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Why You Should Not For Sale By Owner

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with The Real Estate Agency (Office License: 265417) 317824

 

Why You Should Not For Sale By Owner
In today’s market, as home prices rise and a lack of inventory continues, some homeowners may consider trying to sell their homes on their own, known in the industry as a For Sale by Owner (FSBO). There are several reasons why this might not be a good idea for most sellers.
Here are the top five reasons:

1. Exposure to Prospective Buyers

According to NAR’s 2018 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 95% of buyers searched online for a home last year. That is in comparison to only 13% of buyers looking at print newspaper ads. Most real estate agents have an Internet strategy to promote the sale of your home, do you?

2. Results Come from the Internet

Where did buyers find the homes they actually purchased?
  • 50% on the Internet
  • 28% from a real estate agent
  • 7% from a yard sign
  • 1% from newspapers
The days of selling your house by putting out a lawn sign or putting an ad in the paper are long gone. Having a strong Internet strategy is crucial.

3. There Are Too Many People to Negotiate With

Here is a list of some of the people with whom you must be prepared to negotiate if you decide to For Sale by Owner:
  • The buyer who wants the best deal possible
  • The buyer’s agent who solely represents the best interests of the buyer
  • The buyer’s attorney (in some parts of the country)
  • The home inspection companies, which work for the buyer and will almost always find some problems with the house
  • The appraiser if there is a question of value

4. FSBOing Has Become More And More Difficult

The paperwork involved in selling and buying a home has increased dramatically as industry disclosures and regulations have become mandatory. This is one of the reasons that the percentage of people FSBOing has dropped from 19% to 7% over the last 20+ years.

5. You Net More Money When Using an Agent

Many homeowners believe that they can save on the real estate commission by selling on their own, but they don’t realize that the main reason buyers look at FSBOs is because they also believe that they can save on the real estate agent’s commission. The seller and buyer can’t both save the commission.
study by Collateral Analytics revealed that FSBOs don’t actually save anything, and in some cases may be costing themselves more, by not listing with an agent. One of the main reasons for the price difference at the time of sale is that,
“Properties listed with a broker that is a member of the local MLS will be listed online with all other participating broker websites, marketing the home to a much larger buyer population. And those MLS properties generally offer compensation to agents who represent buyers, incentivizing them to show and sell the property and again potentially enlarging the buyer pool.”
If more buyers see a home, the greater the chances are that there could be a bidding war for the property. The study showed that the difference in price between comparable homes of size and location is currently at an average of 6% this year.
Why would you choose to list on your own and manage the entire transaction when you can hire an agent and not have to pay anything more?

Bottom Line

Before you decide to take on the challenges of selling your house on your own, sit with a real estate professional in your marketplace and see what they have to offer.
 
Source: Keeping Current Matters | The KCM Crew 011719
Mel Ahrens, MBA, Kelly Right Real Estate
Kelly Right Real Estate - Hood River, OR
Customized Choices for your Real Estate Needs

#1 and #2 are really the same arguments.  A seller needs a robust internet strategy.  There are a variety of ways to do so, including a Flat Fee listing, which syndicates the property to hundreds (thousands) of websites.

#3 - Too many people to negotiate with is a bit misleading.  Seldom does a seller negotiate with a buyer, buyer's agent and a buyer's attorney.  If the buyer's agent is doing their job, the seller will negotiate with the buyer's agent.  That is the buyer's agent job, right?  Very seldom are there negotiations with the inspector or appraiser.  Generally, time spent with the inspector or appraiser is to understand the professional opinions they provided.  The negotiation happens with the buyer's agent.  Perhaps they should have added the escrow agent, the title insurance representative etc.. to add more peopel to the list.  This is a misleading argument.

#4 FSBOing has become more difficult.  So has life. Buying a car, choosing a college, determining if you want to go through with surgery, proposing to a future spouse etc... can be difficult too. Research and learning about the process means an informed decision can be made.  Real estate agents can certainly help FSBO sellers understand the process and be a resource.  The real estate agent does not make the decision though.  The seller still makes the decisions. Also, one of the reasons for the drop in FSBO % is the proliferation of Flat Fee listings.  FSBO sellers have more tools than in prior years.  One of those tools results in the FSBO transaction being classified as an agent transaction.  The Flat Fees could easily be segregated out of the results, but apparently, no effort is made to do so.  The result would not make the marketing point the studies authors are biased towards.

#5 FSBO's net less - Keeping Current Matters continues serving the Kool-Aid on the Collateral Analytics study. I'm not sure the Collateral Analytics study conclusions can be broadly applied.  The study only focuses on 13 highly populated counties.  Only 150 counties (of over 3,000 counties) in the US comprise 50% of the US population.  The study uses AVM methodology as a tool to derive their results.  AVM models do not work well in low population housing markets.  Extrapolating high population urban results to less populated and/or rural areas is risky.


The Collateral Analytics study also indicates it was a normal market. “The data used for this study came from a rather normal housing market, not one in rapid rise or decline, and covered all of 2016 and the first half of 2017.”
A quick review of the markets the study covered showed the following info:

·       Clark County, NV, “The median sales price of previously owned single-family homes in Southern Nevada in June was $257,373. That’s up 2.9 percent from May and 9.5 percent from June 2016, according to a new report from the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors.”  Las Vegas Review-Journal 07/06/17

·       Cook County, IL, “Feb 2017 median home price was $210k, a 12% increase over Feb 2016” Illinois Realtors Blog 03/22/17

·       King County, WA,  “median home prices grew 15.7% compared to a year ago”  Seattle Times 05/04/17

·       Prince George’s County, MD, “Prices rose fastest in Prince George’s County, climbing 19% from Feb 2016 to Feb 2017”  WA Post 03/31/17

Double-digit median price increases year over year is a normal housing market? 2.9% increases month over month?  Sounds more like a rapidly rising market.  Only one of the counties in the study had a median price increase of less than 5% (Fairfax County, VA 4.8%).  According to Keeping Current Matters, 38% of the US states had year-to-year price appreciation greater than 6%.  Washington (including Seattle & King County) had 12.9% appreciation statewide.   

I do not believe the study was done in a “normal market”.  

Also, it does not appear the study excluded Flat Fee Listings, which are typically used by FSBO sellers to advertise in the MLS.  Including Flat Fee Listings as agent represented most likely leads to overstating agent represented results and under-representing FSBO results.

Finally, an economic study, which controlled for the local market, Madison, WI, showed there was no difference between sold pricing for FSBO/agents. Certainly not what the NAR and the real estate sales industry wants to hear, let alone disclose.

FSBO sellers generally sell on their own to save their equity; they do not perceive the value of the typical real estate commission. It is about the money.

Jan 19, 2019 11:56 AM
Richard Weeks
Dallas, TX
REALTOR®, Broker

Great information, thanks for sharing.  I hope 2019 is a great  year for you.

Jan 21, 2019 03:58 AM