For years, our industry has fervently debated who really pays the commission — the buyer or the seller. This debate turned up at the final session of Inman Disconnect, where one attendee argued that it’s the buyers who actually pay the commission because it’s embedded in the purchase price. Here’s why this argument is wrong.
Source: Inman News
Why it’s actually the seller who pays our commission
More from AgentMore posts in Agent »
- NAR economist predicts post-shutdown real estate ‘boom’
- RateMyAgent and Curated Social merge to form Renowned platform
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- Crack the code on social media: Now Streaming
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
More from bernice rossMore posts in bernice ross »
- 10 compelling reasons that your buyers should purchase now
- 10 old school marketing strategies that still work in this tough market
- 5 creative strategies to overcome seller staging objections
- 10 hot strategies to help sell your listings this fall
- ‘Is it cheaper to rent or buy today?’ How to answer that question
More from commissionMore posts in commission »
- NAR’s Kevin Sears: We need to ‘show everybody that we as Realtors are pro-consumer’
- The anti-lawsuit way of presenting your fee: Now Streaming
- The 4 types of listing appointments you must have: Now Streaming
- Massachusetts broker arrested, accused of embezzling $11.6M
- How the ‘bro climate’ is failing new real estate agents and their clients
More from OpinionMore posts in Opinion »
- Why independent brokerages matter more than ever amid real estate consolidation
- Stop freaking out about 50-year mortgages. They might save the housing market
- Real estate has become lawsuit-happy, and it’s killing our credibility
- Why ‘leadership’ shouldn’t be a dirty word in real estate
- Why commissions have risen since the 2024 NAR settlement
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- HUD shifts homeless policy away from providing permanent housing
- Pulte refers a 4th Democrat, Rep. Eric Swalwell, for mortage fraud
- RateMyAgent and Curated Social merge to form Renowned platform
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
Be First to Comment