Buyer brokerage (or Buyer agency as it is also known) is the practice of RealEstateBroker (and their agents) representing a buyer in a real estate transaction rather than, by default, representing the seller either directly or as a sub-agent. In most states, until the 1990s, buyers who worked with an agent of a real estate broker in finding a house were customers of the brokerage, since, by most common law of most states at the time, the broker represented only sellers. Only in the last fifteen years or so have states passed statute law to create buyers' agency.
Today, if the buyer is working with a broker other than the brokerage which "lists" the property, he may choose to enter into a buyer-brokerage agreement to be represented. (In some cases where dual agency is permitted by law, even the listing broker may represent the buyer). If the buyer does not enter into this agreement, he/she remains as a customer of the broker who is then the sub-agent of seller's broker.
With the increase in the practice of Buyer Agency in the US, especially since the late 1990s in most states, agents (acting under their brokers) have been able to represent buyers in the transaction with a written "Buyer Agency Agreement" not unlike the "Listing Agreement" between brokers and sellers. In this case, buyers are clients of the brokerage.
A real estate brokerage attempts to do the following for the buyers of real estate:
Like the listing agreement wiith sellers, the Agreements with buyers must have a starting and ending date as well as specifying how the buyer's broker is to be paid (by the seller or by the buyer himself). In addition, it should spell out the duties and obligations of all parties.
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