Do you need a realtor to sell your house? The super short answer is: No. The slightly longer answer is: It depends on your priorities. If you’re not in any rush to sell and your goal is to maximize sale price, a competent realtor can help. If your goal is to save on commission and you’re comfortable with paperwork, marketing, and negotiation, you can sell without one. But if you want to sell fast and in as-is condition without any hassles, a cash buyer–like Fair Deal Home Buyers–is your best bet.
Let’s walk through the details so you can make the call you won’t regret.
What a Realtor Actually Does
A realtor (I’ll use “realtor” to mean a real estate agent affiliated with the MLS and a brokerage) is a middleperson with training, local market knowledge, and tools. They don’t just slap a sign in the yard — they manage a complex, regulated transaction.
Pricing and CMA (Comparative Market Analysis)
A good agent runs a CMA, comparing your home to recent sales of similar properties nearby, adjusting for condition, upgrades, lot size, and days on market. This is critical: price too high, and you rot on the market; price too low, and you leave money on the table.
Marketing and listing (MLS, photography, staging)
Agents list on the MLS (which feeds popular portals), coordinate professional photos, write compelling listing copy, schedule showings, and sometimes hire stagers. That visibility matters—most buyers start online.
Negotiation and offers
They field offers, compare terms (not just price), and negotiate contingencies, closing dates, and repairs. Negotiation is a skill—especially when multiple offers or appraisal issues come up.
Paperwork, disclosures, and closing
Real estate transactions require region-specific forms, seller disclosures, and legal language. Agents guide you through inspection responses, title and escrow liaison, and the closing itself.
Ways to Sell Without a Realtor
For Sale By Owner (FSBO)
You list and market the property yourself. You save commission (often 5–6% split) but take on every task: marketing, vetting buyers, drafting contracts, and coordinating closing. FSBO works best when time isn’t tight and you’re comfortable learning the process.
Selling to an investor / cash buyer
Investors or “we buy houses” companies buy fast—often “as-is” and for less than market value. This is great for speed or if the house needs major repairs. You trade maximum price for convenience.
Using a flat-fee MLS or limited-service agent
Pay a one-time fee to get on MLS, but do showings and paperwork yourself (or hire help piecemeal). This hybrid saves money but still requires seller involvement.
Pros of Using a Realtor
Higher sale price (data and logic)
Numerous studies show homes sold with agents typically fetch higher prices than FSBO sales—even after paying commission. Why? Agents know pricing, expose the property to more buyers, and create competitive situations.
Time saved and reduced stress
If you hate calling strangers, scheduling, and haggling, an agent handles that. They also help avoid mistakes that can delay or derail a closing.
Access to buyers and professional networks
Agents have buyer databases, investor contacts, and relationships with other agents that increase the flow of qualified buyers.
Cons of Using a Realtor
Commission and cost
Typical commissions range 5–6% of sale price (split between buyer’s and seller’s agents). On a $300,000 house, that’s $15–$18k—real money.
Less control over process
Agents may push staging, open houses, or price strategies you don’t like. You also need to trust them to represent your interests.
Variable agent quality
Not all agents are equal. A rookie or lazy agent can cost you time and money. Vetting is crucial.
When You Probably Do Need a Realtor
Luxury homes or specialty markets
High-end properties often require niche marketing, international exposure, and buyer vetting that specialists provide.
When You Might Skip a Realtor
You’re pricing aggressively to sell fast
If time is everything and you just want to move—sell to a cash buyer or investor. You’ll accept less, but you’ll close quicker.
You’re experienced and comfortable with the process
If you’ve sold properties before, understand contracts, and have a buyer network, FSBO may be viable.
You have a strong buyer network
If investors or friends are already lined up, you can transact directly and save the commission.
How to Prepare Your Home No Matter How You Sell
Practical repairs and staging on a budget
- Fix safety issues and obvious defects first (leaky roof, electrical hazards).
- Neutralize clutter and personal items.
- Small fixes—fresh paint, deep clean, good lighting—go a long way.
Disclosure checklist
Be honest about known defects. Non-disclosure can lead to legal trouble after the sale. Keep records of repairs and permits.
Pricing Strategy: Listing Price vs. Market Strategy
Pricing to sell fast vs. pricing to test the market
- Below market (aggressive): Drives interest and multiple offers, good in hot markets.
- At market: Attracts steady traffic; safer in balanced markets.
- Above market: Risky—your listing may sit and be ignored.
An agent helps pick the sweet spot based on comps and days-on-market trends.
Negotiation Tactics for Sellers
Common buyer contingencies and how to handle them
- Inspection contingency: Consider setting a short inspection window and limiting requests to safety/major systems.
- Appraisal contingency: If the appraisal is low, build a plan—price reduction, buyer brings cash, or challenge the appraisal with comps.
- Financing contingency: Require pre-approval and proof of funds for cash offers.
Counteroffers and escalation clauses
Don’t only look at price—consider closing timeline, inspection terms, and financing strength. An escalation clause can help in a bidding war but must be used carefully.
Closing: What to Expect at the Finish Line
Walk-throughs, repairs, and closing costs
Final walk-through confirms property condition. Expect to negotiate repair credits or repairs if new issues appear. Closing costs vary: title, transfer taxes, and prorations. The seller often pays broker commission and certain fees; your closing statement will show details.
Cost Comparison: Realtor vs. FSBO vs. Cash Sale
- Realtor sale: Higher sale price but commission costs. Net proceeds often higher if agent creates competition.
- FSBO: Save on commission but may net less due to lower buyer exposure and weaker negotiation.
- Cash sale to investor: Fast and low hassle, but typically lower sale price. Good when speed trumps price.
Run the math: estimate likely sale price under each route, subtract fees/repairs, and see which nets you most — factoring in the value of your time and stress.
Final Decision Checklist: Do I Need a Realtor?
Ask yourself:
- Do I want maximum price or maximum speed?
- Am I comfortable negotiating and handling contracts?
- Is my property complex (tenants, probate, liens)?
- Do I have a buyer network or marketing skills?
- Can I afford to pay commission in exchange for lower stress and potentially higher price?
If you answered “no” to most and “yes” to “maximize price/avoid hassle,” hire a realtor.
Conclusion
There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. Realtors add value through pricing expertise, marketing reach, negotiation skill, and transaction management—often resulting in a higher net sale after commission. But FSBO, flat-fee MLS, or direct investor sales are valid options when speed, commission savings, or simplicity are higher priorities. The smartest approach: be realistic about your goals, crunch the numbers, and if you hire an agent, interview multiple candidates to find someone who truly understands your local market and shares your priorities.
FAQs
Q1: Will I always get a higher price if I use a realtor?
Not always, but statistically, homes marketed by experienced agents often sell for more than comparable FSBO listings because of broader exposure and skilled negotiation. However, a bad agent can underperform; vetting matters.
Q2: How much commission should I expect to pay?
Typical commissions range from about 5%–6% of the sale price (split between seller and buyer agents), but it’s negotiable. High-value properties and hot markets may allow lower percentage rates.
Q3: What’s the biggest risk of FSBO?
The biggest risks are pricing wrong (leaving money on the table), legal mistakes in contracts/disclosures, and reduced buyer exposure—leading to longer time on market or lower offers.
Q4: Can I hire an attorney instead of a realtor?
You can use an attorney for legal work, but attorneys generally don’t provide market marketing or buyer outreach. In some regions (attorney states), closings use attorneys, but marketing and negotiation remain an agent’s role.
Q5: If I sell to a cash buyer, how much less can I expect?
It varies widely. Cash buyers often offer 5%–30% below market, depending on property condition and local demand. For houses needing major repairs, offers skew lower; for turnkey homes, discounts are smaller.