Comparison
Buyer's Agent vs. Seller's Agent: Who Represents Whom in Real Estate?
Quick answer
A buyer's agent represents the purchaser in a real estate transaction — finding properties, negotiating offers, and protecting the buyer's interests. A seller's agent (listing agent) represents the property owner — marketing the listing, fielding offers, and negotiating on behalf of the seller. In most transactions, each party should have their own agent. Understanding whose interest each agent represents is fundamental.
Written by James Chae — Co-Founder, Expert Sapiens
Platform expertise: Financial consulting & advisory · Reviewed March 2026
Key differences
When to choose Buyer's Agent
- You are purchasing a home or investment property and want professional representation
- You want someone to search the MLS, arrange showings, and negotiate purchase terms on your behalf
- You are unfamiliar with the local market and need guidance on offer price and contract terms
- You want an advocate whose fiduciary duty is to you, not to getting the deal closed at any price
When to choose Seller's Agent
- You are selling a property and want professional marketing, pricing strategy, and negotiation support
- You need professional photography, staging advice, and MLS listing to maximize buyer exposure
- You want an expert to evaluate and negotiate offers to get the best possible sale terms
- Your market is competitive and you need a skilled negotiator to manage multiple offer situations
Bottom line
Every buyer should have a buyer's agent and every seller should have a listing agent. Unrepresented buyers often overpay; unrepresented sellers often under-price or make costly contract mistakes. Post-NAR settlement changes, buyers should negotiate buyer's agent compensation explicitly rather than assuming it is covered. The value of professional representation — particularly in negotiation — typically far exceeds the commission cost.