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"Meat-in-the-Middle" Toughest for FSBOs -
Part VI
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Source: Julie Garton-Good ©2001
Using
Retainer Fees in Fee-for-Services Real Estate.
If you're a
for-sale-by-owner, wanting to contract with a fee-for-services
professional for only the services you need, is there any benefit to
using a retainer fee, perhaps as a motivator? And
what about accessing fee-for-services professionals
to reduce your risk as a for-sale-by-owner, even if
you're successful at selling your own home?
Let's tackle the second question, first. Depending on the degree of
risk you're trying to shed, the answer is possibly "yes",
it may pay to use fee-for-service professionals at
checkpoints throughout your FSBO transaction.
Especially for troubleshooting the "meat-in-the-middle" I
suggest you hire one or more professionals to double-check the
paper work at various phases of the transaction.
This would include a real estate agent to check property information
before presenting it to buyers, a real estate
attorney to review the purchase and sales agreement
before your final signature is obtained and perhaps a home
inspector to do a pre-listing inspection. The latter is a great way to know
the condition of the property before putting it on
the market and help prevent a buyer from later
uncovering problems (often when they obtain their own
inspection) that might cause the transaction to fall apart. In many real
estate markets today, home inspectors will give an
all-inclusive fee that covers the pre-listing
inspection plus another inspection once the buyer is
found.
Now for fee retainers. A myriad of professions require their
use---attorneys, CPAs, even orthodontists! But is it
in the consumer's best interest to place a retainer
with a fee-for-service professional? Yes, if the consumer is serious
about establishing a firm working relationship with the
professional, wants results prioritized on his behalf
and is motivated to move to a timely solution. By
placing a fee retainer with a professional, you not only show
your good faith, but show your motivation in getting to results. As real
estate professionals would tell you, a consumer
without proper motivation is very difficult, if not
impossible, to help.
Most professionals base their retainer fees on a multiple of their
hourly rate, a percentage of their flat fee, or other
similar formula. Retainers can be either refundable
or non-refundable (often depending on what's permissible
by the licensing law for real estate agents in the particular state.) Make
sure that the fee-for-service agreement you sign
specifies whether the retainer fee can be refunded;
and if so, under what circumstances.
While saving the commission is
the primary motivator in going it alone as a seller,
it can be a time-consuming, laborious, even expensive process.
Making it to and through the "meat-in-the-middle" should find
you pleasantly on the uphill side of the sale. If you
drown somewhere in between, know that there's help
from unbundled, reinvented professionals in a variety of
specialties and fee structures, prepared to throw you a FSBO lifeline.
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