The Listing Agent Works for the Seller (Always)

Let's start with what should be obvious but often isn't: the listing agent represents the seller. That agent is hired by the homeowner, paid by the seller (through the commission split at closing), and their fiduciary duty—the legal obligation to act in someone's best interest—runs to the seller only.

When a listing agent shows you a home, they are not your friend. They are gathering intelligence about you: your budget, your timeline, your motivations, how badly you want this house, any weaknesses in your financial position. Everything you say to a listing agent can and will be reported back to the seller's side, and that information will be used in negotiations against you.

I've been on both sides of this table for 35 years. I know exactly what listing agents are thinking in that conversation. They're mentally calculating the highest offer they can possibly extract from you.

What Happens When You Call the Number on the Sign

When you call a listing agent directly, you are voluntarily walking into a situation where one party's representative is interviewing you on behalf of the other side. There is no legal requirement for that agent to tell you "I represent the seller" in that first conversation—though California law does require disclosure before a transaction begins.

Many listing agents are skilled at being warm, helpful, and seemingly on your side. They'll send you listings, answer questions, and build rapport. And they may be genuinely nice people. But their legal obligation is to the seller, and when push comes to shove, they will prioritize the seller's interests over yours.

The worst-case scenario: you become emotionally attached to a property after working with the listing agent, and by the time you realize you should have had your own representation, you're already negotiating without one.

Understanding Dual Agency in California

California law allows something called "dual agency"—where a single brokerage represents both the buyer and the seller in the same transaction. This is legal, but it's a minefield.

Here's how it typically works: You find a home listed by an agent at ABC Realty. You don't have your own agent, so you ask the listing agent to write your offer. The listing agent (or another agent at the same brokerage) then represents you as well as the seller. They claim they'll be fair to both sides.

But here's the problem: you cannot have split loyalty. An agent cannot simultaneously fight hard to lower the price and fight hard to keep the price high. When a conflict arises—and it will—the agent must choose. And guess who loses? The buyer, because the seller is the one who hired them first and brings them listings.

California requires that dual agents disclose this arrangement in writing and obtain written consent from both parties. But disclosure is not the same as protection. Knowing you're in a dual agency situation doesn't eliminate the inherent conflict of interest.

Watch out: In a dual agency, the agent is also representing the seller. California law may allow it, but that doesn't mean you should agree to it. The moment a conflict between your interests and the seller's interests emerges, the dual agent cannot represent both of you fairly.

The Legal Obligations of a Listing Agent to the Seller

Under California law and the NAR Code of Ethics, a listing agent owes the seller specific fiduciary duties:

Notice something? None of these obligations run to you, the buyer. In fact, if you confide in a listing agent that you'd go $50,000 over the asking price, that agent can tell the seller, and the listing agent can advise the seller to wait for a higher offer.

Why Calling the Sign is Almost Never in Your Interest

Here's the scenario I see constantly: A buyer sees a house they like, calls the number on the sign, and the listing agent shows it to them. No representation. No one in your corner. Just you and someone whose job is to extract the maximum from you.

Even if the listing agent is ethical and professional, you are at a disadvantage:

The buyer who calls the sign is the buyer the listing agent is hoping to find—one without representation or leverage.

How to Protect Yourself

Get your own buyer's agent before you start seriously looking. This is the single most important thing you can do. Your agent represents you, owes fiduciary duties to you, and is paid from the same commission pool (the seller pays it, but your agent comes from that commission, not your pocket).

Your buyer's agent:

Never negotiate directly with a listing agent. All communications should go through your agent. This creates a professional barrier and ensures there's a neutral party (the escrow holder or title company) managing the details.

If you must work with the listing agent, get everything in writing. Verbal agreements mean nothing. If the listing agent tells you something—about the property, the seller's flexibility, closing timeline—ask for it in writing or have your agent request it in writing.

Understand that any information you share with a listing agent can be used against you. Don't tell the listing agent how much you love the house, how badly you need to close quickly, or what your maximum budget is. Share as little personal information as possible.

Bottom line: The listing agent works for the seller. Every conversation you have with them is intelligence gathering for the other side. Get your own buyer's agent, let them do the negotiating, and keep the listing agent at arm's length. It's not personal—it's business, and your agent makes sure it stays fair.

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