Call the Listing Agent or Get Your Own Agent?
Suppose you call the Realtor who is listing the property
you "might" be interested in and it turns out
that the house is absolutely perfect and affordable and
you want to make an offer? Do you want the same agent who
listed the home for sale and represents the seller to also
represent you? The odds are that everything would be okay
if you did, but it is risky. It would be like both the husband
and the wife using the same attorney to represent each of
them in a divorce. A more extreme example would be if you
sued somebody and agreed to let the opposing lawyer represent
you, too.
When you make an offer to buy a house, you are entering
a negotiation. The seller wants as high a price as possible
and the buyer wants the lowest price possible. If a Realtor
represents both sides, there is a conflict of interest,
though an ethical Realtor can equally represent both sides.
Most Realtors are very ethical and take their responsibilities
seriously. However, If the listing Realtor knows how much
you are willing to pay for a home or the loan amount you
have been qualified for, and that information gets somehow
passed on to the seller even though they are also representing
you as the homebuyer, you are at a disadvantage.
There are other ways that having the same Realtor represent
both sides of the transaction can be a negative as well.
Finding Your Own Realtor
Actually, the best thing for you to do when you see an
advertisement in the paper is to call your own Realtor and
tell them about the ad. Since addresses usually do not appear
in advertisements, your Realtor will call the listing agent
and find out which property is featured in the ad. It may
be a great home for you, but it may also be a property the
Realtor has already disregarded because it backed up to
a busy noisy street and you have told your Realtor you wanted
a quiet neighborhood.
First you have to have a Realtor you can call. How do you
find one?
Referrals are always a good way to go. Perhaps a friend,
co-worker, or family member recently bought a house in the
same community and had a good experience. However, if they
bought a house twenty miles from where you want to move,
it may not be a good idea to use the same Realtor. You want
one who knows the area in detail, and has already previewed
many of the homes available for sale in that community.
Community knowledge should be important to you because you
are not just buying a house. You are buying a home.
Every Realtor can show you every property available for
sale in the Multiple Listing Service. Since that is true,
you can call any real estate office and find a Realtor willing
to show you houses for sale. The problem is that you do
not know if you are talking to an excellent Realtor or a
lazy inactive one. Your first step should be to shop for
a Realtor, not to shop for property. Shop for a Realtor
the way you would shop for a good attorney, accountant,
mechanic, plumber, doctor, financial advisor, or other professional.
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© copyright 1999 by Terry Light and
RealEstate ABC