What It Means for Home Buyers and Sellers
For years, I’ve told anyone who would listen: splitting one commission check between the listing agent and the buyer’s agent was an ethical landmine waiting to go off. I called it the “Commission Divorce” before most people in the industry were willing to say the words out loud — and this week, it became official in our region.
I haven’t been guessing. For years, I’ve structured my own transactions to keep commissions separated, because I believed the old way put agents in an impossible position. Now the rest of the industry is catching up, and the contracts prove it.
What Actually Changed
This shift didn’t happen overnight, and it didn’t happen because of one single ruling. It’s the product of a few years of mounting pressure:
- The 2024 NAR commission lawsuit settlement required MLSs nationwide to stop publishing buyer-broker compensation offers on the MLS itself — the first real crack in the old “co-mingled” system.
- Since then, the DOJ has continued pushing the industry toward a complete decoupling of seller and buyer agent compensation, and in ongoing litigation, the Department has explicitly argued that industry commission rules can constitute a per se violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act — meaning the practice may be presumed anticompetitive on its face, without needing to prove harm case by case.
- The DOJ’s Antitrust Division has stated plainly that U.S. real estate commissions run higher than in other developed economies, and has made lowering the cost of buying and selling a home an explicit enforcement priority.
That pressure has now worked its way into the actual paperwork agents use every day — including ours. Our regional listing contracts have been rewritten, and the language tells the whole story.
The Old Way: One Paycheck, Two Masters
Our old listing agreements used to read something like this:
“Owner agrees to pay to the Broker the compensation equal to the total of X%… Owner authorizes Broker to cooperate with and compensate other brokers X%.”
Under this model, the listing broker collected the full commission and then decided how much of it to hand to the buyer’s broker. Sounds harmless — until you think about the incentives it created:
- A listing broker could shave the buyer-broker split lower to keep more money for the brokerage, even if that risked scaring off buyer’s agents from showing the home.
- The seller often had no real visibility into how that negotiation played out, because it happened behind the scenes between two brokers.
- A buyer’s agent’s paycheck was technically controlled by the other side’s broker — a built-in conflict that the industry largely shrugged off for decades. Of course the commission between the written agreement in the listing agreement, the commission within the written agreement in the Right to Represent contract, and the commission in the final purchase contract could all be different – leaving a wave of confusion to the general public.
That’s the structural problem I’ve been pointing to for years. It’s not that any one agent was acting in bad faith. It’s that the system itself rewarded putting brokerage revenue ahead of client outcomes.
The New Way: The Owner Stays in Control
Compare that to the new language now used in our regional contracts:
“Owner agrees to pay the following Broker Compensation to Listing Broker for the services rendered to Owner by Listing Broker.”
That’s it. Full stop. There’s no built-in reference to the buyer’s broker at all — unless the owner specifically chooses to add one manually under Other Terms, as an expectation rather than a rule.
That one change flips the entire structure:
- The owner pays for their own representation, and only their own representation, by default.
- Any commission offered to a buyer’s broker is now a deliberate, visible choice the seller makes — not a default split baked into the contract.
- The listing broker no longer has quiet authority to negotiate that split on the seller’s behalf.
Why the New Rule Is More Ethical
I’m not shy about saying it: the old system had a real integrity problem, and the new one fixes it.
A listing agent has a fiduciary duty to their seller. Under the old model, that same agent was also effectively setting the pay rate for the agent on the other side of the table — the one whose job is to negotiate against the seller’s interests on price and terms. Even with the best intentions, that’s an awkward position to put any professional in because the more the buyer’s agent received the less the listing agent brought home to his or her own family. It blurs a line that should be bright and clear.
The new structure removes the ambiguity. Each broker is paid by, and accountable to, their own client. If a seller wants to offer compensation to attract buyer’s agents — which IS still be a smart strategy in many markets, and really the overwhelming option in our Lynchburg market — that’s a transparent decision the seller makes on purpose, not a number quietly split for them.
What This Means for Sellers
- You’re back in the driver’s seat. You decide whether to offer buyer-broker compensation, and how much, instead of it being handled as a default split. Great example: you have a bottom line you want to net and the buyer’s agent presents a lowball offer or tries to get a moneybag in “repair credits,” now you can put the buyer’s agent on a string and thereby protect your bottom line.
- More negotiating leverage. Because the offer is now optional and visible, sellers can use it strategically — full compensation in a slower market, reduced or none in a hot one. For clarification, we’re not in a Buyers Market but we’re in a very light Seller’s Market, so there’s not much changing for us.
- Clearer total cost picture. Your listing agreement now spells out exactly what you’re paying your broker, full stop.
What This Means for Buyers
- Expect a buyer-broker agreement. Most buyer’s agents now need a signed agreement with you before showing homes, spelling out how they’re compensated.
- Compensation is negotiable, not assumed. Your agent’s pay may come from the seller (if offered), from you directly, or some combination — and it should be discussed and agreed to upfront rather than buried in MLS data.
- More transparency, more questions to ask. It’s worth talking to your agent early about exactly how they get paid on a given home, since it can vary listing to listing now.
The Bottom Line
This is the moment I’ve been talking about for years — not a rumor, not a prediction, but a real shift in the paperwork sellers and buyers sign in our region, and it’s backed by the Department of Justice and the regulatory courts. The old co-mingled commission system created conflicts that didn’t serve anyone well in the long run – honestly, name just one other industry that serves their clients the way real estate agents used to. The new wording puts the person paying for the service back in control of that decision.
If you’re buying or selling and want to know exactly how this affects your specific situation, that’s exactly the kind of conversation I love having — reach out, and let’s walk through it together. My phone number is 434-944-6982 or you can book my online at www.haeferhomes.com/book.

Award-winning REALTOR® & President of Haefer Homes. Helping Sellers, Investors, Veterans & First-Time Buyers Live. Dream. Own. in Lynchburg, VA and the surrounding areas.