My sister is doing the same thing right now and they have a beautiful home waiting for them to buy. They put a contingency in their offer that their home must sell to buy this new one. They are going to lose this new home.
They have to pay 6% of the sale. I guess after reading this that 3 goes to their own agent then 3 to the other one too. I don't know, she said they were going to save 6% by selling it themselves.
I asked her how she was going to have time to promote her home, how much the ads were going to cost, running an ad with pictures and stuff week after week after week much be expensive, they don't want it to be a waste of money. I asked her how she planned on doing an open house, how she would prevent people from stealing, from damaging their property while they were looking at it. How would she feel if she was showing someone through the house and they were talking about how ugly her bathroom border is, how she was going to focus on the selling it part and not the "This is my house" thought process when strangers were looking at it.
I think a Realtor is a good thing if you work, if you are involved at all with the kids, anything that would take half an hour per day to do. If you can't devote 100% of your time to this then having a Realtor manage this sale is a good idea.
Just don't forget if you don't do everything that is required of you and someone even 15 years down the line catches it you are liable....
My friend was adding on to her house. We were sitting there visiting when the construction guy came to the window and told her she had a problem. They lived on the corner of a somewhat busy intersection, by no means is it in the middle of town, maybe 3 miles from downtown, anyway, they lived on nearly an acre of land on this corner.
As they started to dig a basement for the new addition they hit a septic tank. It was a working septic tank. The house had never been attached to City sewer systems.
As they did research the home owners 2 times back had sold the house and the Realtor did not check to see if it was attached. They just assumed since it was in town it was hooked up to the City. My friend had to file paperwork and those previous owners had to pay to have the septic tank removed and the lines put in by the City.
The Other previous owners had to be contacted and they had to file paperwork so they could be reimbursed for every penny they paid on their utility bills.
All that time, maybe 20 years and no one had known there was a septic tank. No treatments, no precautions, nothing and it was still functioning correctly...that says something about how effective they are.
Even if the issue found is an electrical one, a roof one, anything at all you could be help liable in the distant future. Even if the new owners buy as is, future owners should not be help liable for issues that might have been overlooked.