Skip to main content

Been stuck with a terrible agent

A few years back, I signed into an agreement with MV realty. Anyone who knows anything about them would know that many states have been coming after them for bad business practices. My state has not had their attorney general make a suit against them yet. I live in South Carolina. Basically, they have liens against our homes. I did not know that when I signed an agreement with them a few years back. For the last 5 months, I have been trying to sell my home so I can be closer to my son. MV realty has been terrible. My agent is 90 minutes away from where I live, has done hardly anything to promote my home, and sort of just been there. I have been lied to by them, ignored when asked for new pics of my home for the listing, and haven’t had many phone calls returned. The stress and anxiety of trying to be closer to my son and not being able to sell my house has taken its toll on me and I feel like there isn’t much I can do. When I call real estate lawyers, they want money for a consultation. I don’t want to waste that money if it’s for nothing. I am basically stuck with them and I don’t know what to do. All I want is for my home to sell and start a fresh life and this realtor I have doesn’t seem to care about any of that or the 6 percent commission I would I owe them for the sale of the home. The house is only 3 years old and in great shape. Any helpful advice would be great. Before commenting, please google MV realty to see the lawsuits different states have put on them so you know why I am stuck with them. Thanks!

submitted by /u/Suspicious-Mortgage6
[link] [comments]

source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/12xilu6/been_stuck_with_a_terrible_agent/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

North Carolina – “One to Buy; Two to Sell”

I realize I will likely have to contact a real estate attorney but also hoping to hear insights and experiences from others! I have a house in NC that I bought by myself in 2009, and paid off, in full, in 2022. I got married in 2023. My spouse and I have not lived in the house as our "marital residence". We have maintained separate residences even after we got married. (That a separate topic!). I am now selling this house. Realtors have told us that my husband has to sign the deed at time of transfer but I am not convinced since the house has not been our marital residence. The realtors like to use the phrase "one to buy; two to sell", which seems like a broad-stroke statement which is not applicable under all circumstances. And of course, the realtors don’t realize the details of my specific circumstances: I purchased and paid for the house in full prior to marriage Only my name is on the deed And most importantly, we have never lived in the house as a marit...

Question With Tricon "Pending ID".....

My wife and i, along with 2 other peopl applied to rent a house, and our application says "Approved, Pending ID". Anyone else know what that means? Do we pretty much have the place or are we missing something? submitted by /u/Itskrueger [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1orixqj/question_with_tricon_pending_id/

Aren't comps/CMAs useless with buyer credits at close happening now?

I'm looking into buying a new construction townhouse in my HCOL US city. I'm seeing builders offering interest rate buydowns worth $20k-$60k on $800k homes (rather than just lowering prices) in order to keep their comps high for their other units, now that buyer demand has been declining. I asked my agent about these, and he said these buydowns aren't even the full story: buyers can write all kinds of other credits into an offer, like their closing costs, prepaid sewer fees, etc. Apparently cash buyers can just write in a "buyer credit at close" for any amount in their offer. So a new townhouse that appeared to sell for $800k in the MLS might have actually been a cash offer with a $100k+ buyer credit at close, meaning the buyer only spent $700k or less in total, but to the rest of the world they can only see the $800k! So that made me realize I can't trust comps/CMAs for other new construction townhouses. The sales prices could be way lower than they appear...