The old system — how it worked
For decades, the home buying process worked like this: a seller listed their home and agreed to pay a total commission — typically 5 to 6 percent of the sale price. That commission was split between the listing agent (who represented the seller) and the buyer's agent (who was supposed to represent the buyer). The buyer never saw this negotiated, never signed anything about it, and most never fully understood that they were, in effect, funding both sides of the transaction through the purchase price.
Most buyers assumed their agent was free. The commission was invisible — baked into the price, paid at closing, never itemized on the buyer's side of the settlement statement in a way that made the cost clear.
Important context: This doesn't mean buyers were harmed by a corrupt system. Many agents — on both sides — served their clients well. The issue was transparency, not intent. Buyers deserved to understand the economics of their own transaction.
What the NAR settlement changed
In August 2024, following a landmark antitrust settlement with the National Association of Realtors, two fundamental rules changed for every real estate transaction in the United States:
1. Offers of buyer-agent compensation were removed from the MLS. Previously, the listing agent would advertise a co-op commission on the MLS — effectively pre-committing to what the buyer's agent would be paid. That's gone. Sellers can still choose to offer a concession that a buyer might use to pay their agent, but it's no longer automatic, standardized, or guaranteed.
2. Buyers must sign a written representation agreement before touring homes. This is perhaps the most significant practical change for buyers. Before you walk through a single door with an agent, you are now required to have a signed agreement that specifies: who represents you, how they will be compensated, how much they will be paid, and under what terms.
What buyers are being handed right now: Agents are presenting buyer representation agreements as routine paperwork. Some are. Some are not. Terms vary significantly — in duration, compensation amount, exclusivity, and what triggers the obligation to pay. Read everything before you sign anything.
What this means for you as a buyer
The short version: you have more transparency and more negotiating power than any buyer in the history of American real estate. The longer version is that this power only matters if you know how to use it.
Here is what every buyer should understand going into any transaction today:
- Your agent's compensation is negotiable. There is no standard rate. There is no required percentage. Compensation can be structured as a percentage of the sale price, a flat fee, or a hybrid — and you can negotiate it before you sign.
- Sellers can still pay your agent. A seller can offer a concession as part of the transaction that you can use to pay your buyer's agent. This is still common. It's just no longer automatic.
- The listing agent is not your agent. If you walk into an open house or call the number on the sign, you are talking to someone whose legal obligation is to the seller. That agent cannot give you advice that serves your interests if it conflicts with the seller's interests.
- You have the right to representation. Just because compensation has changed doesn't mean representation has disappeared. A good buyer's agent is still one of the most valuable people in a real estate transaction — they know the market, can write a competitive offer, negotiate repairs, and protect you through the inspection and escrow process.
Why this site exists
BuyersCentral.com was built around one conviction: buyers deserve to understand the transaction they're entering. Not after closing. Not when something goes wrong. Before they sign anything.
The professional behind this site has spent 35 years on every side of a real estate transaction — as a licensed broker, as a lender, and as the founder of an escrow company. That's three vantage points most buyers never have access to. This site exists to share that perspective freely — with any buyer, anywhere in the country, regardless of whether they ever hire us.
If you're buying in California — particularly in the Santa Barbara area — we can represent you directly, with AI-assisted research and document review that gives you the depth of a large team at the cost of an individual practitioner. If you're buying anywhere else in the country, we'll connect you with a vetted RE/MAX professional who knows your local market and understands the new rules.
The bottom line: The commission has always been in the price. Now it's in the open. Use that visibility to your advantage — and make sure you have someone on your side who can help you do that.
Questions every buyer should ask before signing anything
- Who do you legally represent in this transaction?
- How are you compensated, and how much?
- Is your compensation negotiable?
- If the seller doesn't offer a concession, how does that affect our agreement?
- What is the duration of this agreement, and can I cancel it?
- Have you represented buyers in this neighborhood and price range before?
- What is your offer acceptance rate in the last 12 months?