UpNest Reviews (READ WARNING!)
WARNING: Unlawful Kickbacks, Broker-to-Broker Collusion, False Marketing, Wire Fraud, Price Fixing.
UpNest 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 UpNest
UpNest works as a referral fee network that collects pricing and services data from a limited pool of Referred Agents and sends it to consumers as non-binding proposals. UpNest operates as a licensed real estate brokerage in California under BRE License # 01928572, 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.
When consumers submit information to UpNest, this information is simply sold to real estate agents who are willing to pay for it with a 30% share of their commission. If an Agent does not want to pay a referral fee, the consumer will not see any proposals from them using the UpNest platform.
UpNest claims to provide savings, but consumers are likely to overpay for their Referred Agent's commission due to added mandatory 30% referral fee.
UpNest Pricing
UpNest revenue comes from referral fees and sale of user data.
Listing Services
- This Service Does Not Represent Sellers
Buyer's Agent Services
- This Service Does Not Represent Buyers
UpNest Editor's Review:
UpNest is a referral fee network in business to collect fees for matching brokers with consumers. Referral fees are highly disadvantageous for real estate consumers because these are hidden and not negotiated. One of the major expenses for real estate consumers, when buying or selling a home, is real estate service fees and closing costs associated with the purchase, or sale.
Service fees and closing costs are, for the most part, a necessary expense. Real estate agents significantly help home buyers and sellers to navigate a complicated and competitive real estate process in exchange for a legitimate commission as a reward. Other closing fees usually include required services such as property appraisals, inspections, title insurance, etc. – all in some way help to legitimize the sale and to manage risk. There can be much said with regards to managing closing costs by choosing a motivated competitive agent who is willing to offer a buyer’s refund or a competitive listing rate.
On the other hand, while claiming it saves money to consumers, UpNest simply adds referral fees into already a fee-ridden process – consumers experience false and fabricated savings in this model. In economics, this process is known as reverse competition.
The platform works with a limited pool of Referral Agents willing to pay a very significant part of their commission to UpNest. This referral fee is back-loaded into Referred Agent's agreement, instead of being handed to the consumer directly. The consumer technically does not pay UpNest, but he/she ends up with a higher cost of commissions when working with their Referred Agent. UpNest is not a free platform, these fees are simply hidden.
Let's say a real estate consumer, James, wants to hire a buyer’s agent in one of the States that allow buyer's rebates when buying a median-priced home for $250,000. A local competitive buyer’s agent, Jill, offers James a 50% buyer's refund while helping him in this process. This is a typical refund Jill is able to organically negotiate with all her customers. The estimated commission refund, in this case, is $3,750 paid back to James from Jill in a form of buyer's refund, assuming a 3% Buyer’s Agent Commission.
On the other hand, James also receives non-binding proposals using UpNest platform from Referred Agents with a 30% referral fee attached to the back of every proposal. When James is faced with these types of proposals, results are quite different. Firmly assuming that the profit margins and service offerings remain the same for Jill and Referral Agents using UpNest, any possible buyer's refund offered by Referral Agents must be reduced to account for the UpNest referral fees. The referral fee in this scenario estimated at $1,125 due to UpNest from a Referral Agent. With the profit margin fixed, the estimated commission refund a Referral Agent may offer to James is now only $2,625.
James just effectively “paid” UpNest $1,125 for a service that is supposed to be “free”.
One reason the amount of savings may ever be matched by Referred Agents versus Jill's competitive savings is due to broker-to-broker pricing collusion - if Referral Agent is willing to reduce their fee beyond market rates to compensate UpNest out of their own pocket, which is highly unlikely and unreasonable to assume.
Because referral fees are pre-set between UpNest and Referral Agents in advance, the cost of the referral has to be eventually be paid by the real estate consumer.
The reason we give UpNest a low score is due to exigent fees and the way these fees are structured. UpNest plays down fees to consumers, it states directly that the service is 100% free, but then it rigidly locks every Referred Agent into an added cost. The vast majority of competitive agents refuse to play this game and UpNest simply steers consumers toward a limited pay-to-play network. As a licensed real estate agent that doesn't perform any real estate services, or takes any responsibility for the transaction, it's not entirely clear how this process works under the Business and Professions Code.
Should real estate agents distribute "bids" of other agents for a fee? If one to say that the 30% fee is indeed necessary, why not structure it as an actual service fee that is properly charged, instead of having to be back-loaded into Referral Agent's agreement? The answer is simple – if UpNest was to charge Agents for its service directly, no Agent would ever sign-up. Agents only sign-up with UpNest because the price of the referral fee can be easily incorporated into their client's agreement.
UpNest clearly doesn't provide any tangible value to the real estate consumers as a licensed real estate agent. UpNest further audits all transactions because it needs to find out how much money real estate agents receive in commissions, inevitably collecting private details of consumer’s agreement for home purchase or sale.
This effect is known as a “blind” match. Truly competitive agents who offer great savings to consumers can never use UpNest. For example, a highly competitive flat fee listing service has a set competitive price – they would never be able to pay 30% of this amount to a third-party. UpNest 30% referral fee only works is with services who are “silent” on their commission – if a client comes directly to an agent, one price is given, if a client uses UpNest, another price is in play. We strongly believe that real estate consumers looking to buy or sell a home should always use 0% referral fee platforms in order to avoid paying a higher cost in commissions.
By using UpNest, consumers further encourage pay-to-play referral fee bias to thrive in a broken real estate industry.
FAQ for UpNest
What are the alternatives to UpNest?
UpNest directly competes with several broker-to-broker blanket referral fee schemes, including Zillow Flex, Realtor.com Opcity, Redfin Partner Program, Opendoor Brokerage, OJO Labs, Better Real Estate, mellohome, Sold.com, Xome, HomeLight, LemonBrew, Radius Agent, ReferralExchange, Nobul, NAEBA, agentpronto, effectiveagents, topagentsranked, myagentfinder, Rocket Homes, Clever Real Estate, and others.
Genuine alternatives to UpNest 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 UpNest?
Pros: there are none with UpNest. UpNest 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 UpNest. First, consumers are hiring two brokers for the work of one. Second, UpNest takes a hidden referral fee, so the referred agent is unable to offer their full value to consumers. Third, UpNest only recommends paying agents to consumers, leaving out the vast majority of honest agents out of the scheme.
Summary: UpNest steers consumers toward their network of brokers and away from others. UpNest cannot legally organize brokers into a network because blanket referral agreements, price fixing, and consumer allocation between licensed real estate brokers in the United States are prohibited.
What is UpNest?
UpNest is a broker referral fee network designed to collect fees by matching consumers with local real estate agents willing to pay it. When consumers submit information to UpNest, their information is shared in exchange for blanket referral fees with real estate agents in a process known as a blind match.
Is UpNest legitimate?
No. UpNest is a consumer allocation and a price-fixing scheme between licensed real estate brokers that increases broker commissions and limits consumer choices. UpNest revenue comes from undisclosed referral fees. Blanket referral fees set by such networks range anywhere between 30%-40% of the entire broker's commission. UpNest is a pay-to-play scheme that offers biased matches for financial gain. The main qualification for real estate brokers who collude with UpNest brokerage is their willingness to pay a referral fee.
Using its website, UpNest engages in a process known as price-fixing because it receives and distributes commissions and rebates bids from independent real estate professionals, disguised as savings. Price fixing between actively licensed brokers is a felony prohibited by federal antitrust legislation.
Where does UpNest operate?
UpNest User Reviews
In addition, when you get started with them they say that the proposed realtors will not contact you that you will get only their quotes to compare and pick one… that is not true. STAY AWAY FROM THIS COMPANY.
Customer support (Marcos Torres
I then reasoned that perhaps my gmail account has some strong filter on UpNest emails - which would be odd, given I’d received plenty of marketing emails from them previously. I asked them to send it to an alternate email address. I never received the survey link at the alternate email address either.
If a company says it will give you $150 but then doesn’t give you the money, is it my fault they can’t get their system to send me a survey? I don’t think so. They should have sent me the gift card anyway.
Agents from suggested company used repeatedly made critical marketing mistakes on the price and Process of marketing my home..
Wrong price printed up 3 separate times.
Mistakes caught by me.
Open house flyers set out were for a different property.
No open house signage. Website glitches etc...
Not a strategy to pick a competent realestate team.
The selling point UpNest uses for home SELLERS is false, in my opinion.
UpNest will state that what their "agents" offer you is a reduced listing commission of 5% instead of 6%.
Granted, this could be a huge savings and benefit.
However, that commission reduction is an almost given with ANY agent today.
I easily negotiated commissions, with the agents UpNest referred to me, of 4% and 4.5%.
Every agent that walked in the door was willing to come down from 5%.
Given that UpNest is taking a piece of their commission for the referral I highly recommend you find your own listing agent and hold your ground at 4%. As for the quality of the agents that were referred, I was wholly impressed.
I did list with the agent that had the best presentation, but I was not impressed with the service provided.
Additionally, the range of recommended listing price the 4 agents I interviewed was huge (more than $30,000, or nearly 8% of actual sale price).
That told me some of the agents were just looking for a quick buck and did not care about me maximizing my return on investment. A house is an investment and fair market value should be expected, your agent should help ensure you get that.
If I had followed the advice of the best commission offer (4%) I would have lost more than $25,000 due to a low list price and would not have sold any faster. My home went under contract 18 days after listing at $30,000 more than "agent lowball".
He loses about $1500 in commission but I would have lost $25k.
No thanks.
If UpNest isn't taking 30% (their commission for the lead referral) from an agent that just gives you more room to negotiate.
So, my advice find your own agent you will likely do much better on your own.
Went with Clever. UPnest has continually harangued me since then.
Like asking Did I list my house.
It's public info.
Calls, emails, texts continue after I've asked for them to stop.
UPNEST can't take no for an answer. Crooks?
Secondly, Upnext does not disclose to the consumer that they get 30% of listing fees, and 25% of buyer agent fees! So they say its free, yet you get an agent that can't negotiate their own commission, and then upnest gets 30% of that commission. So you save nothing, and risk losing a ton with an agent that desperately needs business. lose-lose for conusmer!
I was told they would not give out my info.
All realtor referrals had different percentages most under 6% fee, but my local agent took 4 present.
Upnest - quick response - but don't call if I don't ask to!
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