Types of listing contracts
A listing contract is an agreement between you and a licensed real estate broker authorizing the broker to represent you in selling your home. By far the most common type of listing contract is the “Exclusive Right to Sell”, but there are several other types. 

rightExclusive Right to Sell Listing
This is the most popular type of listing with sellers and brokers.  Under a right to sell listing contract, the broker is the only one authorized to sell your home.  If another agent finds a buyer, your broker earns a commission.  If you find a buyer on your own, your broker still earns a commission.  This arrangement gives your broker the most incentive to spend time, money and energy marketing your home. 

leftExclusive Agency Listing
This is similar to the right to sell listing, with the significant difference that you reserve the right to sell your home yourself and not pay the broker a commission.  The broker only gets paid if your home is sold through a licensed real estate professional.  If you find your own buyer and sell the home yourself, you pay no commission.  On the face of it, this might sound like an attractive arrangement.  But it's not a popular listing type with brokers, and for good reason.  Under an exclusive agency agreement, the broker is exposed to the risk of putting forth considerable effort and expense marketing your home, only to come away empty handed.  The attraction to the seller of this type of contract of course, is the possibility of finding their own buyer and not paying a commission.  This puts the seller and broker in competitive roles, which usually isn't in the best interest of either party. 

rightOpen Listing
The open listing is a non-exclusive contract.  It gives the broker permission to show potential buyers your home, and the broker will only earn a commission by bringing in a client who buys the home.  Since the open listing isn't exclusive, sellers can sign these listing agreements with as many brokers as they want.  The bottom line with an open listing is that no broker has any incentive to market the home at all.  They won't even place the home on the local MLS service with an open listing.  Further, it's up to the seller to field all phone calls and coordinate all showings etc….  Generally, the only people who use open listings are FSBO's (for sale by owner) who are willing to pay a partial commission to an agent for finding a buyer.   

Showing Listing
Also called the “one time” agreement.  This is an agreement whereby a FSBO agrees to let an agent show the home to an interested client and pay a commission to the agent if that showing results in a sale.  The purpose being to prevent a seller from letting an agent show the property, then deal directly with the client, to avoid paying any commission.

 

 

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