Lodi News-Sentinel

Commission­s fall to new lows as homes fly off the market

- Jeff Ostrowski BANKRATE.COM

Forget 6 percent, once the going rate for real estate commission­s. The average brokerage fee in the United States fell to an alltime low in 2020, remaining below 5 percent.

Real Trends, a Colorado-based research firm that issues a widely cited survey on the topic, says the average commission slid to 4.94 percent in 2020 from 4.96 percent in 2019 and 5.03 percent in 2018. Commission­s typically decline in strong seller’s markets like that of 2020, a year when homes sold quickly and many sellers were inundated with multiple offers over the list price.

Realogy Corp., the nation’s largest broker, reports a different trend. Realogy — which owns the Coldwell Banker, Century 21, ERA and Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty brands — says the average commission rate at its company-owned operations rose to 2.43 percent per “transactio­n side” in 2020, up from 2.41 percent in 2019. If the listing agent and the buyer’s agent split the take equally, that would suggest an average commission of 4.86 percent last year. For consumers and Realtors, billions are at stake. Americans spent an estimated $86 billion in real estate commission­s last year, according to Real Trends. On a $400,000 sale, a 6 percent commission would add $24,000 to the cost of the transactio­n, while a 5 percent fee would cost $20,000.

The commission trends seem to indicate that consumers have room to negotiate with their Realtors, a market reality that only intensifie­d during the seller’s market of 2020. With most homes selling quickly and for more than asking price, sellers might be able to drive a harder bargain.

Commission rates have been falling steadily for decades, although they briefly bounced back during the Great Recession before resuming their long slide. It might seem counterint­uitive, but consumers have proven willing to pay agents a higher commission rate in difficult markets.

For Realtors, the decline in commission rates has been offset by rising home prices. They get a smaller piece of the pie, but the pie is getting bigger.

In 2009, for instance, Realogy said half the commission was worth 2.51 percent. The company’s average home sale price was $390,688 that year, and the typical Realogy agent made $10,519 for representi­ng one party in the transactio­n, the company told the Securities and Exchange Commission.

By 2020, Realogy’s average sale price had climbed to $553,081. So even though the typical take for half the commission had fallen to 2.43 percent, the typical fee for representi­ng the buyer or seller rose to $13,990. Meanwhile, commission­s at Realogy’s franchise operations rose to 2.48 percent in 2020 from 2.47 percent per side in 2019.

A quick primer on how commission­s are set: The seller negotiates a fee with the listing agent, typically 2 percent to 3 percent of the sale price of the home. The seller also decides how much to pay a buyer agent who brings a purchaser to the property; that number typically appears in the multiple listing service data about the property. The National Associatio­n of Realtors, long fearful of allegation­s of antitrust violations, stresses that rates are set by individual agents and their clients. Realtors are quick to point out that they only get paid when a deal is consummate­d. All of the work they perform during property tours and open houses and home inspection­s is done for free, in anticipati­on of a pay day at the closing table.

Commission­s are falling in part because consumers have been conditione­d to push for better deals on everything.

“The continued decline in commission rates seems to reflect both rising housing prices, especially in higher-income urban areas, and an increase in consumer willingnes­s to ask about these rates,” says Stephen Brobeck, senior fellow at the Consumer Federation of America.

 ?? MARTHA ASENCIO RHINE/TAMPA BAY TIMES ?? Realtor Carol Hasbrouck poses for a photo at a home she recently sold in the Allendale neighborho­od in St. Petersburg, Fla. The house went under contract less than three days after she formally listed it, a quick turnaround that has become typical in today’s market.
MARTHA ASENCIO RHINE/TAMPA BAY TIMES Realtor Carol Hasbrouck poses for a photo at a home she recently sold in the Allendale neighborho­od in St. Petersburg, Fla. The house went under contract less than three days after she formally listed it, a quick turnaround that has become typical in today’s market.

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