactions, we need to charge a higher than average fee to reflect the value of experience.
Buyers should be willing to pay for experienced representation.
Buyers who are unwilling to pay for the expertise and experience required to get the difficult transactions to settlement should not expect agents and selling brokers to donate extra time and energy and expertise to manage a complicated transaction. Buyers who are unwilling to pay for experience are looking for agents and selling brokers to subsidize their purchase with the agent's time. Once a Buyer's Agency Agreement is signed, the agent and broker has tremendous responsibility to perform duties to get that buyer to settlement. If an agent or selling broker knows up front that the transaction is going to be far more complicated than a normal transaction, the buyer is offered a choice: accept the broker fee offered for managing a complicated transaction OR, use the services of another buyer's agent. OR, the buyer can be a customer of the listing agent.
Inexperienced agents should not represent buyers in transactions beyond their ability.
When inexperienced agents agree to represent buyers in complicated transactions without the experience to
know how to analyze contracting or financing needs, what to do and whom to contact for special services, they are putting themselves and their brokers at considerable risk for complaints with the real estate commissions and/or the local REALTOR associations. Most offices do not have a fee model that rewards for experience. Agents can charge the same fee whether they have one year experience or twenty years experience. However, agents and selling brokers with 10-20-30 years experience should be willing to charge more for complicated services than agents who have had 1-3 transactions. New agents may not even understand that a transaction is complicated until problems arise. But, if a contract management becomes complicated, the agent isn't usually going to go back to the buyer and adjust their fee because the fee is coming from the co-op. If you have the experience to manage complicated transactions, agents and brokers should be charging higher fees right up front.
Complicated transactions demand higher broker fees.
A higher fee will be included in the Buyer's Agency/Broker Representation Agreement and offset by the co-op. In most cases, the buyer can pay the additional fee at settlement from buyer incentive included in the Contract of Sale. Sometimes, simply knowing the right mortgage resources is worth money to a buyer. Buyer's should be willing to pay for agents with valuable resources. Many buyers do not hesitate to ask for rebates from our fees. Agents should not hesitate to charge more for complicated transactions.
Complicated transactions require experience and experience isn't cheap. We invest in our business daily for years to gain experience. Agents and selling brokers should charge for the value of their experience. If presented with a complicated transaction, give the buyer your fee to represent them in that transaction. If they do not accept your fee or you cannot negotiate an acceptable fee, the buyer can select another agent. The experienced agent or broker can. . . . . .
JUST GO TO THE NEXT TRANSACTION.