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Should I Hire a Real Estate Agent to Sell My Home?

There’s a reason nearly 90% of sellers use a listing agent: Selling a home takes time, knowledge of neighborhood trends, and negotiating skills.

So while eliminating the agent’s commission—6% of the sale price, on average—sounds mighty tempting, try to resist.

Hire a Real Estate Agent

“The market is shifting every day. It’s the agent’s job to keep abreast of those changes,” says Ryan Fitzpatrick, director of sales for New York real estate agency CORE.

A good agent also will market your home aggressively. That means recommending staging techniques to make the place look great, maximizing the listing with professional-quality photographs, and showing the house to prospective buyers.

Most important, the agent will vet potential buyers so you can deal only with serious prospects.

Thinking of going the For Sale By Owner (FSBO) way?

Hire a Real Estate Agent Before skipping a full-service agent, think hard about the time and effort you want to spend, particularly if the process drags on.

The average home takes about four months to sell (six in the slowest cities), according to National Association of Realtor statistics.

If costs are a concern, you should feel comfortable having a frank up front conversation about how and how much the agent expects to be paid.

Once you’ve found an agent you feel comfortable with, sign a contract for the shortest possible period, say 30 or 60 days, Fitzpatrick says.

That should give you enough time to evaluate the agent’s performance; besides, “if the home is properly priced and properly marketed,” he says, “you will be reaching your most serious buyers in the few weeks of listing.”

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