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Competition In The Real Estate Brokerage Industry

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Understanding Commisson Rebates as written by the United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. To access the entire treatise please click, DOJ Cash Rebates.

 

C. Nontraditional Business Models

Although the data show that most consumers currently contract with a broker that supplies the full range of services traditionally offered by brokers, many consumers prefer to use brokers whose business models are alternatives to the traditional one. Some consumers may also choose to work with non-brokers who offer services that will facilitate the marketing and sale of their homes. The growing popularity of some of these new business models is likely linked to consumers' increasing use of, and comfort with, the Internet. In this Section we discuss the following non-traditional business models: (1) full-service discount brokers; (2) fee-for service brokers; (3) VOW brokers; (4) websites that provide advertising and other assistance to sellers who choose not to use a broker; and (5) referral networks.65

  1. Full-Service Discount Brokers

Discount brokers offer buyers and sellers full-service real estate brokerage services at a price lower than the prevailing commission fees.66 For example, a discount broker may offer all of the services provided by a traditional broker for a 3 or 4 percent commission in an area where 6 to 7 percent is the prevailing rate. In addition, in states that do not prohibit them, brokers may offer rebates (i.e. cash payments) and inducements, such as gift certificates, coupons, vouchers, and discounted or free services relating to buying and selling a home, to buyers and sellers.67 These are incentives that typically are offered by cooperating brokers to home buyers to encourage them to use the brokers' services. For example, 1% Realty offers buyers a rebate of approximately 1 percent of the purchase price in states that have not prohibited rebates.68 Brokers sometimes also pay rebates to home sellers. For example, home sellers who are referred by one broker to another broker sometimes receive rebates. Additionally, some listing brokers pay their clients secret rebates rather than offering a lower listing commission in order to disguise discounting.69

Rebates are an important form of price competition under the traditional structure of real estate transactions because the seller and seller's broker, not the buyer's broker, determine the amount of the buyer's broker's commission via the listing agreement. Without rebates, if the buyer's broker were simply to reduce his or her commission, the savings would go to the seller's broker, not to the home buyer. As one panelist explained: the mechanics of the typical real estate transaction make it difficult for a buyer's broker to reduce the price of his or her services because the "custom of the industry" is for the listing broker to split his or her commission with the buyer's broker.70 Rebates, therefore, can be powerful tools for price competition between brokers. And by returning money to home buyers, rebates can also benefit home sellers, because buyers will have more to spend on the home as opposed to commission payments.

To view the entire report written by the FTC, titled, "COMPETITION IN THE REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE INDUSTRY," Click Here.