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Buying a Home
All real estate is For Sale By Owner. Some owners just hire a realtor as their
choice for their Marketing plan. In a nutshell, the biggest difference in purchasing
property directly from an owner as compared to dealing through a realtor is that the buyer
and seller do not have the weight of the "6% Commission Yoke" hanging around
their neck to impede making a deal they are each comfortable with. Transactions only occur
when both the buyer and seller are comfortable with the deal. Many home sellers have a
price that they either Need or Want to get out of their property. If property values are
such that they can't get this price after they have paid a realtor 6%, these sellers Must
either list their property with a realtor at an "above market" price (meaning a
deal will not get done because the seller does not have the flexibility to negotiate) or
market the property themselves in order to meet their price target. Other property sellers
understand that they can offer home buyers an attractive "slightly under market"
price and still take more cash to the bank since they are not paying a realtor 6%. The
buyer, on the other hand, simply wants to buy a home of a particular type in a particular
area for the best price the buyer can get. Considering that sellers always think property
is worth more than buyers want to pay, it is logically certain that deals should be easier
to consummate when a 6% middleman is taken out of between two parties that already have a
difference of perspective about what is a fair price. Out of the starting gate, the buyer
and seller are 6% closer to a deal. Every Buyer should appreciate the reality that the
buyer is really paying the realtors 6% commission. Sure the title company takes the money
out of the sellers account at closing, but just a few moments earlier it was the buyers
money that the title company is then handing to the realtor instead of the seller.
Therefore, buyers must decide if they consider the services of realtors to be a value to
them at 6% of the property price since it really is the buyer who is paying for those
services. Millions of people buy computers "direct" from Dell and stocks
"direct" through Etrade. Middlemen of all types are being cut out of many
transactions primarily because the increase in the flow of information down the
Information Super Highway has empowered the consumer to not need the middlemen as much, if
at all. One day, maybe all real estate will be sold "this way" as well. As
information resources continue to increase, buyers should increasingly find that they can
pay a reasonable professional service fee to an Attorney, an Appraiser, and an Inspector
and with this competent professional help buy property cheaper than paying a 6% commission
to a realtor. When a bank makes a loan on real estate to the buyer, they hire an Attorney,
an Appraiser, and a licensed Inspector before they loan the buyer that money. The banks do
not rely on the advice of a realtor to loan money, so why should a buyer value that advice
so highly when they are the ones who are going to be paying the bank back? The bank hires
all these professionals, of course, at the buyers expense anyway so these are not really
"incremental cost". There was a time when buyers, without the assistance of a
realtor, could not get enough quality information about what properties were available in
an area at what asking prices and the related information about the details of each of
those properties to make a comparative evaluation as to whether the asking price of a
particular property is reasonable or not and to have an ample selection of properties to
choose from such that they could end up with a good deal on property that suited them just
right. Today information is much more easily exchanged. Sellers can advertise their homes
nationwide for months for under a hundred dollars and in many areas the prior sale prices
of homes are available from the property tax appraisal districts at their public web
sites. There are so many information resources available today that the realtors
informational value has at the very least been substantially diminished. The professional
services of Attorneys, Appraisers, and Inspectors are being paid for at closing by most
buyers anyway so savvy buyers will increasingly use all these information resources, drive
themselves to go see the property, discover that they can indeed find the property they
want without the realtors assistance, and are able to make a better deal, Direct. The
American Bar Association publishes a Handy Reference Guide For Home Buyers & Sellers.
You can find it along with a collection of other interesting Books on the subject of
Buying Real Estate at barnes & noble bookstores.
Home Buying Tips
You can save even more of Your Time buying a home
if you register for our Automatic New Home Listing Notification When a new property is
listed which meets your request we email you a Custom Search Results URL, One Mouse Click
and in seconds all the new listings matching your request are there to conveniently
review. Your contact information is kept private and we do not contact you ourselves
except to send your requested notification.
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