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Culing the RE agent herd!

OMG. The horror!


Mediocre agents are out

By Sami Sparber, Axios News

Sept 14, 2024


Real estate brokers may be singing for their suppers after new rules on commissions kicked in last month.


Why it matters: Changes from a National Association of Realtors settlement could prove especially tough for what Business Insider calls the country's "glut of mediocre Realtors," including amateurs and those whose services might not be worth the price to homebuyers.


What we're hearing: Industry veterans expect the changes to weed out lackluster agents.


"There are lesser agents who are either newer or they don't [know] how to articulate: 'This is what I bring to you as an agent,'" Chicago agent Jesse Treviño tells Axios.

Catch up quick: The status quo is that home sellers typically pay a 5–6% commission, which is split between the buying and selling agents.


Buyers should now be compensating their own brokers, per the settlement reached in March — meaning buyer brokers can't count on a share of seller proceeds.

Reality check: Many longtime agents say they're not sweating it; the field has grown too big.


Seasoned pros "are going to make more money" because there will be fewer "Realtors out there who don't know what they're doing," says Laura Ellis, president of residential sales at Chicago-based Baird & Warner.

By the numbers: The average Chicagoland buyer agent commission was 2.35% in July, down from 2.44% in January, before the settlement was announced, according to Redfin.


Commissions are projected to continue falling nationally.

What they're saying: "At the end of the day, the market is going to decide whether there are too many Realtors or not enough Realtors," says Nate Johnson, vice president of advocacy at the National Association of Realtors, which is headquartered in Chicago.


What we're watching: Sellers can continue offering to cover the buyer's agent commission.


As some brokers look for workarounds to the rules, new websites are making it easy to learn if that's the case, HousingWire reports.

2. Broker exodus begins


The line chart shows the annual number of full-time real estate agents and brokers in the U.S. from 2000 to 2023. The number peaked at 543,000 in 2019, before declining to 440,000 in 2023.

Data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics/Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; Chart: Axios Visuals

There were roughly 72,000 fewer full-time real estate agents and brokers in 2023 than the year before.


The big picture: The shrinkage comes as the volume of home sales has fallen — and now analysts expect the decline to continue after the settlement on commissions.


Between the lines: Nearly half of about 2,000 agents surveyed by the Consumer Federation of America say they sold fewer than two homes in 2023, The Washington Post reports.


Zoom out: The National Association of Realtors, which bills itself as the country's largest trade organization, counts about 1.5 million members.


That number has dropped over 100,000 since 2022, one industry observer told The Post.

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