Have you seen the claim that “research shows” that real estate agents sell homes for 13% higher prices than people who sell their homes themselves? Does that seem right to you?
I wouldn’t be surprised if real estate agents sold homes for prices that are a few percentage points higher than homes sold directly by homeowners but 13% more didn’t seem plausible to me.
So being a trained economist, in addition to being a real estate agent the last 12 years, I decided to track down the origin of this beloved real estate agent data point.
Note: A home the owner is selling directly to buyers without using a real estate agent is called a “For Sale By Owner” or “FSBO” by real estate agents.
Can a real estate agent really sell your house for 13% more than you can?
If you’re FSBO-curious and looking into your options for selling your house, this is a hugely important question for you.
If a real estate agent could actually sell your house for 13% more than you could yourself, then your decision is made. People would never sell their houses themselves, they’d always hire a real estate agent and get, on average, 13% more.
But if, on the other hand, that 13% number is an exaggeration, you’d want to know that when you’re deciding whether to sell your house yourself or to hire an agent.
You need accurate information to make good choices.
Unfortunately, if you’re researching your options online, you’ll run into a lot of disinformation about selling your house yourself.
Clearly, for some people, selling their homes themselves is a good option. Around 500,000 houses a year in the United States are, in fact, sold directly from seller to buyer.
My goal here is to give you accurate information to help you make the best decision possible for you and your family.
Eureka!
That didn’t take long! I quickly found the origin of our real estate agent myth.
The National Association of REALTORS® loves this paragraph, they highlighted it in a recent report (2014 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, National Association of REALTORS®);
“FSBOs typically have a lower median selling price: $208,700 compared to $235,000. Thus the typical agent-assisted home sale typically has a 13 percent higher sales price than the typical FSBO sale.”
Did you, by any chance, happen to get the idea from that quote that if you hire a real estate agent to sell your house, you can expect it to sell for 13% more than if you sold it yourself?
If you did think that, you’re certainly not alone.
Here’s an advice column on Realtor.com.
- “However, statistics show that selling your home with the assistance of a professional real estate agent will garner you a higher profit, enough to cover the commission as well as put more money in your pocket.”
And here are some too typical quotes from four different real estate agent websites.
- “Did you know that home sellers that use a real estate professional on average get 16% more in the sale of their home?”
- “Even after commissions, statistics show that listing your home with a professional versus trying to sell by owner (FSBO) results in not only a faster sale but more money for the seller.”
- “Plus, sellers who use an agent usually make more on their home sale, even after paying an agent’s commission.”
- “I know, you might hesitate to use a realtor to avoid those commissions but did you know studies show most FSBO’s get less for their property than if they used a realtor (even after accounting for commissions)?”
And check out this detail of an infographic that appears on many real estate agent websites. Don’t miss the disclaimer in the small print at the bottom. The disclaimer tells me they know they’re being misleading.
Misleading Claim
It’s clear the National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) is misleading many people into believing that NAR studies prove real estate agents can sell homes for 13% more than homeowners. (Non-NAR members can buy the full NAR report for $250.)
The National Association of REALTORS® gives us a clue to one weird trick behind the highlighted “13%” number with this quote, “FSBO sales are more likely than agent-assisted sales to be a mobile or manufactured home. Nine percent of all FSBO sales are mobile homes compared to only three percent of agent-assisted sales.” (The accompanying table, however, shows agent-assisted sales to only be 2%.)
Unnecessarily including mobile and manufactured homes into the mix really skews their results against FSBOs.
When my imagination runs away with itself, I interpret that to mean, “We could have published a comparison using single-family detached homes only (no mobile homes) but the difference between agents and FSBO’s wasn’t as big so we didn’t publish that.”
Cheap FSBOs vs. Luxury FSBOs
By the way, you might think because of all the money to be saved that FSBOs would be a lot more popular with luxury home sellers, but they’re not.
FSBO’s tend to be more common with less expensive homes.
When a home is priced less than a used Range Rover, it’s more likely to be sold like a used car too. Or like my friend Dean says it in a comment below, “Who is more likely to sell a car on their own, the Ford Escort owner or the Bentley owner?”
And if you have a $10,000 mobile home, good luck trying to find a real estate agent to help you sell it.
The Whole Geeky Truth
The whole geeky truth isn’t that real estate agents can sell homes for more money, it’s that FSBOs tend to be more popular with inexpensive homes (mobile homes, manufactured homes and condos) and in inexpensive areas (rural areas, small towns and the Midwest).
It’s as if one real estate agent told another;
“I’m a better agent than you because I sell homes for higher prices than you.”
And the other agent said;
“You only sell single family homes and I sell single family homes and condos so, of course, my average sale price will be lower than yours. That doesn’t mean you’re better than me at selling homes.”
If the National Association of REALTORS® wanted to better prove their members could sell homes for more than FSBOs, they could easily publish a comparison of the median sale prices of homes sold with and without agent assistance – and here’s the important part – for single-family detached homes (only) in one region or state (only).
I bet in such a single-family-homes-only study that more than half that 13% difference would disappear.
NAR no doubt has that data, they just don’t publish it. (I wonder if total mayhem would break out in the NAR lunchroom, if NAR economists tried to publish a number that was less than the magic 6%.)
But even a study like that wouldn’t remove all anti-FSBO bias. For example, within the Midwest, FSBOs will likely to be more popular in rural/small towns where home prices tend to be cheaper.
The Ideal Study
The ideal study, I think, would be to compare the sale prices of similar units within condo complexes.
I’ve never seen such a study but here’s a study that in some ways is even better.
“The Relative Performance of Real Estate Marketing Platforms: MLS Versus FSBOMadison.com,” Hendel, Nivo and Ortalo-Magne (2007)
Why this study is so good;
- It looked at single family homes only – it didn’t confuse things by adding in mobile and manufactured homes and condos and townhouses.
- It looked at only one area, Madison Wisconsin – it didn’t confuse things by combining different regions that have different home prices and different levels of FSBO popularity.
- It corrected for neighborhoods and house characteristics like square footage and number of bedrooms, which essentially means it compared the prices of FSBO and non-FSBO sales of similar homes in similar neighborhoods. Nice!
- It had tons of data, 15,606 home sales were in its dataset.
NAR Study vs. Madison, Wisconsin Study
I was surprised by the results of the Madison study. I figured that since FSBOs were saving around 6% on real estate agent commissions that FSBOs would sell for a bit less than homes sold by real estate agents.
But that’s not what the Madison, Wisconsin study showed. They found 0% difference in home sold prices between agents and FSBOs. (You can find the full economic study here.)
There’s no conflict between the two studies
- The NAR study simply says cheaper homes are more likely to be sold as FSBOs.
- The Madison, Wisconsin study simply says real estate agents in Madison, Wisconsin didn’t sell their clients’ homes for more than FSBOs sold theirs.
NAR’s Response
I’d characterize NAR’s response to the Madison, Wisconsin study as “What happens in Madison, stays in Madison,” meaning the Madison, Wisconsin real estate market is unique and the facts on the ground there don’t reflect reality in other cities or in the United States as a whole.
There’s some truth to that argument. I’d point out that Madison had an unusually popular FSBO website, FSBOMadison.com, and a relatively large FSBO market share, 14% of all homes sold were sold as FSBOs. Areas with smaller, less developed FSBO markets might fare differently.
NAR doesn’t mention this but the State of Wisconsin publishes a free real estate sales contract form that both agents and FSBOs use. That simplifies the paperwork a bit for Wisconsin FSBOs.
Nevertheless, until I see equally precise economic studies from other cities or states that show a different result, for me, the “research shows” that, on average, real estate agents don’t sell homes for more than FSBOs.
1 Pinocchio
So I concluded that this favorite talking point of Team Real Estate Agent is – I’ll be polite here – misleading.
Anyone who tells you that real estate agents sell homes for 13% more than FSBOs is selling you.
But let’s not get carried away here. Even though the internet is filled with disinformation about FSBOs that doesn’t mean selling FSBO is a good choice for most people.
In fact, I personally believe that hiring a real estate agent to sell your house is still the best option for a large majority of people.
I also believe, on the other hand, that as more people get accurate information about FSBOs, that more people will go FSBO and more people will be successful selling their homes FSBO.
FSBOs are only 9% of U.S. home sales. Even if they grow, they’ll still be small. FSBOs aren’t a threat to the other 91% of the market.
Takeaway
Hiring a real estate agent doesn’t make you money, it saves you a lot of work and worry.
If you’re FSBO-curious and checking out your options for selling your home, I hope this piece has been useful to you.
My goal here has been to give you accurate information so you can make the best decisions possible for you and your family.
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Have you ever sold a home FSBO? How did that go for you? Tell us in a comment below. Your experience can help other people who are trying to decide whether or not to sell their homes themselves.
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7 Responses to FSBOs vs. Real Estate Agents. Do agents really sell homes for 13% more?
Thanks for reading this far! Feel free to jump in and make a comment.
I think this myth got around because real estate agents and brokers are able to sell really well. Their job is primarily to buy and sell homes. It would be a great skill to have because you could sell homes and make a good amount of money really easily.
Bingo. I always scream this is so misleading. I always go back to a car example. Who is more likely to sell a car on their own, the Ford Escort owner or the Bentley owner? Skews the numbers. But at the same time you should ask yourself why is the person with the million dollar house not selling by owner while the person with the 70k condo doing it own their own? But yes this needs to be called out. It’s always the first comment out of agents mouth and so misleading
Wow! That’s a great way to explain it! I’m stealing that. Thanks!
A new study came out comparing FSBO to MLS sales and it found FSBOs sell for 5.5% less than MLS sales, http://collateralanalytics.com/saving-real-estate-commissions-at-any-price/.
5.5% seems a lot more reasonable than 13% and I like that they don’t include condos and mobile homes like the NAR studies. But the study does have problems.
They call all sales that weren’t listed in the MLS as FSBOs. So if you sell your house to your kid in a sweetheart deal, this study would consider that a FSBO sale. It wouldn’t take too many sweetheart family deals to skew the FSBO numbers down. Or, let’s say you never put a “For Sale” sign in your yard or put an ad in Craigslist, but you called “We Buy Ugly Houses” and sold it, the study would call that a FSBO. The article doesn’t say how they handle foreclosures. I suspect bank foreclosures were also considered to be FSBOs in this study.
FSBOs that were listed in the MLS are not called FSBOs. In many places a seller can pay an agent, say, $250 to list the home in the local MLS but that is the only service the agent provides. Thye are essentially FSBOs but in this study, those would NOT be called FSBOs.
They use average instead of median home prices. Averages can be easily skew by a small number of outliers. Medians can’t. I’m sure the differences between FSBOs and MLS would be smaller looking at median prices.
There could be some weird artifact in their AVM algo that skews the numbers against FSBOs.
It’s also weird that the average price of FSBOs in their study was significantly HIGHER than MLS sales. It may be that their AVM is less accurate with more expensive homes and that its error systematically tend to be on the high side. Anyway, there’s something weird going on with the FSBOs being MORE expensive than MLS sales.
Nevertheless, I wouldn’t be at all surprised if agents sold homes for more than FSBOs but 5.5% still seems a little high to me.
[…] To prove that point, note that 10 percent of for sale by owner homes are manufactured or mobile homes, which sell for much lower prices than single-family homes. Whereas, only 2 percent of homes sold by agents are manufactured or mobile homes, according to Real Estate Decoded. […]
You mentioned reasons why you thought the FSBO price average should be pretty close to the MLS price but you failed to mention why Realtors may get more money than FSBO’s.. 87% of buyers purchased their home through a real estate agent or broker—a share that has steadily increased from 69 percent in 2001 (NAR) so there must be a reason. One of the biggest differences is the exposure. Agents dominate the market and the more competition, the more someone is willing to pay. And most FSBO’s eventually list their homes and buyers realize they can usually offer 6 or 7% less to a FSBO because of that. A seller then is faced with the question, “do I know i can do better if I list it?”
And since you think the mobile homes skews the results is Realtors favor, What about new homes. Most builders sell FSBO and the average sale price for new homes is quite a bit higher so that would skew it in favor of FSBO’s. There are other reasons I won’t get into here but I think it is clear you are doing the same thing you are accusing Realtors of doing. Deceiving people by presenting selected facts.
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