Thursday, May 30, 2024

NAR Ruling FAQ From NC Association of Realtors


 Carolina Living and Roby Robertson does their best to keep their clients informed about the recent Litigation with regard to the National Association of Realtors.  Below are important points to consider.  If you are thinking of buying or selling, let us know what questions you have (no obligation).  

1. Listing Commissions: Cooperating compensation is still permitted, and as has been shown many times, it offers benefits to both buyers and sellers. It would be good to examine policies to make sure that sellers are being fully informed about how their commissions are used, including how much is being paid to cooperating agents. Sellers should be made aware that they are under no obligation to pay cooperating agent commissions, including cooperating compensation to seller subagents. 

2. Buyer Agent Commissions: a. Disclosure. Examine policies to make sure buyers are aware that sellers may not offer cooperating compensation, and that buyers may need to pay their agents from their own funds. b. Avoid Steering. Buyer agents should put their fiduciary duty to the buyer first and avoid steering their buyers only toward properties that offer cooperating compensation that will cover the buyer’s monetary obligation to their agent. c. A la Carte Compensation. Buyer agents may want to consider alternate forms of compensation, such as a flat fee or an hourly rate, if no cooperating compensation is offered. This may mean that buyer agents may want to consider altering the services they offer to reflect the amount of compensation due. d. VA Loans. Buyers using VA loans are still not permitted to pay buyer agent commissions from their own funds. Assisting these buyers is still important, but it may take time for the VA to adjust its policies, if it chooses to do so at all. In the interim, buyer agents will need to understand the risk in representing these clients if they find a property that does not offer cooperating compensation. Use existing tools designed for buyers and sellers like the North Carolina Real Estate Commission’s Working with Real Estate Agents Q&A to get the conversations about compensation started early. 

3. Use of Standard Form 220: Confirmation of Compensation, Agency, and Appointment: Agents may need to use Form 220 more often to negotiate cooperating compensation. Form 220 can be used by buyer agents and listing agents to negotiate cooperating compensation directly. Pursuant to Standard of Practice 3-1, cooperating agents should determine compensation terms, if any, prior to an offer being made. Remember that a REALTOR® may not make submission of an offer to purchase contingent on the listing firm adjusting its rate of cooperating compensation, if any. 

4. No Standard Commission Rates. It bears repeating that there is no standard commission rate. This is true for listing firm commissions, buyer agent commissions, seller subagent commissions, and cooperating compensation. Agents should negotiate their compensation with their sellers and buyers, and it should reflect the agent’s skill, value, time, and other factors, including whether cooperating compensation (whether offered or accepted) is in the client’s best interest.

No comments:

Lake Norman : Agents Take of Not offering Compensation in MLS

  On this week's episode of Real Estate Insiders Unfiltered , California agent   Chris Cragnotti shares his experience working with sell...