Home > How Buyer Agents Get Paid
How Buyer Agents Get Paid
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Will hiring a buyer broker cost me more money?
In a standard real estate transaction, it doesn't cost a home buyer any more to use a buyer broker than it would if they used any broker to assist in locating the right home.
Who really pays the real estate broker?
Whether a real estate broker represents the buyer or seller, there is always a brokerage fee paid from a real estate transaction when a broker is involved. The question of who pays the real estate brokerage fees is a matter of how one looks at a real estate transaction and the terms of the contracts involved between the parties.
Leading real estate industry trade associations report that the vast majority of real estate transactions in the United States involve the use of at least one brokerage firm, but more often than not there are two brokerage firms involved. One broker usually works for the seller; the other broker works with the buyer. In the case of two brokers being involved in the same transaction, both brokers typically share the commission in the form of a "co-fee" or "cooperating broker fee." This co-fee is defined in a real estate listing agreement and/or buyer agency agreement prior to the transaction taking place, and may be regulated by the local (MLS) Multiple Listing Service in which the brokerages participate. Because the brokers share the transaction commission, there is no additional cost to either the buyer or seller for using their own individual broker.
With the majority of real estate transactions involving professional real estate brokers, buyers should employ their own exclusive buyer agent to assist them in locating, evaluating and negotiating real estate, without the fear of additional fees needing to be paid for buyer brokerage services.
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