buyerseller September 1, 2025

What the New NAR Rules Mean for Home Buyers and Sellers

What the New NAR Rules Mean for Home Buyers and Sellers

In August 2024, a major shift rippled through the U.S. real estate market when the National Association of Realtors (NAR) implemented new rules tied to a landmark legal settlement. The changes fundamentally altered how real estate agent commissions are handled, bringing greater transparency and negotiation power to both buyers and sellers, and forcing everyone to rethink long-held assumptions about the home-buying process.

Why the Rules Changed

The new practices stem from a federal lawsuit alleging that traditional real estate commission structures, where sellers typically paid for both their agent and the buyer’s agent, were anticompetitive and lacked transparency. To settle the case, NAR agreed to a $418 million payout and significant operational changes that took effect nationwide on August 17, 2024.

For Home Buyers: More Clarity and More Decision-Making

One of the biggest shifts for buyers involves how they work with agents and how agent compensation is handled:

Written Agreements Are Required Before Tours

Before 2024, buyers could tour homes with agents without signing formal contracts. Now, if a buyer is working with an agent who uses the MLS (Multiple Listing Service), a written buyer-broker agreement detailing exactly what services the agent will provide and how much they’ll be paid must be signed before touring homes, whether in person or virtually.

What this means:

  • Buyers must think earlier about representation terms.

  • Buyers know upfront what they’re paying and what they’re getting, no surprises later.

Buyer Agent Compensation Must Be Negotiated

Under the old system, sellers typically offered a buyer-agent commission that appeared on MLS listings and worked like an implicit part of the home price. That’s no longer allowed. Sellers can still choose to pay a buyer’s agent, but that offer can’t be publicly displayed on the MLS anymore, and buyers may negotiate compensation directly with their agent.

This change encourages buyers to:

  • Ask agents about fees upfront.

  • Compare fee structures and services among agents.

  • Potentially negotiate lower or alternative fee arrangements, like flat fees or hourly rates, instead of standard percentages.

For Home Sellers: Flexibility and Strategy in Commission Offers

Sellers, too, are seeing meaningful shifts:

Sellers Are Not Obligated to Pay Buyer Agent Fees

Traditionally, sellers covered commissions for both their own listing agent and the buyer’s agent, often totaling around ~5-6 % of the sale price. Under the new rules, sellers are no longer required to pay the buyer’s agent’s commission, though many still do, especially in competitive markets to attract buyer interest.

What this means:

  • Sellers can decide which commissions they will cover, and must strategize to make their incentives appealing to buyers and buyer agents.

  • Some sellers may offer higher commissions off-MLS directly, outside the public listing.

  • Price negotiations may now include commission decisions as part of the deal.

More Room to Negotiate With Your Agent

With the old “standard” commission model loosening, sellers now have greater flexibility to set commission terms with their listing agents. Some sellers are negotiating lower rates in exchange for limited services, while others agree to custom deals that better reflect their market conditions and goals.

The Market After a Year: Mixed Early Results

A year into these changes, the outcomes are still unfolding:

Positive trends include: increased transparency, earlier compensation discussions, and more options for fee structures.
Challenges include: some agents and firms quietly preserving old arrangements through private negotiations, and limited awareness among buyers and sellers about how to leverage these new rules to their advantage.

Many professionals believe the real impact will unfold over several years as more consumers embrace negotiation and alternative models rather than expecting commissions to be automatically included.
In other words: agents who can clearly articulate their value and fees are gaining an edge.

What Buyers and Sellers Can Do Now

Whether you’re buying or selling, here’s how to work with the new landscape:

For Buyers

  • Shop around for agents and compare their services and fee structures.

  • Expect to sign a written commission agreement early in your search.

  • Ask whether the seller intends to contribute toward your agent’s fees.

For Sellers

  • Consider how commission offers may influence buyer agent interest.

  • Negotiate commission terms consciously with your own agent.

  • Understand that buyers are now paying closer attention to agent costs and overall transaction transparency.

Final Thoughts

The NAR rule changes from last year represent one of the most significant shifts in U.S. real estate practice in decades. By decoupling long-standing assumptions about commissions and empowering buyers and sellers to negotiate terms earlier and more transparently, the market has taken a step toward greater consumer control. The full impact will continue to play out, but the trend is clear: clarity, negotiation, and preparation are now essential for anyone entering the real estate space.