2 Important Forms You’ll Need To Sign When You Sell Your Home

Teddy Runge
Teddy Runge
Published on October 8, 2017

Like practitioners in any profession, real estate agents and brokers have a unique vocabulary, they usher their clients through a distinct process and provide industry-exclusive legal paperwork. Because agents and brokers use the latter, daily, they are so familiar with it that many tend to forget that their clients are not.

Buyers and sellers don’t want to appear clueless, so sometimes real estate consumers keep quiet and don’t ask questions about things they don’t understand. Today I’ve decided to fix that by introducing you to two of the most important real estate forms that your Truckee listing agent will ask you to sign.

Agency Disclosure

The first thing to understand about “agency” is that it is a legal term that applies to a relationship in which one party is representing another in dealings with a third party.  You could even say agency = representation. When selling your home, your real estate agent is actually representing the broker in his/her dealings with you.

Your real estate agent will then represent you in your dealings with buyers. Following so far? Think of the real estate agent as the middle-man or woman, standing in for the person who holds the broker’s license when dealing with you and representing you when dealing with the buyer.  In my case, I’m your Truckee listing agent, but at Tahoe Mountain Realty, Jeff Brown is the broker who I’m representing in transactions.

One of the first forms you’ll be asked to sign (if not the first) is the Agency Disclosure.

It is “a written explanation, to be signed by a prospective buyer or seller, explaining to the client the role that the broker plays in the transaction,” according to “Barron’s Dictionary of Real Estate Terms.” The disclosure form explains the various types of agency relationships in effect in your state. The most common relationships are:

  • single agency (the broker represents only one party in the transaction),
  • designated agency (when the buyer and seller are represented by two agents from the same brokerage)
  • and dual agency (when one agent represents both the seller and the buyer, illegal in eight states).

The agency disclosure form is not a contract. By signing it, you are merely acknowledging that the broker has disclosed the agency relationship.

Wondering What your Truckee home is worth? Click here.

Listing Agreement or Contract

This is typically the second form you’ll sign and it gives the broker and her agents the right to offer the home for sale. The listing agreement must contain the following if the broker is a member of the National Association of Realtors:

  • The price at which the home will be offered for sale.
  • A beginning and ending date.
  • The amount of broker compensation and the terms and conditions under which it will be paid.
  • Authorization for the broker to cooperate with other brokers and how the broker that brings in the buyer will be compensated.
  • Authorization for your broker to either reveal or not reveal the existence of previous offers.

Other items you may find in the listing agreement include:

  • Authorization for the broker to install a sign and lockbox.
  • Items the seller wants excluded from and included in the sale.
  • Seller’s warranty that he or she owns the home and that there is no pending notice of default.
  • Authorization for the broker to advertise the home in the Multiple Listing Service database and/or online.

The listing agreement is a contract, so read and understand everything in it before signing.

 Another important piece of paperwork your Truckee Listing Agent will ask you to sign is the homeowner’s disclosure, which we’re happy to explain to you.

ARE YOU THINKING ABOUT SELLING YOUR TRUCKEE HOME? Click this link to see Top Tips: Getting your Home Ready to Sell (written by Truckee Listing Agent Teddy Runge)

Selling your home is a paperwork-intensive undertaking, but nothing compares to the stack of papers you’ll be required to sign at closing. But, that’s a subject for another post. If you’re looking for a Truckee listing agent, let’s chat.  I’d be happy to help.

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