LilBastage
Meat is murder! Tasty, tasty murder.
When we bought both of our houses the seller paid the commission to our agent each time. That's standard here. I don't know about other places.Doesn't this result in paying double the commission fees? IE. The seller paying the listing agent a commission and the buyer paying a commission to his agent? The end result being you're paying too much in commission fees?There's a lot of great advice here. I just want to clarify one point. And it really is one of the most misunderstood things in all of residential real estate.
The Realtor is always representing one party or the other (buyer or seller - never ''neither'') and owes that party full fiduciary responsibility. The only case in which this is not true is ''disclosed dual agency' (legal in Massachusetts), in which case the Realtor is representing both parties with consent of both.
As a buyer, the best way to avoid problems with this is to work with an exclusive buyers agent under contract to you. This way you know they are ALWAYS representing your best interests.
Oh, one other little hint, find an agent who has been through a couple of boom and bust cycles. They're a lot of amateurs out there selling real estate. You'll save yourself a lot of aggravation at closing.
Doc.
My best advice is to not settle. Don't get "that house" because it is close. Get what you want and what you are willing to live with 100% from the start. There's no worse feeling than dropping thousands of dollars and 3 months later regretting buying the house you settled for. Trust me on this one...
