Consumer Advocates Warn Lawsuits Will Hurt Home Buyers, Circumvent Fair Housing Laws

Oct 26, 2023Press Releases

The National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents cautions a prohibition against seller agents paying buyer agents commissions is anti-consumer. It will lead to fewer home buyers retaining representation and more harmful dual agency situations.

MESA, Ariz.Oct. 26, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — The consumer advocates of the National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents (NAEBA) warn that efforts to “decouple” home seller and buyer commissions will hurt home-buying consumers and potentially circumvent Fair Housing laws.

At least two class-action lawsuits claim, among other things, that a National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) rule requiring an offer of buyer agent compensation for properties listed on a multi-listing service (MLS) violates federal antitrust laws. As it currently stands, NAR’s MLS policy requires participants to communicate an offer of compensation, sometimes referred to as a cooperating commission, to other MLS participants. That offer can be any amount, including $0. While an offer of compensation comes from the seller’s side of the transaction, only the home buyer brings the full purchase price to the closing.

“A system that makes it harder for first-time and lower-income home buyers to retain loyal representation won’t save home-buying consumers money,” NAEBA president Rich Rosa said. “The lack of trusted representation will lead to costly mistakes, ultimately costing home buyers more money.”

NAEBA members have always embraced greater transparency and consumer choice. They caution a prohibition against seller agents paying buyer agents commissions is anti-consumer, leading to fewer home buyers retaining representation and more dual agency. Dual agency is when the same real estate agent or brokerage represents the buyer and the seller in the transaction.

“A system that makes it harder for first-time and lower-income home buyers to retain loyal representation won’t save home-buying consumers money,” NAEBA president Rich Rosa said. “The lack of trusted representation will lead to costly mistakes, ultimately costing home buyers more money.”

Another lawsuit also calls into question the rule requiring REALTOR® members who list properties in alternative databases to list the properties on an MLS. Sellers, of course, can choose not to list with a REALTOR® and avoid the MLS entirely.

NAEBA believes calls for dismantling rules requiring REALTOR® members to list all advertised properties on the MLS are dangerous. Allowing REALTORS® to bypass their local MLS for alternative platforms, encouraging what is known as a “pocket listing,” could lead to sellers and agents circumventing Fair Housing laws and opening the door to disparate treatment of protected classes. At a minimum, it severely limits a seller’s exposure of their home to the marketplace and more than 1.5 million REALTORS®, potentially costing sellers a lower sale price.

“Why would any seller want to limit exposure of their listing to home buyers,” Rosa said. “A seller doesn’t have to use a REALTOR® or any real estate agent, but real estate professionals should not encourage ‘pocket listings’ and limit which consumers see homes for sale.”

ABOUT NAEBA

Members of the nonprofit National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents (NAEBA) believe there is a better way of working in the real estate industry. Unlike traditional agents, NAEBA members voluntarily dedicate their careers to exclusively representing home buyers, providing full fiduciary-level duties to protect home-buying consumers.

Exclusive buyer agents are 100 percent loyal to home buyers 100 percent of the time and work at real estate brokerages that do not ever represent home sellers. NAEBA members are also committed to promoting fair housing, eliminating discrimination, and steering in housing to ensure equal opportunities for all individuals.

NAEBA members do not accept listings, advertise properties for sale, or represent home sellers; therefore, its members avoid the conflicts of interest common at traditional real estate companies, which attempt to represent both buyers and sellers in the same transaction.

Consumer advocates created NAEBA in 1995 to fill the void faced by homebuyers and started a professional association that would provide home buyers with a higher standard of ethics.

Media Contact

Beverly Babb, National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents, 1 480-221-2230, [email protected]naeba.org

Rich Rosa, National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents, 1 978-835-5906, [email protected]naeba.org

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