[quote author="PANDA" date=1242786856][quote author="usctrojanman29" date=1242786408][quote author="PANDA" date=1242784448][quote author="IrvineRealtor" date=1219820804][quote author="k.o." date=1219800178]First off, forgive my naivet?, I?ve been reading this and other sites for a while, but some things I just still haven?t committed to memory. And 2nd yes, Graph, I made sure to do a ?search? and found only snippets of what I was looking for.
Anyways, I?m looking to educate myself beyond the blog, and that means reading books and now thinking about getting a RE license. If I want to purchase a home, I want to spend as little as possible with various fees associated with a purchase. Is this something that should be considered or does just getting a certain % back using Zipreatly, etc., as a buyers agent, yield benefits that are comparable?
I?m a little confused by the process, so I wanted to pick the brains of those here. It seems as though I cannot just study for the exam and take it to become licensed. Instead, changes made late last year indicate I also need to have taken various RE courses in order to have it ?stick?. I have the time and desire to study up for the test and classes, so that really isn?t an issue for me.
Thoughts from anyone?</blockquote>
Not a difficult process. I second the motion that crackerix made regarding the crash course. (Buy the CD-ROM and learn to click the buttons in the right order like you're Sawyer earning a fish-cracker on LOST.) To pass the test you need to know the answers, not the information. In fact, knowing the information and having to learn the answers only makes the process worse.
If you are getting the license <strong>just </strong>to do your own purchase, I'd advise against it as it is not cost-effective. ZipRealty offers 20% back, Redfin offers 67% back, and usctrojanman (another realtor on this site) will get you a portion of his commission too, maybe better than the others.
Here's the Dept of Real Estate page if you're in it for the info:
<strong><a href="http://www.dre.ca.gov/lic_cond.html">www.DRE.ca.gov</a></strong>
Thanks and good luck.
-IrvineRealtor
P.S. Here are the <strong><a href="http://www.dre.ca.gov/exm_broker_exper.html">Broker requirements</a></strong>.</blockquote>
In what circumstances would it make sense for someone to get their broker and sales license if he or she does not do real estate as a full time profession? IR2 advised against it if you were doing your own purchases, but does it make sense if you own several properties in OC that you want to sell yourself? If you are not a full time real estate professional like IR2 but got your broker and sales license, what was your reason for doing so? Just curious.</blockquote>
1. Working on your own transactions and saving/collecting the commissions.
2. Making supplemental income by working with buyers and/or sellers.
3. Have access to property records and MLS
Those are the main reasons I can think of getting your license other than becoming a full-time realtor. There are costs associated with becoming a realtor...testing, finger printing, study course, application fees. Then there are your realtor dues that you have to pay on an annual basis (this includes MLS access fees). Then for realtors who aren't brokers (like me and IR2), there are annual broker fee, transaction fees, and/or commission splits. I chose to work under a broker because they take care of all the record keeping for me and I don't have to work about E&O insurance (the larger chain real estate firms offer more benefits such as advertising and support staff with a pretty office but they take a higher commission split for that).</blockquote>
Trojan, when you mentioned that IR2 and you are not brokers, do you mean that you guys just have a sales license and not the broker license. I have to research this more as I don't even know the difference between a sales license and a broker's license.. Thanks for the input though.</blockquote>
I think that IR2 only has a sales license, but I'm not 100% sure. I have a sales license. You can also get a sales/broker license and a broker license. When you have a sales license, you have to hang your license with a broker.