1. Realtors Are Real Estate Specialists. Not all real estate
professionals are created equally. There are approximately 2.3
million licensed real estate professionals, but only members of
the National Association of Realtors can call themselves Realtors.
This association of about 750,000 brokers and agents provides a
Code of Ethics to standardize professional behavior, and it offers
advanced educational opportunities to its members, enabling them
to offer accredited sub-specialties such as buyer's representation
(ABR,) residential real estate expertise (CRS,) or Internet
readiness (e-PRO) to the public.
2. Realtors Lower Your Risk. When you have a Realtor as an
advocate, you share some of the risk of home buying with your
agent. Otherwise, it's buyer beware. Incredibly, many states do
not have laws or regulatory bodies in place that protect
homebuyers in many situations. If you have a Realtor as your
advocate, he or she will make recommendations that will assure
that you are buying a home that is safe, environmentally sound and
priced fairly according to the current marketplace.
3. Realtors Work For You At Their Own Risk. Can you name
another profession that will go to work for you on a contingency
basis? Or without a contract? Even attorneys charge by the hour
except for some high-risk law suits. You don't typically pay for
any services up front with an agent and that is because agents are
paid on the back end by the lender's proceeds. When you think
about it, that is an incredible endorsement that your lender is
willing to finance your brokerage fees. That means you and the
seller have no out-of-pocket expenses. Therefore, it's in your
agent's best interest to work quickly, diligently, and use all his
or her resources to help you meet your goals, or there is no
payday. But don't be surprised if your agent asks for a commitment
from you in the form of a contract. Wouldn't you do the same if
your time and money were on the line?
4.Realtors Understand The Current Market. Real estate
professionals have invaluable house-by-house, street-by-street,
and market-by-market experience which can't be learned overnight.
Realtors who have weathered the pendulum swing between buyers'
markets and sellers' markets know that the real estate market can
turn abruptly. Rising and falling interest rates affect the number
of available homes for sale and their prices within weeks or days.
All it takes is the entrance or exit of a major employer, and
hundreds of homes in a neighborhood can be affected. As
neighborhood experts, experienced brokers and agents can help you
with home buying strategies and proposals that will get the right
house at the best price and terms.
5. Realtors Have Inventory. Do you want to find a home quickly?
With a Realtor by your side, you will. According to The National
Association of Realtors, over four-fifths of existing homes in the
United States are represented by real estate brokers. So are 70
percent of new home builders and their products, according to
NewHomeNetwork.com. Realtors cooperate with each other through an
organization called the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) that allows
them to share their current inventory with each other. Your agent
can also show you homes outside of the MLS inventory, including
for-sale-by-owner homes, new builder homes, and
institution-operated homes. However, no Realtor can be expected to
show you this unqualified inventory without a representation
agreement that assures him or her of being paid at closing.
6. Realtors Have Information You Don't Have. MLS data entry can
take from one to 10 days, depending on the listing agent, his or
her broker, and the rules and technology of the MLS. By the time
the home is posted on the Internet, it could already be sold, so
when you shop for homes on the Internet, you may not be seeing the
most current inventory. That's why clever agents network with each
other. Your agent will tell other agents about you and your wish
list in exchange for information about upcoming homes for sale
which are not yet in the MLS or the Internet. Many homes are
bought and sold this way without a sign ever going into the yard.
If you want to be the buyer positioned to make first and best
offers on these desirable homes, hire an agent and be willing to
go under contract. If an agent has found out about a home for sale
that has not been listed, whom do you think he or she will tell
first - you, or a buyer who is committed to him or her by
contract? Again, commitment works both ways.
7. Realtors Understand The Complexity Of The Transaction. Less
than a decade ago, a home could be bought with a two-page
contract. Now consumer-mandated seller's disclosures,
environmental and structural reports, and other legal documents
have turned the home transfer into a potential minefield. Realtors
work with contracts daily, and can fully understand which points
are harmful and/or beneficial to you. From helping you make a
reasonable offer, to providing for the discovery and disclosure of
material facts, your agent can also correctly interpret
information for you. If you found out the neighbor next door to
the house you are buying is building a new fence, would you know
to get a new survey ordered? Your Realtor will make sure that the
new fence doesn't encroach on your new property.
8. Realtors Work For You...And The Transaction. Your agent not
only represents your interests but also works on behalf of the
transaction. Does that seem like a conflict of interest? It isn't.
Buyers and sellers are natural adversaries. You want to buy for
the least price, and the seller wants the most. Agents must be
skilled negotiators to keep pride, ignorance, or stubbornness from
getting in the way of a fair deal for both sides. As the buyer,
remember that you are the one in control. You can instruct your
agent how far to go in negotiations on your behalf. One day,
you'll be glad your agent helped you keep your cool when the
seller refused to leave that old chandelier.
9. Realtors Offer Flexible Services. Realtors' services are
somewhat negotiable. The more risk you ask your agent to take, the
higher the fees on the back end (closing) will be. Also, the more
your broker serves as your advocate, the more you can expect to
pay. New ideas are coming to the real estate industry which allow
the consumer to pick and choose real estate services based on what
brokers offer in the marketplace. Some offer only full-service
brokerage services. Others offer menu services and are paid
accordingly. If you want to save some money, be prepared to pay
more fees along the way and to shoulder more responsibility.
10.Realtors Are Homeowner Advocates. Do you like the idea of
deducting your mortgage interest from your income tax? Paying no
capital gains when you sell your home up to $250,000 if you are
single and $500,000 if you are married after living in it only two
years? If so, you can thank the only lobbying group in the nation
that looks out for the interests of homeowners - The National
Association of Realtors. Every year, the Realtor PAC perches on
Capitol Hill and swoops down on legislators who try to overturn
these generous government-sponsored homeowner benefits. The result
is well worth it. These initiatives keep housing more affordable
and make them better investments, enabling more buyers than ever
before to move into a home of their own. Thanks in part to
Realtors, more than 67 percent of the population are enjoying the
benefits of owning a home. So keep in mind that every time you put
a Realtor to work, you are working to keep your homeowner benefits
in place.