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How to Avoid Having a Buyer's Agent in California


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2011 Jul 20, 8:59am   25,506 views  60 comments

by corntrollio   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

(I posted this in another thread and am reposting as a separate topic)

[I'm adding this "assumptions" section because people who don't read this whole post are making misguided comments and not using common sense.]
Assumptions: 1) you are (or you have a friend who is) a CA-barred lawyer who has taken the DRE exam because you are planning to buy your (or he or she has bought his/her) own house and can save up to 3% by not paying a used house salesman
2) you can be your own (or this friend is willing to hook you up too by being your) buying agent (or selling agent) when you've already found a house you want to buy (or sell) -- the idea is not that your friend will drive you around like a used house salesman
3) I'm not suggesting you pay your friend to take the DRE exam. It would be far better to study for the DRE exam and take it yourself if that were the case.
4) if you (or your lawyer friend) is not a real estate attorney, they can specifically say they are not providing legal advice with respect to the transaction, and you can hire a real estate attorney for cheaper than a used house salesman (at least in the expensive markets in CA) who actually knows the law and can give you legal advice on disclosures, instead of non-legal advice from a realtor

One thing you can do in California is find a friend who is a member of the State Bar who is willing to help you out. A lawyer in California can take the brokerage exam (automatically qualified to be a broker by education and qualification) and become a member of the local real estate association for probably less than $1000 all in.

Your lawyer friend can then take the fee that would have gone to the buyer agent, 2.5-3% or whatever, and refund a portion to you. In addition, your lawyer friend would get all of the standard used house salesmen forms that realtors use for transactions from the local real estate association, so you won't be missing anything you would have gotten from a realtor.

One thing your lawyer friend may want to do is make it clear they are not providing legal advice, but are only providing services as a real estate broker in this case, unless they specifically want to provide legal advice (and are covered by their malpractice carrier for this). Instead, you could hire a real estate lawyer with the money you save to review all the disclosure issues and other material aspects of the transaction.

That way, there's no double-end issue and no dual agent issue, and you can save up to 3% on the deal. I highly recommend that most members of the Bar who are comfortable going without a buyer's agent take the DRE exam and become a member of the local real estate association when they want to buy property. Instead of paying 2.5-3% to a buyer's agent, you can pay $1000 or less. You'd still have to pay the listing agent, of course.

Other benefits are that, by being a member of the local real estate association, you get access to full MLS, not the cheap consumer-facing version that lacks realtors' internal comments and that lacks a lot of pertinent information.

Update: Since people keep asking, I'm not saying that you should get a friend who is not already licensed by the DRE to do this. I'm saying that if your friend already did this for himself/herself, they could also do it for you. There might be insurance issues and other business risks, but that's true of any business. I'm also suggesting that you simultaneously get a real estate lawyer to review the transaction, instead of paying an absurd fee to a used house salesman that has no relation to the value they provide. Let's not pretend that I'm the first person to suggest that a lawyer could easily get DRE-licensed or that plenty of lawyers aren't also DRE-licensed.

#housing

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1   FortWayne   2011 Jul 20, 2:02pm  

consumer MLS is the same thing as realtor MLS. There is absolutely no difference there. Just FYI.

2   lurking   2011 Jul 20, 3:21pm  

EMan says

consumer MLS is the same thing as realtor MLS. There is absolutely no difference there. Just FYI.

You are wrong yet again. The Realtor accessable MLS has many details such as days on market, condo lobby codes, etc. that the consumer can't get from the public MLS site. That's why the Realtor MLS has a space for private information. Please stop spreading misinformation about matters that you know nothing about.

3   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Jul 20, 3:27pm  

lurking says

That's why the Realtor MLS has a space for private information

completely agree. I've seen a real estate agent's print out of the MLS listing when I've visited properties and they have a lot more info on it. all important for the buyer, but of course the buyer is really the most important part of the transaction who has to be kept in the dark, about what is really going on behind the scenes.

4   DM   2011 Jul 20, 4:25pm  

corntrollio's advice sounds plausible. In fact, it's what I thought before I actually went through this process and tried to buy a house without a buyer's agent.

I contacted a bunch of attorneys on the peninsula who do real estate work and asked them if they would do precisely this: work for an hourly fee and refund the buyer's agent cut. Not one would. It turns out that there are insurance-related issues (among others) and each one was wary of becoming involved. Think of it: if you're an attorney, why would you want to take the risk of being sued for a measly $1,000, as corntrollio posted? In reality, the price they wanted to review the documents, etc. was closer to $2,500, and that's still not acting as an agent.

My wife is a California bar-licensed attorney, and I've taught law (although not real estate law), so we're not entirely clueless here.

If corntrollio is so certain he's right, why doesn't he post a list of attorneys in the bay area who would be willing to do this, along with their contact info? That we haven't seen even one such name means this is speculation, not reality. And this is unfortunate, because it feeds into the Realtor(TM) monopoly.

5   DF   2011 Jul 20, 7:17pm  

Well every house sale is a little different. I suspect there are plenty of attorneys who will work on a fee for service basis. The dodgy part is when you tell them they're going to act as an agent and try to collect a comission and refund it to you. That's what makes a lot of peoples' radar twitch. Sounds dodgy. Is dodgy.

OTOH, the seller should have no objection whatsoever to recognizing that there will be NO buyer's agent fee and lowering the asking price accordingly, or at least sharing the joy.

I for one have done a FSBO where I paid an attorney 4 hours to review the docs and the seller met me at the title company office for closing. Saved the seller 6% and yes I'm pretty sure that was a consideration.

6   vain   2011 Jul 20, 11:24pm  

lurking says

EMan says



consumer MLS is the same thing as realtor MLS. There is absolutely no difference there. Just FYI.


You are wrong yet again. The Realtor accessable MLS has many details such as days on market, condo lobby codes, etc. that the consumer can't get from the public MLS site. That's why the Realtor MLS has a space for private information. Please stop spreading misinformation about matters that you know nothing about.

This would qualify them to get an MLS account as well. It's about $50/month, and if they want the lockbox key, it'll be another $100/month, in addition to purchasing the key itself. It's really not worthwhile for anyone to just have one of these things unless they are a full blown RE agent.

Listing agents may very well select an offer written by a well known agent to gain a contact/ally in the industry. They want to scratch each others' backs. This won't happen if they select your lawyer friend's offer.

7   Maxit   2011 Jul 21, 12:26am  

If you are a seasoned buyer and don't need the help of a buyer's agent I recommend going directly with the seller's agent. Either he collects double commission (and will therefore he will highly recommend your LOW offer to the seller) or often there is a reduced commission if he represents both sides and the seller can net the same amount of your LOWER offer.

8   bubblesitter   2011 Jul 21, 12:58am  

Maxit says

If you are a seasoned buyer and don't need the help of a buyer's agent I recommend going directly with the seller's agent. Either he collects double commission (and will therefore he will highly recommend your LOW offer to the seller) or often there is a reduced commission if he represents both sides and the seller can net the same amount of your LOWER offer.

I agree partially, if you are able to knock down your price by more than 1.5% of the commission you normally get back from buyer's agent. Only thing you have to be careful about is contingencies and you should have your own solid inspection.

9   darrellsimon   2011 Jul 21, 1:48am  

Jesus christ people!!

First on the MLS: The biggest difference to access is that a Broker can look up what properties sold for and offers that have been tendered. In some place Days on Market also is only available to brokers.

But heres the thing: Just go and get a broker's ;icense on line for about 400 bucks. Then you can buy mls and avoid all the legal shit... getting lawyers involved is always a bad idea. Most broker training is how not to be responsible for anything when considering agency, liabiity in contracts and sub agency, itis not brain surgery

10   UAVMX   2011 Jul 21, 4:00am  

So are you telling me I can spend $99 here

http://www.californialicense.com/california-real-estate-license-new3.html

and then go take the exam provided I'm a legal resident (i am) and I'm honest (I am)

This will allow me to become a Real Estate Salesman....then after I pass, I just go to Realtor.com and sign up for access??

http://www.dre.ca.gov/lic_fee.html then add that to the $305 the state charges you...so for around $400 plus monthly fees you will be signed into the MLS

If after you do all this, then go buy a house ( your primary residence) You will get the 3% buyers commission fee???

11   UAVMX   2011 Jul 21, 4:17am  

Okay, so doing more research, to become a Realtor you must join your local association...

heres the fee schedule for where I am

http://www.vvar.com/sites/default/files/2011FeeSchedule_0.pdf

Am I correct in thinking that you have to pay $700 a year for all the dues, then $96 a quarterly? so about a $1k a year to be a full blown realtor....or can you skip the dues and just sign up for the MLS?

12   Â¥   2011 Jul 21, 4:17am  

There's probably more to it but the real estate practice course will go over what a buyer's agent does during the process.

It's my general understanding that the escrow and title people do most of the work during a closing, the buyer's agent just sits around waiting for his check.

Also, the broker's license test is no walk in the park.

If you only get a salesman license, you will have to find a broker to affiliate with, and they charge "desk fees" and will take 1% or so of your commission.

13   Â¥   2011 Jul 21, 4:20am  

Nomograph says

A buyers agent costs you nothing.

On a $700,000 house the buyer's agent costs the buyer $20,000 or so.

Everybody at the closing table is getting paid by the buyer.

14   FortWayne   2011 Jul 21, 4:37am  

lurking says

EMan says

consumer MLS is the same thing as realtor MLS. There is absolutely no difference there. Just FYI.

You are wrong yet again. The Realtor accessable MLS has many details such as days on market, condo lobby codes, etc. that the consumer can't get from the public MLS site. That's why the Realtor MLS has a space for private information. Please stop spreading misinformation about matters that you know nothing about.

No, you are wrong. All MLS are about the same, the only difference is where they buy the comps data from. There is no such thing as private information, all info is public. All of the data comes typically from the same sources anyway. Almost every mls lets you put in private comments, thats just a basic feature. Not sure why you find it so amazing or can't figure out how to do it on a $24.99/membership mls. And if you can't figure out how to run a property report to get all the details well than you are technologically challenged.

15   UAVMX   2011 Jul 21, 4:48am  

but in order to become a broker, you have to have two years experience as a salesperson....

in order to get a paid membership to MLS, you must be a "broker, agent or appraiser"

is an agent a salesperson?

http://portal.mlslistings.com/newmember/intro/

any way you look at it, with fees, etc your looking at at least $1k for your first year....I guess if you buy your own place and collect the fees, it would make it worth it

16   corntrollio   2011 Jul 21, 4:58am  

EMan says

Consumer MLS is the same thing as realtor MLS. There is absolutely no difference there. Just FYI.

Wrong, absolutely wrong. One of the most important things realtor MLS has is the fee split between buying agent and selling agent, for example. In addition, there are internal notes, and you can search the whole database (i.e. look at comps, histories, prior listings, etc.. For consumer MLS, you can only view active database entries and have a limited amount of data provided to you.

This is obvious to anyone who has used Redfin. Redfin has a note that it blocks certain data from the MLS feed at MLS' request.

If you've ever seen the printout the agent gives you instead of the printout you make yourself, you'd know this.

17   corntrollio   2011 Jul 21, 5:05am  

DM says

My wife is a California bar-licensed attorney, and I've taught law (although not real estate law), so we're not entirely clueless here.

If your wife is an attorney, she can do it herself. In fact, why not? It's a $1000 investment at most, and if you're buying a $500K house, that's $15K - $1K in your pocket for very little work other than taking an easy exam.

DM says

It turns out that there are insurance-related issues (among others) and each one was wary of becoming involved. Think of it: if you're an attorney, why would you want to take the risk of being sued for a measly $1,000, as corntrollio posted? In reality, the price they wanted to review the documents, etc. was closer to $2,500, and that's still not acting as an agent.

A few points:
1) the buying agent can get insurance for this if they do it regularly for buyers; if they're doing it for themselves, then they don't need to be insured; people may have higher or lower risk tolerances for doing this for someone else
2) I'm not suggesting that the buyer pay the lawyer-buying agent $1000 for services, but rather the lawyer-buying agent can pay $1000 or less to take the DRE exam and get MLS access; the fee can be negotiated as appropriate between buyer and lawyer-buying agent
3) what you are talking about for $2500 is reviewing the real estate transaction -- that's my whole point. A realtor is f**king useless at anything legal-related. I recommend getting a lawyer instead of a realtor if you are a seasoned buyer, and negotiating realtor fees down or figuring out another way to get lower fees than 5-6%.
4) if you're a lawyer, this is super-easy -- why not do it for yourself? Especially if you ever buy multiple properties, it'd be worth it.

Nomograph says

The advice to hire an attorney is terrible. Who is going to (a) find a lawyer friend who has nothing better to do, (b) get him to study and pass the broker's exam, (c) engage in a bunch of shenanigans in the hopes of splitting a commission?

You are misunderstanding. I'm not saying tell your lawyer friend to take the exam just for you. Find one who did this for their own house and is still licensed.

DF says

I for one have done a FSBO where I paid an attorney 4 hours to review the docs and the seller met me at the title company office for closing. Saved the seller 6% and yes I'm pretty sure that was a consideration.

This was very smart. A real estate agent is useless for anything having to do with legal issues.

Nomograph says

A buyers agent costs you nothing.

Worst advice ever. The buyer technically pays everybody. The cost of housing is higher because of used house salesman fees. You can treat it as buyer paying half and seller paying half because that represents the substance of the transaction, but to say any one buying or selling property doesn't pay fees to the realtor-industrial complex is just being naive.

darrellsimon says

Then you can buy mls and avoid all the legal shit... getting lawyers involved is always a bad idea.

Wrong. Realtors are completely useless for legal issues. They may say, "oh, I'm really good at helping my clients with their disclosures," but they aren't real estate lawyers and don't have subject-matter expertise at all. If they are really that good at disclosures, you should query whether they are committing unauthorized practice of law.

18   FortWayne   2011 Jul 21, 6:31am  

corntrollio says

If you've ever seen the printout the agent gives you instead of the printout you make yourself, you'd know this.

All that data is available on public MLS. And public MLS is dime a dozen.
If you are that much interested in private shared notes you can sign up as a company instead of individual and pay more. It isn't going to be any different.

19   DM   2011 Jul 21, 8:37am  

corntrollio: I think we agree about the *desirability* of avoiding a buyer's agent and paying by the hour.

But you're making this sound easier than it really is (even for a licensed attorney familiar with contracts, albeit one who works in a non-real estate field).

I'll reiterate my question: if it's so simple, why don't you post a list of attorneys in the bay area who would be willing to do this, along with their contact info? Still waiting...

20   corntrollio   2011 Jul 21, 8:48am  

DM says

My wife is a California bar-licensed attorney, and I've taught law (although not real estate law), so we're not entirely clueless here.

What kind of law did you teach as a non-attorney?

DM says

I'll reiterate my question: if it's so simple, why don't you post a list of attorneys in the bay area who would be willing to do this, along with their contact info? Still waiting...

It's not my job to find you an attorney to do it, and you clearly didn't read my "update" and are making bad assumptions. I am saying rather that this is possible and it's quite simple to do.

Your wife could do it, if she's a member of the bar. Why do you think it's so difficult? Most realtors have very little skill and expertise in anything except pricing, which is quite easy to learn if you study the market, and realtors still get pricing wrong. You could hire a real estate attorney for the transaction to reduce risk on legal issues -- realtors profess to have knowledge of legal issues, but they don't have it. The forms are standard realtor association forms -- again, no special magic here.

Why do you think an agent who is not even required to have a college education is somehow more qualified to do this than a member of the state bar? It would be quite cheap for your wife to do this, it would take very little effort, and you could save thousands of dollars.

21   Â¥   2011 Jul 21, 9:03am  

corntrollio says

it would take very little effort

I disagree with this. Real Estate licensing tests are filled with questions that you really can't guess at, like the difference between accretion and avulsion, where the origins of the cadastral system are in California, how many acres in a section, etc.

22   corntrollio   2011 Jul 21, 9:35am  

Troy says

I disagree with this. Real Estate licensing tests are filled with questions that you really can't guess at, like the difference between accretion and avulsion, where the origins of the cadastral system are in California, how many acres in a section, etc.

As if lawyers aren't used to knowing shit they will never use again when studying for the bar.

For the record, here's a description from DRE about the test:
http://www.dre.ca.gov/exm_content_broker.html

Sample questions are in this PDF -- you be the judge:
http://www.dre.ca.gov/pdf_docs/ref_book/ref02.pdf

Lawyers could easily get many of these questions right off the top of their head, and some of them are math questions involving simple math. You can also look for the Barron's book for more sample questions.

23   Esq.REALTOR   2011 Jul 21, 9:45am  

I am an attorney and a real estate broker with membership in my local MLS (and an avid patrick.net reader) and have closed escrow on over 80 single family residences in the past few years.

Regarding, "Your lawyer friend can then take the fee that would have gone to the buyer agent, 2.5-3% or whatever, and refund a portion to you" I would take this deal all day long, with the amount of fee refunded depending on how far along the transaction is before I am contacted. If you are pre-approved for the loan amount, I do not have to drive all over the place showing property or preparing multiple CMAs and offers (in other words you have already decided what property you want to make an offer on and what price you are willing to pay and can qualify for the loan) and I can get right to preparing and submitting an offer then my fee will be very reasonable. (I do note that after closing offices in 12 markets and shedding 700 agents during the first quarter, ZipRealty says it will no longer offer commission rebates to buyers in the 23 markets where it continues to operate brokerage offices so offering commission rebates to buyers is an endangered business model.)

Regarding FSBO property, if you have the buyer lined up and I can meet with both parties at the same time to fill out the disclosures and prepare the offer and have it accepted (the purchase agreement) I will do any house up to $1m for a flat fee of $4,995.00. This includes, among numerous other things, opening and supervising escrow, ordering and supervising the inspections and providing names of vendors for any subsequent repairs, handling changes to the purchase agreement because of inspection findings (decrease in purchase price/seller credit, etc.) and babysitting the loan officer for the two-month escrow period to make sure he or she gets the job done. In other words, I am involved in all aspects of the transaction until title changes hands.

What I have found after operating as a discount broker for the past few years is people are apparently happy paying 6% of the equity in their home to someone from their church or someone with the right logo on his or her business card. Very few people are willing to think out of the box and try a different approach, either because they are lazy or scared. Either way, unless the consumer demands, through effort and action, a different compensation model, the 6% regiment is here to stay. There are alternatives, but consumers need to put a little effort into finding them, which can easily be done using the Internet. I for one do not have tens of thousands of dollars to spend to try and convince consumers that they do not have to pay 6% of their equity to sell their home. It should be obvious right?!

24   corntrollio   2011 Jul 21, 9:51am  

EsquireREALTOR says

I am an attorney and a real estate broker with membership in my local MLS (and an avid patrick.net reader) and have closed escrow on over 80 single family residences in the past few years.

Awesome. :) It sounds like your prices are very reasonable as well. Keep fighting the good fight.

25   Esq.REALTOR   2011 Jul 21, 11:31am  

Regarding the MLS, it is just one giant database that contains information and pictures regarding houses. When a broker/agent looks something up/does a search, certain data fields are queried and the resulting data appears in the broker/agent report. When the same search is done for a non-MLS subscriber, a seller or a buyer, certain data fields are not queried so that information does not end up in the consumer report. Most notably, confidential remarks and the amount of commission offered to the selling (buyer's) agent is absent. Confidential remarks usually consist of showing instructions, i.e., "Call 30 minutes before, then go and show", "Don't let the cat out." Occasionally the remarks will be more telling such as a "Contractor's Special" or "A real tear down."

Regarding the commission, I am contractually bound to pay the commission listed in the MLS. While it is true that the money actually comes from the Seller, the law treats it as the responsibility of the listing broker to pay the selling broker. So if I list a property and the seller agrees to offer the selling broker 3% and I list the home on the MLS and offer the selling broker 3% and then the seller changes his mind and only wants to offer the selling broker 2.5% but the selling broker saw the 3% listing and his buyer submits an offer then legally I am out .5%, which would really suck, so it is important that the commission offered to the selling broker be in the MLS listing data and be correct so there is no misunderstanding when it comes time to close escrow.

26   REpro   2011 Jul 21, 12:14pm  

Every Agency has two major groups of agents: one or few, usually brokers- owners, who focus only on listing properties. Those are RE Kings, use they connections to list as many properties as possible. Most agents, who work for agency, are the guys who run around town and shows properties to prospective buyers. Whenever they work for listing agency or shows properties from MLS, they STILL represent the SELLER- The owner who agreed to pay commission.
Every agent can say, regardless if it’s true or not “we have multiple offer” simply because buyer has no power to check it out.
When listing agent approach the owner who wants to sell property, he usually shows him for how much the similar property were sold recently. To make owner happy he is adding 6% commission on a top of that. This fact alone artificially drive prices higher with every listing.
Now is the hint: If your offer is 6% below listing price, you are the closest to the real market value.

27   StoutFiles   2011 Jul 21, 10:16pm  

robertoaribas says

so yeah, great theory, but waste of time...Another thing is I have now spent 15 years driving around Phoenix showing homes... You don't think that gives me a little bit of market knowledge about this area that your office bound attorney might not have?

If you mean knowledge of pointing out features like granite counter tops and stainless steel appliances, then sure.

robertoaribas says

Is your new lawyer/Realtor going to drive around with you opening all the homes too? They can't give you the mls lockbox key after all, and good luck getting foreclosure listing agents to open the door for you, they won't even return your calls.

Agreed! The system must be changed as almost all the realtor "benefits" are getting them to do things that people could easily do themselves. The database should be open, owners can have open houses, I should be able to bid openly with the owner, etc.

One day we'll all be dealing with the owners once people get tired of this shit. You're just a greedy middleman road block.

28   MoneySheep   2011 Jul 21, 10:27pm  

The best way to buy a house is from FSBO directly. (For Sale By Owner).

You get the deal you want, and at the same time shutot the middle man.

29   StoutFiles   2011 Jul 21, 10:35pm  

MoneySheep says

The best way to buy a house is from FSBO directly. (For Sale By Owner).

You get the deal you want, and at the same time shutot the middle man.

Yeah, and the amount of houses doing that are slim to none. People play the Realtor game because they have no choice, but it shouldn't have to be this way. They've stepped in as middlemen and locked away everything to keep it that way. You'd almost need government intervention to get all the shadyness out of real estate.

30   vain   2011 Jul 22, 12:01am  

EMan says

corntrollio says



If you've ever seen the printout the agent gives you instead of the printout you make yourself, you'd know this.


All that data is available on public MLS. And public MLS is dime a dozen.
If you are that much interested in private shared notes you can sign up as a company instead of individual and pay more. It isn't going to be any different.

You're able to find the listing agent's contact information as well as offer instructions and where to obtain disclosures? Try calling the listing agent for info that is on the private remarks and see what he will do.

The private remarks are where the agents go to stab buyers/sellers in the back. They give away minimum sale prices, disclosures about the property that your buyer agent may want to withhold from you, etc.

The most recent important private remark I've seen mentions something about an aggressive dog in the backyard, and not to go there. I'd like to see someone surfing the web find that address and go in the backyard :)

31   MM from SoCal   2011 Jul 22, 1:42am  

If you don't want to use a Buyer's Agent. Find the property you want via one of the many home listing websites and contact the selling agent directly and negotiate to just pay the selling agent commission. He/she may not agree to this but it is not uncommon for this to happen.

If you have a strong offer and you are a solid buyer, a selling agent is not going to loose a sure selling commission holding out, for an extended period, just to double end the deal.

I have seen agents cut their own commissions in order to close a sale when there is a hiccup in the process. This allows them to at least earn something from their efforts rather than lose the sale and walk away with nothing.

32   corntrollio   2011 Jul 22, 2:46am  

robertoaribas says

another stupid thread...written purely as conjecture by the uninformed.

Yes an attorney can act as an agent. No, most won't do it, and most several years out of law school have forgotten everything that isn't in their area of practice. I'm sure a 20 years divorce attorney will be quite up on zoning issues for real estate...

You did not read the original post. Assumptions: 1) the attorney is a friend who already has a license and used it for buying/selling their own house already and can quickly close a transaction on the side; 2) the attorney is not advising on real estate law, but only just closing the transaction as a realtor would do; 3) the attorney could optionally advice on the transaction if they have subject matter expertise, but you could also hire a real estate attorney.

Read before you criticize. The assumption is based on the fact that an attorney in California does not have to take additional coursework to take the real estate exam, like a non-attorney would. The exam is a cinch for attorneys -- these questions are far easier than the Bar.

Also, this assumes you have already found a home.

Yeah, duh. I said that -- the purpose is just to close the transaction. I'm saying that most of the other services realtors provide are mostly useless. Driving around, I can do myself. Useless middleman salesman does not need to do that. You're not even in California, so I'm not sure why you're talking.

33   Zoas   2011 Jul 22, 3:51am  

This is just silly. I assume your lawyer friend is going to study, pass the exam, pay all the fees, complete the background check, THEN work for free as your buyer's agent so you can save the 3%. Really?

Dude, just man up an pay the fee or invest your OWN time to learn enough to buy the property. You don't need a license to purchase for yourself, but you do need some smarts.

34   corntrollio   2011 Jul 22, 4:00am  

Zoas says

This is just silly. I assume your lawyer friend is going to study, pass the exam, pay all the fees, complete the background check, THEN work for free as your buyer's agent so you can save the 3%. Really?

You people can't f'in read. The assumption is that the lawyer friend already is DRE licensed because they bought a house themselves. I'm going to need to move the assumptions to the top because you people who don't read are getting on my nerves.

The lawyer has already passed a much harder exam, paid much higher fees, and completed a much more intensive background check. DRE is a joke compared to the California Bar.

35   Zoas   2011 Jul 22, 6:21am  

You people can't f'in read. .


The lawyer has already passed a much harder exam, paid much higher fees, and completed a much more intensive background check. DRE is a joke compared to the California Bar.

What do you mean "you people" Har, har, har.

Seriously though, your whole fantasy premise makes you come off like a cheapskate buyer looking for a free ride. Only a desperate realtor or attorney would get involved with a client like you.

If the DRE exam is such a joke you'll have no problem passing it so you can start brokering your own deals and those for people that don't want to pay the 3%. You'll do it for $1000 bucks, right?

The idea that attorneys who typically bill out at anywhere from $275 to $400 per hour would touch this is ludicrous. On these low end deals realtors are lucky if they net out one tenth that amount after spits and costs.

There are other ways to save money on the deal, but this ain’t one of them.

36   corntrollio   2011 Jul 22, 6:45am  

Zoas says

If the DRE exam is such a joke you'll have no problem passing it so you can start brokering your own deals and those for people that don't want to pay the 3%. You'll do it for $1000 bucks, right?

I posted the sample questions above. The attorneys in the crowd will agree with me that several questions are simple for attorneys and others just involve basic math. Some of them are ridiculously basic for lawyers (i.e. you wouldn't even need the in-depth knowledge that you got studying for the bar to answer a basic multiple choice question about consideration).

Zoas says

The idea that attorneys who typically bill out at anywhere from $275 to $400 per hour would touch this is ludicrous.

You must be dealing with non-big firm attorneys. Big firm attorneys can top out at 4 digits if you're a partner in a specialty, and even $700 or more if not. Other attorneys work for corporations or for government or even (gasp) public interest, and don't make that kind of coin. In fact, there are a large number of attorneys who make quite a bit less than 6 figures if you look at national numbers. Not that many people work at big firms, and the number who do has been dwindling since 2008.

3% of $500K-$1M is a lot of money, especially if you buy more than one house. It'd be a bargain if you're an attorney to broker your own sales in these cases.

If you're not interested in putting in the effort, fine, but it's not hard. I know people who've done it, sometimes because they brokered two sales of their own and two family members'. Again, no driving around -- their relative found the house ahead of time and asked them to do the paperwork. My other buddy has their house plus two rentals, and his wife is an attorney and took the exam while on maternity leave, so they've probably saved at least $55K in brokerage fees, probably more. Instead they paid about $2500 to their real estate lawyer per transaction to review the standard realtor forms and got real legal advice on disclosures.

Honestly, this sort of goes to the "how do people get their money?" thread and the general idea that many millionaires are unassuming folks who aren't flashy but just work hard. If you're an enterprising person, there are tons of ways to put real money in your pocket. Why should you roll $55K in realtor fees into your mortgage and pay interest on it for 30 years?

37   thomas.wong1986   2011 Jul 22, 1:32pm  

With realtors making $30K-60K on single transation, may well explain "how do people get their money?" and some local income statistics over the past 10 years.

38   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Jul 22, 3:39pm  

Used a lawyer as our "buyers agent" in the 1980's, because the house we wanted was FBSO and that deal made me nervous. It went smoothly with using the lawyer. I don't know why more buyers don't do it that way.

39   La Dude   2011 Jul 23, 2:03am  

I am looking to buy at around 2M in santa monica, los angeles, north of montana ave. Now, I can either go with redfin or try to find an attorney who has broker licesnse and negotiate with him/ her some flat fee or per hour deal. I don't have an attorney friend. Advice will be appreciated.

40   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Jul 23, 2:12am  

La Dude says

I am looking to (transact) at around 2M ..... Now, I can either go with ... or try to find an attorney

2 M is a lot of money for something to go wrong in a transaction. Realtor® or no Realtor®, it sounds like maybe you oughta also have a lawyer reviewing your stuff before signing off on things.

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