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Types of
Listings
There are several different types of
listing contracts, but very few of them are used. The "Exclusive
Right to Sell" is the most common, but there is the "open
listing," the "exclusive agency listing," and the
"one-time show."
Open
Listing
The "open listing" is mostly
used by people trying to sell their home by owner who are also willing
to work with real estate agents. Basically, it gives a real estate agent
the right to bring buyers around to view your home. If their client buys
your home, the agent earns a commission. There is nothing exclusive
about an open listing and a home seller can give out such listings to
every agent who comes around.
For that reason, no agent
who accepts an open listing is going to market your home
or put it in the Multiple Listing Service. If your home
fits the criteria for one of their clients, and it is
convenient, they may be willing to show it to their
client.
That is all
an "open listing" is good for.
One-Time
Show
A "one-time show" is similar to
an open listing in many respects, as it is most often used by real
estate agents who are showing a FSBO (for sale by owner) to one of their
clients. The home seller signs the agreement, which identifies the
potential buyer and guarantees the agent a commission should that buyer
purchase the home. This prevents the buyer and seller from negotiating
directly later and trying to avoid paying the agent's commission.
As with an open listing, agents will not
be spending money on marketing your home and it will not be placed in
the Multiple Listing System.
copyright 2006 by Terry
Light and RealEstate ABC, revised 2002
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