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In short, the reason is to get you a better deal than you would have gotten without one. It’s really as simple as that! This means money, but it also means…
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austin homes for sale, austin realtor, austin real estate, austin hud foreclosures, austin texas realtor, austin property management
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In short, the reason is to get you a better deal than you would have gotten without one. It’s really as simple as that! This means getting you exactly what you want, keeping you from what you don’t want, saving you time and hassle, saving you money by finding underpriced homes and negotiating an even lower price, making sure all papers are written to your advantage to save you 2% of the cost of the house in fees, keeping you in control, and seeing that everything is handled until the sale actually closes. Having a buyer agent is the difference between having a repair manual (seeing homes online) and having a mechanic (actually buying one). This means that if you aren’t in the real estate business, you won’t be familiar with the ins and outs of buying a home (meaning no offense to you). You also won’t be familiar with how to make it work for you. The listing agent will use this fact to get the seller a better deal at your expense. Just because an agent is likable and is driving you around doesn’t automatically mean he is working for you! Unless you have an agreement otherwise, he is the SELLER’S agent, not YOUR agent, and will work to get the seller the best deal!
A buyer agent is trained in real estate and can make sure everything works for the home buyer, such as:
How do you know that a Real Estate agent is working for the buyer?
If you don’t have a WRITTEN buyer representaion agreement with a real estate agent, then that agent will be working for the home seller BY DEFAULT and will get the best deal for them (maybe at your expense.) The typical scenario works like this: The Realtor says that the owner doesn’t want to negotiate on terms. Why? Because he is trying to get THEM the best deal, not YOU! Is he showing you listings that aren’t what you want? That’s because he is trying to sell the houses that are listed with his company ONLY! (Can’t blame him, that’s what he is contracted to do.) Did the sellers find out that you were willing to pay full price? That’s because THEIR agent told THEM what you said! (He HAS to do this. He is THEIR agent, not YOUR agent.) You wouldn’t think of going into a courtroom and expecting the other guy’s lawyer to be looking out for you, would you? The same idea applies to real estate agents.
What are common reservations to hiring a Buyer Agent?
1. You want to do it all yourself
2. You don’t want to pay for an agent
3. You don’t want the hassle of dealing with an agent
Consider:
1. Are you sure you know everything you need to know to get the home you want, get a good price on it, and write the papers so things work your way? Are you “in the know” when it comes to current real estate information? Do you have the pulse of the market? Do you know about real estate procedures and which forms to use? Do you have the desire to be a martyr, or the desire to buy a home? The Realtor has already learned all this, both out of the book and through experience.
2. There is usually no additional charge for a Buyer Agent to work for you – the listing agent will split his fee with the Buyer agent. As a side note, if an agent works for the seller, they get paid EXACTLY the same thing, and he didn’t even negotiate a better deal for you!
3. A buyer agent reduces your hassle: without one, you will spend long hours looking through ads or online listings, making calls for showings, not getting callbacks, driving out to see houses that turn out to be not what you want, feeling awkward in other people’s houses, spending time on papers, making multiple calls every day to keep things on track, dealing with lenders who need a daily ‘nudge’, requests for information (and knowing what information they are talking about), coordinating closing, running across town for documents, and doing everything at odd hours on weekends. (Ahhh, the pleasures of buying a home!) The buyer agent does all this and just reports the highlights to you.
The simple reality is that you will be working with an agent no matter which home you buy, whether from a private owner selling his/her house through a real estate agent who represents THEM (not you), or from a builder’s representative (the agent who is in the sales office on the new home lot), who represents the BUILDER (not you). Or, you can work with an agent who looks out for YOU. Which do you prefer?
© 2006, Jon Kresh