Roughly $30 billion slashed from real estate agents’ commissions: Fed economists pose solution to the 'anomaly' in the American housing market (2024)

Buying a home is expensive these days, but not just because of sky-high prices and burdensome mortgage rates—costly commissions for real estate agents are eating into homebuyers’ bottom lines too. In fact, Americans pay roughly $100 billion in real estate commissions annually, according to a 2023 Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst report. But the good news, at least for anyone who isn’t a real estate agent, is a new working paper titled Real Estate Commissions and Homebuying suggests that roughly $30 billion of U.S. real estate agents’ commissions could be slashed by using a new compensation model.

In the paper, Richmond Federal Reserve Bank senior economist Borys Grochulski and vice president of research Zhu Wang argue that the U.S. model for real estate commissions is “puzzling” and an “anomaly” when compared with other systems abroad. The pair note that home sellers in the U.K., Ireland, the Netherlands, Singapore, Sweden, and Norway pay less than 2% in commission to their real estate agents on average, compared to 5.5% in the U.S, according to a 2015 study.

As for buyers, a large portion in many countries, including Australia, Canada, and Denmark, purchase properties without agent representation, while 87% of homebuyers use an agent in the U.S, according to National Association of Realtors data. That’s a huge percentage of Americans choosing to use buy-side agents considering half of all buyers find their own homes online anyway.

All of these issues with real estate agents’ current compensation model contributes to “elevated home prices, overused agent services, and prolonged home searches,” according to Wang and Grochulski. In order to correct the problem, the economists proposed a new “à la carte” model for buy-side real estate agents that could reduce buyers’ commissions by roughly $30 billion.

“The results suggest that switching to a cost-based commission model…may increase U.S. homebuyers’ welfare by more than $30 billion a year,” Wang and Grochulski write, noting that “most of the consumer welfare gains would come from the redistribution of buyer agents’ profits.”

The à la carte compensation model would require both homebuyers and sellers to pay their own agents separately—and independent of the final home price in the transaction—in order to prevent something called “steering,” where agents tend to direct their clients away from properties that have low commissions.

The model would also force homebuyers, but not sellers, to pay for each task that their agent undertakes individually, whether it’s searching for a home, helping with negotiations, or showing properties—hence the à la carte name. The economists argue that this would enable consumers to shop around for individual buyer-agent services, and even haggle for a better price. “Under such a system, competition among agents would likely align agent compensation with cost, and buyers would not overuse agent services,” they write.

The new paper from the Richmond Fed comes at a difficult moment for real estate agents. The National Association of Realtors and several national brokerage firms are facing multiple lawsuits alleging collusion to inflate real estate agent commissions. This, after a jury in Kansas City sided against NAR last fall in a similar case, leaving the organization with a $1.8 billion judgment (which it plans to appeal).

The pressure on real estate agent commissions has been so intense that it even prompted the noted short-seller Spruce Point Capital to put out a short report on Zillow, the real-estate marketplace that derives a large portion of its revenues from buyer agent commissions, warning that the company’s stock price could drop up to 60%. One of the major issues the short-seller cited was analysis that shows recent lawsuits could change the way buyer-agent commissions are handled, leading the total addressable market of commissions to drop as much as 30%.

Still, in spite of the negative impact of changing the current compensation structure for the real estate industry, Wang and Grochulski believe that a new model for commissions is necessary and their à la carte approach would likely be the best option for the economy as a whole. From eliminating agents’ incentive to “steer” clients away from low-commission homes and increasing “housing search efficiency,” to enabling buyers to use multiple agents throughout the homebuying process (putting agents’ time toward “more productive uses”), the economists lauded their model’s potential benefits. “We propose that policymakers may consider shifting to an à la carte model,” they concluded.

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Roughly $30 billion slashed from real estate agents’ commissions: Fed economists pose solution to the 'anomaly' in the American housing market (2024)

FAQs

Roughly $30 billion slashed from real estate agents’ commissions: Fed economists pose solution to the 'anomaly' in the American housing market? ›

In order to correct the problem, the economists proposed a new “à la carte” model for buy-side real estate agents that could reduce buyers' commissions by roughly $30 billion. “The results suggest that switching to a cost-based commission model

What happened to the housing market during the Great Depression? ›

Housing values dropped by approximately 35 percent. A house, worth $6,000 before the Depression, was worth approximately $3,900 in 1932. By the early 1930s, many people owed more money through their existing mortgages than the reduced value of their home.

What is the commission for real estate in Norway? ›

Real Estate Brokers' Fee in Norway

The Real Estate Agent's fee varies and depends on the assignment´s complexity, marketability and size. Normally commission will be around 1 to 2.5% of the total selling price of the property, plus VAT.

What caused the US housing market crash? ›

The subprime mortgage crisis was triggered by risky lending practices. When interest rates froze and the housing bubble began to collapse, borrowers couldn't afford their payments. As massive foreclosures ensued, the fallout spread to the global financial system.

How did the Federal Housing Administration help during the Great Depression? ›

The FHA's assumption of risk, through its insurance programs, made possible the amortization of mortgage loans with regular monthly payments and a secondary market for home mortgages, thus freeing up funds for home loans.

What commission do most realtors get? ›

Typically, real estate commission is 5%–6% of the home's sale price. In most areas, the buyer's agent receives 2.5%–3% in commission and the seller's agent receives 2.5%-3% in commission. This can vary by agent and location.

What percent commission do most real estate agents make? ›

In a recent survey by FastExpert.com, we found that the average real estate agent commission in California is 5.14%. This is the total for the buyer's agent and the listing agent and is generally split 50/50. It has generally been accepted that real estate agent fees are 6%.

What commission do most real estate agents make? ›

First is the total commission paid by the seller. In California, it ranges anywhere from 1-6% of the sales price. The standard is 5-6%, but for high-priced properties (i.e. $1+ million) the commission may be more like 4-5%. The amount is negotiated between the seller and listing agent before a contract is signed.

What was the housing Act during the Great Depression? ›

The National Housing Act of 1934, H.R. 9620, Pub. L. Tooltip Public Law (United States) 73–479, 48 Stat. 1246, enacted June 27, 1934, also called the Better Housing Program, was part of the New Deal passed during the Great Depression in order to make housing and home mortgages more affordable.

Why did housing prices fall during the Great recession? ›

In 2006, the housing market started to collapse due to rising home prices, loose lending practices, and an increase in subprime mortgages pushing up real estate prices to unsustainable levels. Foreclosures and defaults wiped out financial securities backing up subprime mortgages.

Was it easier to buy a house during the Great Depression? ›

The median annual pay during the Great Depression was 22% of the cost of an average home. Today, it's 14%. It's harder to buy a house today than it was during the Great Depression.

Why did the housing market crash in the 1930s? ›

The stock market crash on Black Tuesday and subsequent economic turmoil reified the formerly abstract risks endemic to the 1920s mortgage market: borrowers could no longer afford even moderate monthly payments and the recompense afforded by foreclosure on a lien did little to ameliorate many institutions' financial ...

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