New York Post

HOME BUYER BREAK

Realtor fee cut likely

- By ARIEL ZILBER With Wires azilber@nypost.com

The National Associatio­n of Realtors on Friday agreed to a landmark settlement over claims that it conspired to inflate agent commission­s — a deal that will likely lower costs and upend how Americans buy and sell homes.

The powerful lobbying group will pay $418 million in the nationwide antitrust suit, which also calls for the NAR to eliminate decades-old rules on commission­s and make it easier for buyers to negotiate fees with their own agents or use no agents at all.

The NAR also agreed to do away with a long-standing practice that required homesale listings to include an upfront offer which set agent fees.

The changes could spur more home sales by lowering commission­s — typically between 5% and 6% — that could save buyers thousands of dollars, a needed relief for lesswealth­y individual­s and families struggling with inflationa­ry pressures or being priced out of their neighborho­ods.

But it may also reduce revenue for traditiona­l real estate brokerages, and make employment less lucrative and appealing to the more than 1 million members the NAR represents.

“What needs to change is education standards to get rid of second-rate bottomfeed­er agents who muck everything up for the good ones who have a real passion for what they do and provide a real service,” Jarrod Randolph, CEO of real estate investment firm Vestre Partners, told The Post.

Real estate brokers earned an average $90,000 a year as of May 2022, about 50% above the national average for all jobs, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

$12,500 savings

TD Cowen analysts expect the settlement could reduce commission­s by 25% to 50%. For a typical American home, the median price of which was $417,700 in last year’s fourth quarter, that could mean a potential $12,500 of savings.

The settlement was announced 4¹/₂ months after a federal jury in Kansas City, Mo., ordered the NAR and several brokerages to pay $1.78 billion in an antitrust case covering agents in that state. A judge there may triple the damages.

Several similar lawsuits have been filed around the country.

Defendants in the litigation have included HomeServic­es of America, part of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.

Anywhere Real Estate, Compass, Douglas Elliman, Keller Williams and Re/Max are among other brokerages that have been sued.

Share prices for several brokerages fell, including some by double-digit percentage­s, after the settlement was announced. Some homebuilde­rs’ shares, including Lennar and Toll Brothers, gained on the news.

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