FSBO sounds like a way to save money. The data says otherwise. Homes sold without an agent sell for 15–26% less on average — a gap that dwarfs any commission savings. Before you go it alone, read the real numbers.
Less money FSBO sellers receive on average vs. agent-listed homes (NAR data)
Of FSBO attempts fail to sell entirely — home comes off market unsold
Of buyers use an agent — FSBO sellers miss access to most of the buyer pool
Longer average time on market for FSBO homes vs. professionally listed homes
Selling without an agent feels like saving 2–3%. In reality, the exposure, pricing errors, and negotiating disadvantages cost most FSBO sellers far more than any commission would have.
The MLS (Multiple Listing Service) feeds Zillow, StreetEasy, Realtor.com, and every agent's buyer database. Without it, your listing doesn't reach the 87% of buyers working with agents. You're invisible to the biggest, most qualified buyer pool in the market.
Without access to professional comparable sale data and pricing expertise, FSBO sellers routinely either overprice (home sits, stigmatizes) or underprice (leave equity on the table). Either mistake costs more than an agent's commission.
New York requires extensive seller disclosures. Missing a required disclosure or misrepresenting a condition can expose you to lawsuits long after closing. A licensed agent helps navigate these obligations and reduces your legal risk significantly.
The buyer's agent does this every day. They know how to structure offers, use contingencies strategically, negotiate repairs, and apply pressure at closing. As a FSBO seller, you're negotiating solo against a trained professional — and buyers know it.
Savvy investors specifically target FSBO listings because they know sellers are unrepresented and motivated. You'll receive lower offers, more aggressive negotiation, and pressure tactics that an experienced agent would shut down immediately.
Scheduling showings, qualifying buyers, fielding calls, handling inspections, managing attorneys, chasing mortgage contingencies — all of that falls on you. Most FSBO sellers are surprised by the full-time commitment required. Your time has value too.
| What You Need | With Nitin Gadura | FSBO |
|---|---|---|
| MLS Listing & Syndication | ✓ Full MLS + 100+ Sites | ✗ No MLS Access |
| Professional Photography | ✓ Included | Out-of-pocket cost |
| Accurate Market Pricing | ✓ Data-Driven CMA | Estimate/Guess |
| Buyer Qualification | ✓ Pre-Screened Buyers Only | ✗ DIY — High Risk |
| Negotiation Expertise | ✓ Professional Advocate | ✗ You vs. Their Agent |
| Disclosure Guidance | ✓ Full Legal Support | ✗ On Your Own |
| Marketing & Advertising | ✓ Social Ads + Community Network | ✗ Limited / None |
| Transaction Management | ✓ Start to Close | ✗ You Handle Everything |
| Average Sale Price | Higher (often 15%+ more) | 15–26% Below Market |
Here's a real-world example using a typical Queens home. The numbers speak for themselves.
Yes. According to the National Association of Realtors, FSBO homes sell for 15–26% less than agent-listed homes. On a $700,000 Queens home, that's $105,000–$182,000 less — far more than any commission. FSBO sellers also attract more investor lowball offers because buyers know there's no professional advocate on your side.
Mispricing, limited buyer exposure (no MLS), legal liability from disclosure failures, negotiating alone against experienced buyer agents, difficulty qualifying buyers, and the sheer time commitment. New York real estate transactions are legally complex — going unrepresented multiplies your risk.
In theory, yes. In practice, rarely. The pricing expertise, negotiation skills, and marketing reach an agent brings typically net sellers 15%+ more than FSBO — which far exceeds any commission savings. The commission doesn't cost you money; not having representation does.
This is actually one of the best times to work with an agent. Even with a known buyer, you need professional negotiation, contract management, disclosure compliance, and transaction coordination. Many "I already have a buyer" deals fall apart without proper professional oversight. A limited representation arrangement can still protect you significantly.
Licensed NYS Real Estate Salesperson | Gadura Real Estate, LLC | Ozone Park, Queens
I'm not here to talk you out of anything. I'm here to show you the numbers — and let you decide. Call me for a free home valuation and a candid conversation about what your Queens home is really worth on the open market.
Call (917) 705-0132 — Free ValuationFind out what your Queens home is really worth — before you decide how to sell it. No obligation, no pressure.
Completely free, no obligation. Nitin will call you directly within hours.
I respect the instinct behind FSBO. When someone calls me after deciding to sell without an agent, I know they've done the math in their head — they're looking at the commission and thinking, "That's money I could keep." I get it. And I never pressure anyone who's thinking about going the FSBO route. What I do instead is show them a different set of numbers.
The commission I charge is not an expense — it's an investment in the outcome. My value is not in showing up with a lockbox and a yard sign. My value is in the pricing analysis that puts your home at the exact number that generates the most competitive buyer interest. It's in the professional photography that turns online browsers into in-person visitors. It's in the buyer network — built through years of working within Queens' Indian, Guyanese, Caribbean, South Asian, and other communities — that brings qualified buyers who are ready to move. And it's in the negotiation that happens after an offer comes in, where my experience as a professional advocate consistently outperforms what a homeowner negotiating solo can achieve.
Here's the conversation I have with every FSBO seller: tell me your address, and I'll give you a real market valuation — what the data says your home is worth, not what you hope it's worth, and not a Zillow estimate. Then I'll show you the math: what a professionally listed, professionally marketed Queens home in your price range typically sells for versus the FSBO average. You'll see the gap. And then you decide — no pressure, no obligation.
I have had FSBO sellers call me after listing on their own for two months with no serious offers. The most common story: they priced based on what a neighbor's home sold for two years ago, they took their own photos with a phone, and the only people calling were cash investors offering 70 cents on the dollar. That's a painful and avoidable situation. If you're thinking about FSBO, talk to me first. The conversation is free and will almost certainly change how you think about it.