Selling FSBO in Utah: What It Actually Costs vs Using an Agent — article hero illustration

Seller Guide

Selling FSBO in Utah: What It Actually Costs vs Using an Agent

By Andrew Ho · August 5, 2024
Selling FSBO in Utah: What It Actually Costs vs Using an Agent — supporting illustration

Selling FSBO (For Sale By Owner) in Utah saves you the listing agent commission — typically 2.5-3% of sale price, or $12,500-$15,000 on a $500,000 home. But FSBO homes consistently sell for 8-12% less than agent-listed comparable homes, which usually wipes out the savings and then some. FSBO makes sense in narrow circumstances; for most Utah sellers, the math doesn’t work.

What you actually save

The realistic FSBO savings, line item:

Cost avoidedTypical amount on $500K home
Listing agent commission$12,500-$15,000
MLS access (via flat-fee service)-$300-$600 paid by you
Professional photography-$300-$700 paid by you
Yard sign and printing-$100-$300 paid by you
Net savings~$11,000-$14,000

What you don’t avoid: buyer agent compensation if the buyer is represented (typically 2-3%) and all the standard seller closing costs (title, escrow, recording).

Why FSBO homes sell for less

NAR’s annual data has consistently shown FSBO sales averaging 8-12% lower than agent-assisted sales of similar homes. Four reasons:

Weaker pricing

Without comp expertise, FSBO sellers tend to either:

  • Overprice (causing extended days on market and eventual desperate cuts)
  • Underprice (leaving money on the table from day one)

A defensible CMA prices the home where it sells fast at maximum value. Mispricing by 5-10% in either direction is common in FSBO listings.

Narrower exposure

Even with a flat-fee MLS service, FSBO homes get:

  • Less promotion to buyer agents (who avoid working with unrepresented sellers)
  • No professional network sharing
  • Less marketing budget
  • Fewer high-quality showings

Weaker negotiation

Most buyers come with experienced agents. When the negotiation is agent-vs-owner, the owner usually loses ground. Common FSBO mistakes:

  • Disclosing maximum acceptable price too early
  • Accepting first offer instead of soliciting competing offers
  • Conceding repairs without comp-based analysis
  • Misjudging buyer financing strength

Utah’s seller disclosure requirements are detailed. Missing or incomplete disclosures create real legal exposure — and most FSBO sellers don’t know what they don’t know. Buyer agents look for these gaps and use them as negotiation leverage.

When FSBO genuinely works

Three specific situations:

  • Selling to a known buyer — family member, neighbor, tenant, or co-worker. You have a price and a buyer. Hire a real estate attorney for $500-$1,500 to handle the paperwork.
  • Selling to an investor for cash — these buyers know what they’re doing, prefer minimal middlemen, and may pay a fair (though discounted) price.
  • Your home is so unique you have a specific buyer in mind — luxury custom builds, equestrian properties, etc.

In all three cases, you should still pay a real estate attorney to handle the contract, disclosures, and closing coordination. The cost is small compared to the legal risk of going completely solo.

A realistic FSBO numbers example

Scenario: $500,000 Salt Lake County home, no special circumstances.

OutcomeFSBOAgent-listed
Likely sale price$445,000-$470,000$495,000-$510,000
Listing commission$0$12,500-$15,000
Buyer agent compensation$9,000-$14,000$10,000-$15,000
Other selling costs$3,000-$5,000$3,000-$5,000
Net to seller$418,000-$453,000$465,000-$485,000

In this typical scenario, the agent-listed sale nets the seller $30,000-$45,000 more even after paying full commission.

What about discount brokerages?

Several Utah firms offer limited-service listings at 1-1.5% (vs 2.5-3%). Realistic outcome:

  • Better than FSBO because you get MLS, photography, and some marketing
  • Worse than full-service because you handle showings, negotiations, and inspections
  • Net result usually somewhere between FSBO and full-service in final sale price

If saving money matters, ask for a full-service listing at a negotiated rate (2-2.5%) instead of a discount brokerage at 1%. You’ll often net more.

What to do next

If you’re considering FSBO because you think the commission is too high, reach out to Andrew. A full conversation on what an agent actually does — pricing, exposure, negotiation, paperwork, closing coordination — often reframes the value calculation.

If you have a known buyer (family, tenant, neighbor), FSBO with a real estate attorney can absolutely make sense. We can recommend Utah real estate attorneys who handle FSBO closings.

The right question isn’t “can I save the commission.” It’s “what will I net at closing.” Often those answers point in opposite directions.

Common Questions

How much do you save selling FSBO in Utah?

You save the listing agent commission, typically 2.5-3% of the sale price. On a $500,000 home that's $12,500-$15,000. You'll likely still pay buyer agent compensation of 2-3% if the buyer is represented.

Do FSBO homes actually sell for less in Utah?

Yes — typical FSBO homes net 8-12% less than equivalent agent-represented sales. Studies from NAR consistently show this gap because of weaker pricing, narrower exposure, and weaker negotiation.

What does a FSBO seller in Utah have to handle?

Pricing, photography, marketing, MLS access (via flat-fee service), all showings, all negotiations, all paperwork (purchase agreement, Utah-specific disclosures, lead paint disclosure, HOA documents), inspection negotiations, and closing coordination with title.

Can I sell FSBO and still offer a buyer agent commission?

Yes. Most successful FSBO sales in Utah still offer 2-3% to buyer agents through a flat-fee MLS service, because most buyers come through agents.

Is selling to a family member FSBO smart?

It can be — but you should still use a real estate attorney to draft the purchase agreement, handle disclosures, and coordinate with a title company. Cost is typically $500-$1,500 vs $12,500+ in commission.

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