this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2024
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Why? Mine did a shit ton of work for me and fought the sellers to get them to do the shit the appraiser wanted done.
As well as working for almost a year looking at different houses before we finally found the right one
3% (as customary is 6%, split evenly to each realtor) of 485100 is about 15k
So a few hours of emails and phone calls is somehow $15k worth of work?
They probably had 50 other clients also during that time. Some of them pan out and is the 15k payday. Ultimately they only need to sell (or buy) like 10 houses a year to make a better living than you likely have. Less than 1 a month.
Do you think a house gets sold every day, or that everyone ends up buying? Or that they even get that $15k as take home?
The industry around home sales is absolutely gross, but the broker is taking a cut here. Not all real estate agents are brokers, in fact most are not. On average, most agents are making as little as $60k/yr and as high as $100k/year, region dependant. Average is going to be around $85k. Above that $100k mark is the top quartile, and above $130k-ish is going to be the top 10%.
It's not as lucrative as you think it is.
Please point me to where I said "every day". Pretty sure I said "less than 1 a month". Far from "every day".
Uh...
Never said take home either. But if I make 1 sale a month... and I get 15k out of that sale... and after everything is done, walk away with HALF... 7.5*12 = 90k... That's STILL MORE THAN MOST PEOPLE. My point has literally not even close to changed.
And? If your pulling those numbers from BLS or similar sources... You're missing the fact that all of these realtors work under LLCs and that the 60-100k is take home. Which ignores that the LLC owns the car they drive, the cell they use, the miles they drive, etc... My own LLC does the same thing. I take home 80k, my company pulls in 160k, but a good chunk goes to operating costs and the rest sits in the company to grow it(or if contracts dry up, the continue operating until I can obtain new ones). They're doing the same shit. They have access to the added funds.
Duh? Those that make more than one sale a month! Almost like I already addressed this.
It's exactly as lucrative as I think it is. And all your "Arguments" to change my opinion fall flat at best. Show me realtors who only make 1% or less per home they sell (keep in mind that this is still "JUST" $4,951 per home on average) and I'll shut the fuck up. Until then you're wrong. And if you're going to tell me that I've said something I didn't say again... I'm just going to block you.
And BTW...
https://www.homelight.com/blog/how-many-homes-does-a-realtor-sell-a-year/
So my "One sale a month" was dead on accurate.
And it also turns out in that same link... the BLS data would be severely tainted by one simple fact...
Clearly, you should be in real estate immediately. It's obviously super easy, and with your math that's super accurate and in no way an understanding far separate from reality, clearly you'll be a multi-millionaire within a few short months.
Good luck!
Ah yes, you misrepresent a bunch of shit that I said.. I call it out... and even back most of it with evidence. You turn into a child and run away. Congrats!
Mine didn’t get anywhere near that much and I think she earned every penny of it.
I tried to go at it without one at first and I know exactly how hard that was, I have no doubt that she earned every penny of what she got.
Also is it illegal to tip a realtor or mortgage loan officer?
Because they both refused the money I tried to tip them very quickly and firmly.
In some states it's illegal and in some others just highly discouraged to tip your realtor. A top to your mortgage loan officer would probably look like a bribe. Not sure outside the US though.
That’s understandable but a shame at the same time.
They both worked really hard for me, so far as them being the ones to text me after 5 about something
Why would you tip your realtor or loan officer?
Because they both did a kick ass job for me, to the point of working outside business hours to answer all my questions
They realtor doesn't get all of that $15k. I forget the actual numbers but the company they work for gets a chunk as well as other people. Yes, there is a $15k commission but that's not all going to the agent.
Our agent was a cool dude. It was the sellers that were always out of their mind. The lady who sold us our house hired a junk hauler to clean the attic. He had an accident and fell through the ceiling. No big. He said he'd cover the cost of repair. She didn't want to do any of the work to make it happen, though. She said we needed to arrange the repair.
Insanity. Only in the market we've been in would this kind of thing be acceptable. But we'd put offers in on about 15 different houses. All of them got outbid. Not only was this one the least expensive, it's also one of the better built ones (fully brick clad, for starters). It was our first offer to be taken. We were exhausted with the process and ready to move. So I called the handyman and arranged the repair.
And then I called the junk hauler who said he'd cover the cost of repair. And when I told him the damage was $350, he RENEGGED. Said that was too steep. Couldn't we find someone cheaper? He will have lost money on this job. Blah blah blah. I told him look, I don't care about 350 bucks. And if he didn't want to pay, then whatever, I have nothing in writing. But the house had to be inspected after that and ofc it shows in the report and so that was a shitty thing for him to do. And I hung up the phone.
4 weeks later, I got a check in the mail for $300. Even in making it right, the bastard cheaped out on me.
I hope this is it. I love my house. It needs love here and there. It's old, but it's got great bones. Plus, it's in a really nice area close to a lot of stuff. I do NOT want to deal with this bullshit for at least another 30 years.
Lol cool story thanks for sharing, hoping to get into the market soon while prices are at all time highs.. "Harold face"
I'm amazed at the downvotes, people stanning for realtOrs now? They work, but it's not a hard job, no extensive education, no incentive to get lower prices because that actually eats into their cut, they resist any improvements to the system, and frankly love the high prices because it just earns them more since they work on % of sale value.
I'm not here to argue with you, rather than to point out it's disingenious to say it's not hard work. Also, there is actually an incentive to get lower prices, for if they weren't trying to get one people would choose another realtor. Also, you don't have to censor the world realtor.
JFC it's hard work in the sense that most jobs are hard work. But it's not hard work like engineering, tech, etc.
A little privileged there to be specifying jobs that require tens of thousands of dollars of education as a prerequisite, no?
Dude that's half the point. Realtors are paid so much and it doesn't even require/take much. I never thought I'd expect people defending realtors.
Oh, I don't give a crap about the realtors. I'm just not a fan of STEM being placed above other fields when it's inaccessible to people without either having been born into money or taking on substantial debts.
It's just what came to mind. Teachers, trades, technicians, whatever. Realtor takes like a couple week course or something.
And in case people misread me, yes I think there should be good jobs without post secondary. Realtors are excessive and they fight to keep their effective monopoly and effective collusion.
As a software engineer, I can say that almost all Realtors work harder and longer than I do. My job isn't really hard work. It can be stressful, and it requires a good chunk of prerequisite knowledge, but it is not 'hard work'.
I think you have the wrong idea of what hard work is. Go do some construction, landscaping, retail, or work in a kitchen/restaurant if you really want to see hard work.
There's complicated (hard) work, and there's physically demanding (hard) work. Realtor is neither.
Imagine thinking that engineering is hard work. Go learn a science, dude.
The percentage they get has come down as house prices went up relatively. And they for sure still have to do a good job for you. Ideally they should save you as much as they make in the end. If your agent didn't meet those expectations, they should be out of business soon.