Three Signs of a Bad Real Estate Agent

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If you are looking for a real estate agent, it is important that you find someone that is professional, credible, trustworthy, and experienced.
Hiring an inexperienced, incompetent, or downright dishonest real estate agent can cost you time and money.
Avoid a bad real estate agent at all costs.
To protect yourself from easily preventable problems with your real estate deals, it is important that you keep an eye out for these warning signs: Your agent is a yes-man.
One of the reasons you're hiring a real estate agent is so you can take advantage of the experience they've gained from the years they've spent buying and selling property.
If they nod their head at everything you say, that may be a sign of incompetence.
Your agent should be the one who comes up with a reasonable price for your home, not you.
If your agent simply asks for your opinion for the worth of your property and puts it on the market with that exact price, you might want to consider finding someone who actually knows what they're doing.
Find an agent who can give you useful, professional advice based on facts.
Your agent never calls.
A lack of communication between you and the person you hired could mean one of several things.
Either no one has inquired about the property you are selling; the agent you have hired has not located any homes on the market that meet your buying specifications; or your agent isn't doing his or her job.
Even without significant developments in the quest to buy/sell real estate for you, it is your agent's responsibility to update you regularly.
Not communicating with you is a sign of disrespect.
Your agent seems to favor certain properties over others for unknown reasons.
Unless he or she is able to give a good reason, having an agent push you in a particular direction may be a warning sign.
They may have a vested interest in you purchasing a particular property.
If this is the case, your agent is doing something that is highly unethical, and may be illegal in some jurisdictions.
Of course, don't be paranoid.
There is nothing wrong with a realtor offering their expert advice on whether or not a home is a good deal.
Just make sure that they are able to back up their advice with facts and reason.
That is what you are paying them for: good, unbiased advice.
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