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WHAT
YOUR EXCLUSIVE BUYER'S AGENT DOES FOR YOU

Most people who buy a home rely on the
assistance of a real estate agent. Many of
those homebuyers believe their agent knows
everything about real estate, from how much they
should pay for their home to whether that home
has termites. Good real estate agents do
know a lot, but they don't know everything.
Real estate standards of practice are
regulated by federal, state, and local laws.
And any agent who is a member of the National
Association of Realtors (i.e., a
"Realtor") must comply with N.A.R.'s
Code of Ethics. Beyond that, how much your
real estate agent knows is a function of his or
her training and experience. Here's a
rough idea of what agents do and know in the
areas of house-hunting, price negotiation,
zoning, and inspections.
It may seem obvious, but what agents do best
is help you find a home you want to purchase.
The process includes searching the Multiple
Listing Service (MLS), previewing and
prescreening homes, and conducting home showings
for you.
If you sign an exclusive buyer's agent
agreement, the agent will go beyond the MLS and
search among new housing developments and
for-sale-by-owner (FSBO) homes, theoretically
giving you not only "more bang for your
buck", but also providing you with
information you might not otherwise obtain using
a traditional (seller's) agent. If you don't
sign an agreement, the agent will be
reluctant to show you homes that aren't in the
MLS for two separate reasons. One,
if it isn't clear as to who they are serving,
they can be in trouble with the laws and ethics
of the state they're operating in, and two, they
may not get paid!
Once you've located a home you'd like to buy,
you'll want your agent to help you negotiate the
purchase price. How much assistance you
can expect to receive depends in part on whether
the agent who found the home is representing you
or is actually representing the seller.
That's not as easy to determine as it might
seem, so you
should ALWAYS ask your agent who they represent,
and if buying, keep searching until you find an
exclusive buyer's agent!
If the Realtor is a buyer's agent, they have
a fiduciary responsibility to do the best they
can to get the very best price and terms for
you. You can ask your buyer's agent to do
a market analysis and show you what comparable
properties are being sold for in the
marketplace. An agent also can tell you
what amenities in the home might make it more
valuable than comparable homes on the market.
Your agent won't be able to tell you exactly
how much you should pay for a particular home.
Each buyer has unique needs and wants, and you
are the only person who can decide how much a
home is worth to you. You are buying
amenities that sometimes are `priceless.'
If someone needs to be able to walk to work and
there is a house that fits that person, it might
be worth a few more dollars to them than it
would be worth to anybody else. The agent
can tell you what other people might pay for it
or what's happening with similar houses in that
neighborhood, but you're the final judge.
Matters are similar when it comes to
Inspections. Your Buyer's Agent will
generally know what inspections are common to
the area. In some areas of the East Coast,
radon is a big issue. In California,
termite infestation is a big issue. In
some areas, dry rot and roof conditions are big
issues. An agent also can tell you the cost of
various inspections and recommend inspectors you
may want to hire.
However, few agents are qualified to tell you
specifically which inspections you must have or
interpret the results of an inspection.
And agents aren't mind-readers. Your agent
can't advise you about inspections or other
matters if you don't tell him or her your
concerns. The biggest misconception is
that the Realtor is going to be the expert on
all matters. The moral is: When in doubt,
ask your agent to direct you to the source of
the information, then investigate it yourself.
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