Hi everyone! I’m a 20-year-old architecture student hoping to buy a property in my college town within the next year or so, and I’m looking for advice on what I can do right now to put myself in the best position possible. I know some people may think this is unrealistic, and that’s okay. I’m not looking for people to tell me to give up. If it doesn’t work out next summer, I’ll still have built savings, improved my credit, and learned more about the process for when I am ready. I’m trying to be intentional and set myself up for success. A little background: I’m an architecture student with minors in sustainability and construction management. My family has years of real estate experience and multiple family members have real estate licenses, so I have people who can help me evaluate properties and avoid mistakes. I currently rent in my college town, and my lease ends next summer. My goal is to buy a single-family home, condo, or small multifamily property, live in it for at least ...
So, looking at selling my house for $450k and looking at agent fees...6% shared seems rather steep to me. I'm an easy seller and the house should sell pretty quick, it's in good shape. Basically, I've lived here less than a year and i HATE the neighborhood. When i bought the house, it had a lot of repairs that needed doing, so I've put in $30k. Bought the house for $340k. 450-340=110. 110-30= 80k. Minus closing costs estimate $15k. 80-15=65k. With realtor fees at 6% split between buyer agent and my agent would be 27k. 65-27=38k. And that's not including all the other associated fees and any potential concessions. At 5% agent split its still high at $22500. At 4%, $18k. Now I don't know about you, but if i had an easy sell house, and they closed in 45days, i would be pretty stoked with $9000 for that work. Is it unreasonable to ask for 4% split? I know ppl think it narrows the buyer pool because buyer agents don't want to show houses that are low commiss, an...