OJO Home Reviews (READ WARNING!)

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Reviews for OJO Home, a referral network that matches consumers with real estate agents.
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WARNING: Unlawful Kickbacks, Broker-to-Broker Collusion, False Marketing, Wire Fraud, Price Fixing.

OJO Home is a broker-to-broker collusion scheme, where "partner agents" unlawfully agree to pay massive kickbacks to receive your information and engage in market allocation, consumer allocation, false advertising, unlawful kickbacks, wire fraud, and price-fixing practices in violation of, inter alia, 18 U.S.C. § 1346, 18 U.S.C. § 1343, 15 U.S.C. § 1, 15 U.S.C. § 45, 12 U.S.C. § 2607, 12 C.F.R. § 1024.14. As a consumer, you will always significantly overpay for Realtor commissions subject to hidden kickbacks and pay-to-play steering promoted in this scheme.

United States federal antitrust laws prohibit consumer allocation and blanket referral agreements between real estate companies.

Be smart; do not allow your information to be "sold as a lead" to a double-dealing Realtor in exchange for massive commission kickbacks paid from your future home sale, or your future home purchase.


Buying and Selling with OJO Home

OJO Home is a referral fee network designed to collect referral fees by matching consumers with local real estate agents willing to pay it. OJO Home operates under a variety of broker licenses, mainly two issued by the Texas Real Estate Commission as OJO Home Inc. 9007689 and OJO Home LLC 9008342, but it does not produce any services that are typically offered by real estate agents and does not represent consumers when buying or selling real estate in any State. In exchange for matching consumers with an OJO Home Partner Agent, OJO Home is compensated by the Partner Agent with an undisclosed percentage of their commission. As of June 2020, OJO Home further operates a real estate online brokerage Movoto. When users are ready to talk to an in-person agent, OJO refers clients to a Movoto agent, or Partner brokerage.

OJO Home Pricing

OJO Home revenue comes from undisclosed referral fees. Referral fees set by such networks range anywhere between 25%-40% of the entire agent’s commission.

Listing Services

  • This Service Does Not Represent Sellers

Buyer's Agent Services

  • This Service Does Not Represent Buyers

OJO Home Editor's Review:

Last updated: 05 December 2024
First published: 05 December 2024

For consumers, OJO Home promises real estate assistance as a lead nurturing platform and a transaction manager. The platform is supposedly able to learn a buyer's preferences via machine learning and match them with homes that fit their needs. By gathering consumers' home preferences and budgets, OJO communicates conversationally through mobile text as a personal advisor throughout the home-buying process.

For real estate professionals, OJO Home promises a scalable, high-touch experience that reflects well on a brokerage and helps increase closings by scrubbing leads as they come in and nurturing buyers with unique insights powered by machine learning. Once a homebuyer is prepared, a home concierge initiates a live transfer to the Partner Agent. OJO representatives give Partner Agents all the background information on the homebuyer to make the transition as warm as possible. This handoff helps ensure both consumers and agents alike receive the most seamless, hassle-free experience. OJO claims to help real estate professionals to create stronger, better-informed connections with buyers and sellers and keeps them engaged until they're ready to get down to business.

For Partner Agents, there is no upfront cost to join OJO to receive leads and referrals. The referral fee is paid on each lead that results in a close.

In other words, OJO Home is a middle-man that scrubs consumer's information and passes it along to a broker who is willing to pay for it with a cut of their commission. All options offered to consumers by OJO Home suffer from pay-to-play bias. If a broker is unwilling to give a portion of their commission to OJO Home, the company has no interest in recommending them. The following is a set of statements taken from OJO's Terms of Service that all, effectively, show that OJO takes no responsibility for their recommendations.

"OJO will process lead inquiries from a variety of sources including but not limited to: your brokerage's website, your brand's website, and leads you have acquired from the major national search portals (e.g. Zillow, Homes.com, Realtor.com, Trulia, etc.)."

"We ingest your leads from your various sources (website, Realtor.com, etc.) in real time and will call leads in as quickly as 10 seconds. We do the legwork to get a customer on the phone and facilitate the live transfer to the first-available agent once a buyer is ready to be connected."

"By using the OJO services, you agree to receive phone calls and text messages from us and our partners. By using the OJO services, you expressly authorize OJO, its affiliated companies and its partners (described below) and each such entity's employees, contractors and software (collectively, "Service Provider") to communicate with you by phone and text at the wireless phone number provided or any other number that you may provide in the future. You understand that message and data rates may apply based upon the terms of your wireless service provider contract. You also agree that methods of contact may include use of auto-generated text messages or an automated telephone dialing system, even if you've registered that number on a Do-Not-Call registry, and that my consent to text messages and phone calls is not a condition to using any Service Provider's services. If you do not consent to receive these texts or calls, do not use the OJO service or provide your information to us."

"We do not endorse or recommend the products or services of any service provider and are not an agent or advisor to you or any service provider. We do not validate or investigate the licensing, certification or other requirements and qualifications of service providers. It is your responsibility to investigate any service providers before you engage them. You acknowledge and agree that these service providers are solely responsible for any services that they may provide to you and that we are not liable for any losses, costs, damages or claims in connection with, arising from, or related to, your use of a service provider's products or services."

"OJO is not a real estate agent or lending institution or other service provider. Instead, we, through the OJO services, may help to connect you with service providers that might meet your needs based on information provided by you. OJO does not, and will not, make any credit decision with any service provider referred to you. OJO does not issue mortgages or any other financial products."

"By accepting a referral to one of our Referral Partners, you grant us permission to share your User Data with the Referral Partner so that they may offer their products or services to you."

"When you accept a referral to one of our Referral Partners, you acknowledge that you are purchasing any products or services offered by the Referral Partner directly from them and that OJO is not a party to any agreement between you and the Referral Partner with respect to those products and services; and OJO is not responsible for that Referral Partner's products or services, the content therein, or any claims that you or any other party may have relating to that Referral Partner's products and services."

"By using the OJO services, you hereby release us of any and all losses, costs, damages or claims in connection with, arising from or related to your use of a service provider's products or services, including any fees charged by a service provider."

Clearly, OJO is a biased platform designed to funnel consumers toward brokers who pay them a kickback at the close of consumers' transactions. Consumers using OJO Home have zero control over what agents the company shares their information with. Instead of being "scrubbed" and "sold as leads" consumers looking for a competitive and fair representation can consider negotiating directly with real estate agents, or with help from unbiased consumer-focused online services that do not collect referral fees.

Conflicts of Interest

According to OJO Home, "When a consumer is ready to connect with an agent, up to five qualified agents are contacted via text message. The first agent to respond wins the opportunity. Upon responding to the consumer notification, the agent will receive a phone call for a warm transfer within one minute. This phone call must be answered promptly or the consumer introduction will go to another agent."

OJO Home doesn't care which agent, specifically, picks up the phone first, but it does care that the match is made only to someone in their referral network.

"After the introductory call with the consumer, agents will receive a text message with a link to update their profile in the Agent Dashboard. Agents will then receive bi-weekly reminders to update their buyer and seller profiles as they move further down the path toward closing on a new home."

This process is established to keep OJO Home informed about what stage of the transaction process the consumer is in. OJO Home needs to understand when the broker will close the deal and when it will receive a referral fee from the sale or purchase of the home. This means that OJO Home receives intimate details about consumers' transactions from Partner Agents.

According to one OJO Home Partner Agent, Sharon S. from Atlanta, GA, "Signing up was really easy. I also love that I can choose what kinds of leads I want and they show up on my phone. I'm talking to new clients within a few minutes. It's pretty neat."

Of course, this is a neat consumer brokering scheme, where agents pick "what leads they want" and consumers are steered only toward agents who choose to cut in OJO Home with a major share of their commission. In this scenario, consumers' needs are "ingested" and "warmed-up" for the agent.

Antitrust Implications

In reality, OJO Home is a broker-to-broker collusion scheme that scrubs consumer's information and passes it along to a colluding broker who is willing to pay for it with a cut of their commission. All Partner Agents agree to pay OJO Home a pre-arranged referral fee, on all closed transactions, through their employing broker. A referral agreement between OJO Home and a Partner Agent for a random transaction that may or may not happen sometime in the future is executed in advance.

OJO Home engages in consumer and market allocation schemes with Partner Agents brokerages, because it is a broker itself. Instead of representing consumers to help buy and sell homes, this "paper" brokerage actively disengages from its licensed activities so that every Partner Agent knows that OJO brokerage will not compete with them. OJO Home does not act in a real estate brokerage capacity, instead, their real estate license is used to collect a blanket referral fee from the largest number of brokers possible.

Sherman Act effectively requires all active real estate brokers to proactively compete for consumers. An agreement or an understanding between brokers not to compete for a mutual profit is a "per se" violation of antitrust regulations in the United States.

The amount of a referral fee between brokers must be negotiated with respect to an individual transaction. It is a per se violation of the Sherman Act for real estate brokers to agree on a "standard" referral fee that will be paid for producing a client. Real estate professionals are not allowed to enter into blanket referral agreements between one another because such agreements always restrict free trade.

Brokers are not allowed to organize their operations into any collusion schemes and networks, and instead, all brokers must compete for consumers on a fair playing field. Legitimate agents who choose to not engage in the OJO referral scheme are harmed as well because consumers are steered away in a highly competitive real estate market.

To comply in good faith with RESPA (12 U.S.C. 2607) Section 8 exception for cooperative brokerage and referral arrangements, legitimate real estate agents must render referral agreements in a particular instance for a particular transaction.

Actions of OJO Home "paper" brokerage directly increase the costs of owning homes in the United States due to added blanket referral fees, consumer allocation practices, and reverse completion between brokers. Partner Agents in the scheme have no incentive to compete for consumers with lower fees, instead, they have an incentive to compete for OJO Home' attention. In this scheme, both colluding parties benefit from offering consumers higher commissions. OJO Home promotes Partner Agents as somehow "superior" to those outside of the network, thus limiting free-market competitive forces and steering consumers in self-interest toward a network of very few agents who chose to agree to participate in the scheme.

As a licensed brokerage, OJO Home owes absolutely no duty of care to consumers and takes no responsibility for the transaction, despite receiving a direct financial benefit from the home sale or purchase completed by a third-party referred brokerage.

FAQ for OJO Home

What are the alternatives to OJO Home?

OJO Home directly competes with several broker-to-broker blanket referral fee schemes, including Zillow Flex, Realtor.com Opcity, Redfin Partner Program, Opendoor Brokerage, Rocket Homes, Better Real Estate, mellohome, Sold.com, Xome, HomeLight, LemonBrew, Radius Agent, ReferralExchange, Nobul, NAEBA, agentpronto, effectiveagents, topagentsranked, myagentfinder, UpNest, Clever Real Estate, and others.

Genuine alternatives to OJO Home are unbiased real estate platforms, open marketplaces, and consumer review portals that offer reliable information without any pay-to-play bias.

What are the pros and cons of OJO Home?

Pros: there are none with OJO Home. OJO Home is a 'paper' broker that operates a consumer steering scheme with a network of independent brokers. Consumer allocation between brokers holds no tangible value to any consumer, either when buying or selling a home.

Cons: there are several main disadvantages to OJO Home. First, consumers are hiring two brokers for the work of one. Second, OJO Home takes a hidden referral fee, so the referred agent is unable to offer their full value to consumers. Third, OJO Home only recommends paying agents to consumers, leaving out the vast majority of honest agents who refuse to participate in the scheme.

Summary: OJO Home steers consumers toward their network of brokers and away from others. OJO Home cannot legally organize brokers into a network because blanket referral agreements, consumer allocation, and market allocation between licensed real estate brokers in the United States are prohibited.

What is OJO Home?

OJO Home is a 'paper' real estate brokerage. Agents agree to pay OJO Home a referral fee, on all closed transactions, through their employing broker. OJO Home does not offer any representation services. OJO Home is a consumer brokering scheme that works to receive a cut of agent's commissions with the use of blanket referral agreements.

Is OJO Home legitimate?

No. OJO Home is a consumer allocation scheme between licensed real estate brokers that increases broker commissions and limits consumer choices. OJO Home' revenue comes from undisclosed referral fees. Blanket referral fees set by such networks range anywhere between 30%-40% of the entire broker's commission. OJO Home is a pay-to-play scheme that offers biased matches for financial gain. The main qualification for real estate brokers who participate with OJO Home brokerage is their willingness to pay a referral fee. Consumer allocation between licenses real estate brokers is a felony in the United States prohibited by federal antitrust regulations.

Where does OJO Home operate?

OJO Home currently operates in select areas across United States.

Contact OJO Home:

1007 S Congress, Building 9, Suite 400
Austin, TX  78704  US
OJO Home User Reviews

OJO Home User Reviews

Nicole K.
9/30/2023 9:41:04 AM
St. Albert, AB
Absolutely terrible. Tried multiple times to get an agent and never once got a response. Thankfully I had an awesome realtor with a completely different company and got the home I wanted. I’d give ojo negative stars if it were possible
Jennifer M.
6/23/2023 7:14:18 PM
Forked River, NJ
I wish I could give 0 stars- I'm a real estate photographer, I work with many agents in my town. OJO started calling me unsophisticated, saying that I when to their website and clicked on a home that is listed by them. (I sometimes look up the address of a home I'm going to photograph.) I never heard of OJO before & didn't click on there website nore did i give them my info. Somehow they got my phone number & now they won't stop calling me, trying to get me to buy a house !
Frederick C.
4/13/2023 6:50:57 PM
Kearny
These people, OJO, got my number from Real Estate.com. They are calling incessantly. One particular rep has made it her mission to call from as many unknown numbers as she can get.
These folks are plain mean.
Lisa M.
3/4/2022 7:24:41 PM
Woodbury, NY
I just got off the phone with customer support to cancel my referral service with them. Just an FYI, the agent did not ASK WHY, what the problem was, what can be done to keep me NOTHING! Hence, 1 of the big reasons I am canceling with them. They have done nothing but send me referrals for QUEENS COUNTY, which I NEVER STATED I COVERED. I SENT YOU OF NASSAU AND SUFFOLK COUNTIES ZIP CODES ON LONG
ISLAND, GOT SCREWED FOR 35% ON THE 1 SUFFOLK REFERRAL I CLOSED WITH YOU, and for the second time today was unable to claim a lead in my area and price range because it said "an error occurred" so I had to go back to the text notification, try and claim again and by that time it was gone. ALL MORNING I HAVE RECEIVED GARBAGE LEADS IN QUEENS FOR 250K AND UNDER!!!!!!!

I have quite a few agents in my office that I am going to share my experience with AS WELL AS A GOOGLE REVIEW so ALL agents thinking about signing up with you will think twice. Your company SUCKS!!!!!!
Deanna J.
11/23/2021 4:10:11 PM
Dallas, TX
I was contacted through ZILLOW by this OJO “group” offering to give me some kind of commission for receiving a client. People if you don’t know, Zillow is already charging a commission for every lead they give us. Stop reaching out to other agents through Zillow and pretend that you don’t know this, or are you so inexperienced to know that there is a directory to call ONLY realtors directly?
P.J.
11/6/2021 6:55:18 PM
Kingston, ON
I found a home on the OJO website that I thought was a local agency at Kingston Ontario. I had left my name with OJO rep in order to go to an open house. She said there was no -one available at that afternoon.
I was local, so decided to drive to the given address- IT DID NOT EXIST!!
No home, no address-
When I called back she instantly said Hi to my name, and that I had been pre-approved for a mortgage within 6 mos and would connect me to someone local. I DID NOT GIVE ANYONE ON THEIR END ANY PERSONAL INFORMATION.
I knew this was not legitimate..
Who are these people??
Deb P.
11/6/2021 3:23:04 PM
Knoxville, TN
OJO is a joke to consumers. After the obtain your information, they connect you to a realtor and that’s it. Then that agent has to pay them 35% of what commission they would receive from a sell.
Most of the leads are not ready to purchase and have no intentions of purchasing. Maybe 5% of the consumers do follow the realtors advice to the first step in purchasing is speaking to lender. I do not know where OJO gets these leads. OJO then requires you to update the leads bi-weekly. I do not chase the leads they send. I am upfront with buyers and if buyers are serious they will stay in contact with their realtor. I am here to help serious homebuyers and provide them a service of guiding them through the home purchase process. It’s a consumer is serious about purchasing a home, I suggest they do not rely on OJO to send them to an agent. There’s other ways for a serious consumer to find a local realtor versus giving OJO all your personal information and answering all their questions before you actually get to speak to a real realtor.
OJO is a time waster to both a serious buyer and a realtor. Do not recommend them.
Sally C.
6/6/2021 4:10:23 PM
Jacksonville, NC
Ojo Leads are not leads at all, they are mostly, unsophisticated, unqualified buyers and the properties they are asking about have often been pending for a while, after the many months I have been working with their "leads" maybe 5 percent even will talk with me and only one has turned into a contract. I do not know where they get the leads, but this has been the biggest waste of time. There is a 35 % commission which would be fine, but the time spent on their constant follow up and the less than satisfactory leads is not worth the time. I would not recommend.
Matt G.
5/8/2021 12:13:15 AM
Clovis, CA
Today, I learned that the referral fee is 35%, regardless of the sale price of the home. This error is my fault, for mis-reading the contract. Now to my experience: six months in, working the leads super-heard, closed one escrow for a $93,000 condo. Leads are almost 100% unsophisticated, unscrubbed buyers. With inventory very low, and most offers having to be over asking, with an appraisal gap guarantee in the Fresno, CA area, 35% is obscene. Have had well-over 100 leads, a tiny percentage of which were qualified buyers. OJO expects frequent updates, which, in addition the time it takes to develop a client, makes the whole enterprise a horrible proposition. Finally, originally I thought the percentage was 20% for transaction for less than $150,000 selling price, otherwise 25%; both percentages being acceptable to me.

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