HomeLight Reviews (READ WARNING!)
WARNING: Unlawful Kickbacks, Broker-to-Broker Collusion, False Marketing, Wire Fraud, Price Fixing.
HomeLight 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 HomeLight
HomeLight is a referral fee network designed to collect fees by matching consumers with local real estate agents willing to participate. HomeLight operates as a licensed real estate brokerage in California under BRE License #01900940, 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 HomeLight, this information is simply sold to real estate agents who are willing to pay for it with a 25% share of their commission.
HomeLight Pricing
HomeLight 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
HomeLight Editor's Review:
On paper, HomeLight seems to have a great idea – to provide its users with a list of the "most effective" real estate agents that are scrutinized across the board to systematically facilitate better offers for sellers and better terms for buyers.
HomeLight states that "our service is 100% free, with no catch. Agents don't pay us to be listed, so you get the best match." Digging deeper into Terms of Service the actual model turns out to be much less effective - HomeLight is a California licensed real estate broker that collects a 33% referral fee from all real estate agents that participate.
This fee makes it hardly a free service for anyone since referral fees are inevitably passed down to consumers.
More importantly, HomeLight applies this pay-to-play bias towards all matching results, meaning, only real estate agents that have agreed to pay a referral fee are displayed in match results for consumers.
HomeLight 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.
HomeLight further claims to produce higher returns to consumers when selling, but there is absolutely no third-party evidence for this. HomeLight algorithm is self-proclaimed and is based on the data derived from MLS past transactions. There are any number of factors that affect the actual home value with no proven correlation to agent representation. In order to select a proper real estate agent, consumers need an open and a transparent information process that HomeLight is unable to provide.
HomeLight plays fees down to consumers - it states directly that the service is 100% free, but at the same time, it rigidly locks every participating real estate agent into 33% referral fee attached to the back-end of every contract. As a licensed real estate agent that doesn't perform any real estate services or takes any responsibility for the transaction, it is not entirely clear how this process works under the Business and Professions Code and RESPA.
Clearly, real estate agents only sign-up with HomeLight because the price of the referral fee can be easily incorporated into their client's agreement with excessive commissions.
HomeLight receives the second lowest score because this service is clearly biased and it claims to provide the complete opposite of what it actually does. HomeLight has presented the following facts prior to the review getting published, but did not respond with any comments. HomeLight must be well aware of this issue but continues to operate on pay-to-play methodology in order to collect fees that needlessly make home buying and selling more expensive.
HomeLight Simple Sale™ Product
HomeLight further offers consumers a connection to local real estate developers that buy and flip homes for profit. According to the company, the majority of Simple Sale developers are only interested in purchasing off-market homes. HomeLight itself admits that 91 percent of sellers choose a real estate agent to list their home on the open market, but that does not stop it from an attempt to offer your information to developers as well.
HomeLight states it will show the seller their best iBuyer offer against an estimation for what they can sell a home in an open market with the help of an agent. The reality is HomeLight doesn't care how your home is sold, as long as it receives a fee for directing you one way or another. It costs absolutely nothing to HomeLight to offer you a bad deal on selling your home to a real estate developer because this company is a referral fee network that is primarily interested in connecting consumers to anything that pays them a fee.
HomeLight does not state how much developers and iBuyers pay them for each successful lead, but according to third-party sources, HomeLight receives a 4% commission from the total value of your home. Remember, this fee comes from the real estate developer, so HomeLight for all practical reasons, works for that developer, not you. A developer will know that your home is off-market and it costs them absolutely nothing to give you a severely underpriced offer.
Typically, iBuyers cost consumers about 15%-20% of net equity from the home sale, when accounting for all fees and reduced cash offer against your home's true value. Most developers will not take anything less of a 30% margin below market. The reason is developers experience high risks and double transaction costs when making an offer on your home, and HomeLight's 4% commission on the sale is a very real closing fee to account for. The bank, on the other hand, does not care how you sell your home or for how much. Your mortgage company receives the same amount from the sale of your home, so these all excessive costs work directly against your net equity as a seller. If you are seriously considering Simple Sale offer made to you using HomeLight, the best way to approach it is with your own real estate agent who does not pay any referral fees to HomeLight.
Of course, matching you with a competitive agent to list your home on the open market is something HomeLight is not built for. Remember, HomeLight is a broker that is interested in receiving a referral fee for any match. If HomeLight does not receive payment of some sort from a broker, you will never see them on their platform. When you use a broker sent to you by HomeLight, you are paying for two brokers.
Consumer Steering
Some consumers who receive a recommendation for the three local HomeLight partner agents will often proclaim that the process of selecting a Realtor is very simple and that they have experienced excellent results.
The question stands, why doesn't the editor's review for HomeLight extend a similar recommendation? The difference is that the editor's review focuses directly on the quality of HomeLight brokerage as an information channel, while most consumers tend to combine HomeLight brokerage with an experience provided by HomeLight partner brokers into a single experience. From an editor's perspective, these are not the same.
The way consumers find a real estate professional must be unbiased and free from pay-to-play incentives in order to be considered as a quality channel.
HomeLight brokerage offers an excellent channel that proactively steers consumers toward a highly selected pool of partner brokers who have a blanket referral agreement with them, in an exchange for a significant share of their commission.
This is a very different experience than having to genuinely rate local agents and offer an unbiased recommendation. HomeLight has a direct financial incentive to steer consumers toward brokers who charge higher commissions.
Moreover, HomeLight brokerage operates by excluding itself from the competition with partner agents. In the United States, it is unlawful for real estate professionals to allocate consumers or organize into broker referral networks by means of blanket referral agreements.
HomeLight is a brokerage and it must compete with other brokers, instead, the company organizes brokers into a network in order to receive a cut of their commission. Real estate professionals working with HomeLight no longer compete for consumers, but rather compete for HomeLight to steer their business.
HomeLight consistently applies a logical fallacy called "Appeal to Authority" where it states that their partner agents are the best simply because the company has done some sort of "black box" research without actionable reasoning to support the claim. HomeLight algorithm is biased by default, simply because it will only match consumers with partner agents, and not all local agents.
HomeLight cannot actually rate all local agents and publically disclose this data, simply because agents who are rated badly will argue that the system of rating is flawed – not all transactions are recorded in the MLS, it is impossible to truly determine the quality of agents based on data provided in the MLS, some agents will underprice homes to sell them quicker, etc. Consumers are legally allowed to rate their experience with services in the United States. Unbiased channels such as Yelp! freely offer unbiased medium with good information where brokers cannot buy their recommendations with referral fees, or offer consumers gift cards to write reviews.
HomeLight only offers three best choices, simply because these agents will not argue with that determination, in fact, they are willing to provide a kickback of their commission for the privilege.
All of these reasons combined are why the editor's review rating is so much different from positive consumer reviews. The editor's rating focuses on the fairness of the process, rather than the individual outcome. In order to promote fair practices in the industry, we place a very different value on pay-to-play steering vs. unbiased match results.
Is HomeLight Free?
HomeLight often proclaims that its "service is 100% free." We find this statement to be false. HomeLight is not free, in fact, this "paper" brokerage adds unnecessary referral fees into transactions that make it more expensive to buy or sell any home.
Eventually, HomeLight is a brokerage and their fees are paid by consumers with higher commissions. HomeLight further claims that "agents don't pay us to be listed, so you get the best match." This is a use of a "Modal Logical Fallacy" because it specifically concludes that because something is true, it is necessarily true, and there is no other situation that would cause the statement to be false. Simply because agents don't pay HomeLight to be listed, doesn't mean that agents don't pay HomeLight at all. In fact, HomeLight actively steers consumers toward agents who pay them, just after the transaction.
As of 2019, HomeLight claims to have made a successful match for about 390,000 people with agents. The median home price of a home in the United States is about $230,000. Multiplying the two figures yields about $100 Billion in home sales. Assuming a 5-6% commission, this yields about $5 to $6 Billion in real estate commission business generated nationwide. In the recent Crunchbase article HomeLight claims to have "driven well over $17 billion of real estate business nationwide," which indicates that HomeLight works with homes above the median price. Simply stated, HomeLight has collected a "standard" 25% (presently, 33%) referral fee on commissions valued anywhere from $5 to $17 Billion since its inception in 2012.
This yields a mind-blowing estimate set at $1.25 to $4.25 Billion in commission kickbacks paid to HomeLight from participating brokers across the United States. Almost all of it is profit since HomeLight doesn't perform any services typically offered by real estate brokers.
HomeLight advertises a 100% free service, yet it subjects consumers to Billions in added fees in one of the most important transactions of their lives.
HomeLight referrals violate RESPA
The primary reason consumers and honest real estate agents should avoid HomeLight is the illegal kickbacks involved. Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) Section 8(a) and CFPB Regulation X maintain firm prohibitions against kickbacks and unearned fees. In the United States, the law firmly reads that no person shall give, and no person shall accept any fee, kickback, or thing of value pursuant to any agreement or understanding, oral or otherwise, that business incident to or a part of a real estate settlement service involving a federally related mortgage loan shall be referred to any person. See 12 U.S.C. 2607(a).
HomeLight attempts to utilize 12 U.S.C. 2607(c)(3) and 12 C.F.R. 1024.14(g)(1)(v) exemptions (or carve-outs) from the RESPA’s kickbacks ban. These exemptions allow payments under cooperative brokerage and referral arrangements between real estate agents and brokers. This limited exemption on kickbacks only applies to fee divisions within real estate brokerage arrangements when all parties act in a real estate brokerage capacity. (A bona fide brokerage sometimes needs to refer a client to another broker, where cooperative fee arrangements between bona fide real estate brokers may help facilitate a home purchase transaction more efficiently for both the home seller and the homebuyer.)
However, the so-called no upfront costs agent-matching services (or referral platforms) are not genuine brokerages acting in a brokerage capacity. This legal question was recently decided in my civil lawsuit with HomeLight. In this lawsuit, the United States District Court for the Northern District of California had reasoned that HomeLight acts in a vertical servicer-customer relationship on a different level of the supply chain with +/-28,000 partner agents. The federal court had reasoned that HomeLight is an upstream supplier of paid referrals to downstream real estate brokers (as opposed to a real estate broker acting on the same distribution level.) Specifically, the court reasoned that … even though HomeLight is a licensed brokerage, in the context of this [referral] agreement HomeLight and agents are not acting as horizontal competitors … where … real estate agents [are] referral platform’s intermediate consumers … HomeLight, Inc. v. Shkipin, 22-cv-03119-PCP, 4 (N.D. Cal. Sep. 27, 2023).
This determination made by the federal court precludes 12 U.S.C. 2607(c)(3) exemption applicability for any of HomeLight’s referrals to partner agents. The publisher of this review does not have standing to raise a claim against HomeLight under RESPA in federal court, however, consumers who used HomeLight may have standing to sue, depending on when they were steered toward a partner agent who paid kickbacks to HomeLight. (The statute of limitations for a violation of RESPA is one year from the date of the violation. However, the statute of limitations can be extended under certain circumstances through the doctrine of equitable tolling.)
HomeLight is not even licensed as a brokerage in most states, so they could not even possibly be acting in brokerage capacity in those jurisdictions where they are not licensed, to begin with. Setting aside all other facts, where their Section 8(c)(3) defense (that HomeLight holds a real estate license in California, therefore it is eligible for 12 U.S.C. 2607(c)(3) exemption) immediately fails in jurisdictions where HomeLight holds no real estate licenses at all, yet they claim to operate in. Even in California, HomeLight holds a license with a single Salesperson listed, for all practical reasons, a shell entity.
There is a cardinal legal difference between a referral platform and a real estate brokerage. The Supreme Court, in Ohio v. Am. Express Co., 138 S. Ct. 2274, 201 L. Ed. 2d 678 (2018) recognized a two-sided platform to facilitate a single, simultaneous transaction that offers different products or services to two different groups who both depend on the platform to intermediate between them. In other words, all agreements between two-sided platforms and their customers are established between firms at different levels of distribution offering entirely different products or services. The term real estate broker is codified under 24 C.F.R. 3500.2(b) as a settlement service provider. A mere possession of a shell real estate license does not meet this designation. The 12 U.S.C. 2607(c)(3) exemption only allows real estate agents or real estate brokers where all parties deliver services provided in connection with a prospective or actual settlement … for which a settlement service provider requires a borrower or seller to pay to share cooperative broker commissions between one another. See 12 C.F.R. 1024.2(b)(29)(14). As a referral platform, HomeLight violates RESPA because it collects a 33% kickback from real estate brokers, a conduct that is outlawed by the United States Congress.
A referral platform may, of course, easily sell customer leads to real estate brokers. However, such sales must never be tied to the outcome of the successful transaction or based on a percentage of real estate commissions. The US-CFPB Advisory Opinion issued on February 7, 2023, further confirms that any operator of a settlement services digital comparison-shopping platform receives a prohibited referral fee in violation of RESPA Section 8 when the operator receives a thing of value for referral activity. In the United States, anyone violating the RESPA’s referral fee ban commits a crime 12 U.S.C. 2607(d)(1). HomeLight is orchestrating a wire-enabled nationwide scheme that constitutes 1,200,000+ separate counts of RESPA violations. When prosecuted by the government, Section 8 of RESPA violations are subject to fines of up to $10,000 and a potential prison sentence of one year, for each violation.
HomeLight false advertising violates Lanham Act and FTC Act
HomeLight utilizes false statements to promote itself (such as: Free and unbiased. Our service is 100% free, with no catch. Agents don't pay us to be listed, so you get the best match). This is integrally false advertising, as a matter of law. HomeLight even admits in its legal arguments that it is not free. The scheme steers consumers in a pay-to-play setting, and it cannot be unbiased by the mere definition.
The US-FTC Guide Concerning Use of the Word Free and Similar Representations 16 C.F.R. 251.1 explains meaning of free such that a purchaser has a right to believe that the merchant will not directly and immediately recover, in whole or in part, the cost of the free merchandise or service. HomeLight's false advertising cannot meet this definition because the scheme directly recovers the cost of steering consumers to partner agents via an unlawful referral fee paid upon a successful transaction. This fee is directly recovered from each referral and is paid by consumers with excessive real estate commissions. For certain transactions, HomeLight, Inc. also admits to taking their referral fees directly from consumers’ escrow. HomeLight is NOT free, and it is certainly NOT 100% free. The false advertising damages, as a result of HomeLight's false advertising, can be restituted to harmed consumers and lawful businesses.
Because consumers continually search for the best buy and regard special offers (such as, 100% free, no catch, and unbiased) to be a special bargain, all such offers must be made with extreme care so as to avoid any possibility that consumers will be misled or deceived. HomeLight's false advertising (Free and unbiased. Our service is 100% free, with no catch) do NOT display ALL of the terms, conditions and obligations in close conjunction at the outset of these offers, where disclosure of the terms of the offer is hidden within Terms of Service, is NEVER sufficient according to US-FTC.
In reality, ALL partner agents agree to pay HomeLight a referral fee on all closed transactions through their employing broker. Partner Agents must also sign a referral agreement with HomeLight before consumers' referrals become accessible. Even where HomeLight admits that it receives a portion of the agent's commission as a referral fee as an explanation on its referral fee model, this explanation is materially deceptive because it falsely and deliberately describes that (1) there is no cost to consumers to use HomeLight, (2) Agent Match service has no catch, and (3) 100% free service for everyone involved. HomeLight's referral fee is not only an unlawful kickback, but it is also never free to any consumers, very much meant to catch consumers with hidden kickbacks, and it makes home buying or selling more expensive by tens of thousands in junk fees.
HomeLight price-fixing violates Sherman Antitrust Act
HomeLight's model is also materially deceptive because it aims to stabilize real estate commission rates for ALL partner agents at 5%-6% of the sales price as the standard range. According to US-FTC Guide to Antitrust Laws, price fixing is an agreement (written, verbal, or inferred from conduct) among competitors to raise, lower, maintain, or stabilize prices or price levels.
HomeLight falsely represents to consumers on its website that: (1) A commission rate of 5%-6% of the sales price is the standard range, (2) Homesellers can expect to pay 5% to 6% of their sale price as total commission, (3) Sellers typically pay a 6% commission, (4) The average total commission on a home sale is 5% to 6% of the total sale price, which is typically paid by the seller, (5) 1.5% [commission] savings may actually cost you more in profits than simply paying the higher commission, (6) When asking an agent to lower their pay, you limit the pool of agents willing to work with you, (7) The downsides to working with a low-commission agent can be steep, (8) Buyer agent commissions are most often covered by the seller, meaning this service is typically 100% free for buyers, (9) HomeLight would be happy to put your commission worries to rest by introducing you to several agents in your area who are well worth it., etc.
None of these statements about commissions are true. All real estate commissions must always be individually-negotiable, and, under law, there are no standard real estate commissions anywhere in the United States. Further, a cooperative buy-side offer of compensation made toward buyer brokers' fees cannot be mandated upon home sellers via MLS, or otherwise (although, real estate professionals may offer optional cooperative Buyer Agent Commissions in (40) state jurisdictions where buyer agent rebates are allowed by state law, as long there are no false claims made that buyer brokers services are free to homebuyers and home sellers are fully informed that all such offers are optional.)
While it is true that HomeLight does not explicitly mandate that all of +/-28,000 partner agents charge consumers 5% to 6% commissions as part of their referral agreement, it blatantly suggests that they do, where the series of horizontal price-fixing agreements to stabilize prices between spokes can be inferred from HomeLight's conduct. In other words, all partner agents (acting on the same distribution level) sign up into the referral network administered by HomeLight on the understanding that other partner agents using the referral platform will also likely be asking for 5% to 6% of the total sale price.
HomeLight maintains full control over selected partner agents who are being referred to consumers (typically, no more than three (3) partner agents are recommended as the best match to consumers), and because HomeLight knows what partner agents from past referrals charge historically, and because HomeLight makes it known to all partner agents that the standard commission is 5% to 6% - a series of horizontal agreements to stabilize prices between spokes is plausibly used as the vehicle to safeguard partner agents from fierce competition, thereby the hub creates collusive efficiency by reducing the need for horizontal coordination through communications from hubs to spokes regarding other spokes' intentions.
According to US-FTC, HomeLight is allowed to argue that it implements no price-fixing agreements between partner agents in their network, but if the government or a private party proves a plain price-fixing agreement, there is no defense to it. HomeLight may not justify its behavior by arguing that the prices were reasonable to consumers, were typical within the industry, or were necessary to avoid fierce competition or stimulated competition. No court has yet determined if a series of horizontal price-fixing agreements to stabilize standard commission at 5% to 6% across +/-28,000 HomeLight partner agents exists or not, but the statements made by HomeLight on their website can be sufficiently used to prove that HomeLight violates antitrust law by way of stabilizing commissions across a nationwide network of partner agents. In the author’s opinion, HomeLight blatantly fixes commissions for partner agents with a single goal in mind: higher price-fixed real estate commissions rates charged by partner agents simply yield higher kickbacks paid to HomeLight from each home sale or home purchase.
FAQ for HomeLight
What are the alternatives to HomeLight?
HomeLight directly competes with several broker-to-broker referral fee schemes, including Zillow Flex, Realtor.com Opcity, Redfin Partner Program, Opendoor Brokerage, Rocket Homes, mellohome, Sold.com, Xome, LemonBrew, Radius Agent, ReferralExchange, Nobul, NAEBA, UpNest, Clever Real Estate, and others.
What are the pros and cons of HomeLight?
Pros: there are none with HomeLight. HomeLight's proposition to match consumers with the best real estate agents is a false advertisement. HomeLight's broker-to-broker collusion scheme holds no tangible value to any consumer, either when buying or selling a home.
Cons: there are several major disadvantages to HomeLight. First, consumers are hiring two brokers for the work of one. Because HomeLight takes a 25% referral fee, the referred agent is unable to offer their full value to consumers. HomeLight only recommends three paying agents to consumers, leaving out the vast majority of honest agents who refuse to participate in the scheme.
Summary: HomeLight steers consumers toward their network of brokers and away from others. HomeLight cannot legally organize brokers into a network because blanket referral agreements, consumer allocation, and market allocation between licensed real estate brokers are prohibited in the United States.
What is HomeLight?
HomeLight is a 'paper' real estate brokerage. Agents agree to pay HomeLight a referral fee, on all closed transactions, through their employing broker. HomeLight does not offer any representation services. HomeLight is a consumer brokering scheme that works to receive a cut of agent's commissions with the use of blanket referral agreements.
Is HomeLight legitimate?
No. HomeLight is a consumer allocation scheme between licensed real estate brokers that increases broker commissions and limits consumer choices. HomeLight's revenue comes from blanket referral fees set at 25% of the entire broker's commission. HomeLight is scamming consumers when it claims to offer unbiased matches. HomeLight a pay-to-play scheme that offers biased matches for financial gain. The main qualification for real estate brokers who participate with HomeLight 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.
How does HomeLight make money?
HomeLight is a pay-to-play scheme that offers biased matches for financial gain. HomeLight is a registered licensed broker with the California Department of Real Estate. As a licensed broker HomeLight does not offer any tangible services, instead, the company utilizes blanket referral agreements with independent Partner Agents in a possible violation of the Sherman Act and RESPA. All Partner Agents must agree to pay HomeLight a blanket referral fee to participate in the scheme.
Is HomeLight algorithm impartial?
No. HomeLight algorithm is self-proclaimed and easily amounts to unfounded results. HomeLight has a direct financial incentive to recommend the most expensive brokers to consumers because their referral fees are calculated from the total price of the commission a referred broker earns from the real estate transaction.
HomeLight does not have any legal authority to rate the quality of other real estate brokers because it is a broker like any other. HomeLight is a 100% biased platform.
What is HomeLight Simple Sale?
HomeLight Simple Sale is a consumer brokering scheme where HomeLight feeds home seller's information to cash home buyers in exchange for a hidden 4% kickback paid by the cash home buyer.
Simple Sale is not a legal home seller representation. HomeLight does not act in a listing brokerage capacity and does not have a representation agreement signed with the home seller. This means that whenever a home seller sells their home to via Simple Sale, HomeLight receives a kickback from the cash home buyer, under the premise that consumers 'save' on the cost of the listing commission.
In reality, with Simple Sale, home sellers are fed into a consumer brokering scheme, lose control of their consumer choice, are presented with below-market offers, lack exposure of their home on the open market, and receive zero market offers made by legitimate buyers.
It is unlikely that any legitimate seller's agent can recommend selling any home off-market with a third party taking hidden kickbacks from the proceeds. A legitimate real estate agent always works for the home seller and always acts in the seller’s best interest under ethics and local state Business and Professions codes. HomeLight merely acts in their self-interest and in the best interest of whoever pays it the largest kickbacks.
Where does HomeLight operate?
HomeLight User Reviews
GeoDoma aims to display user reviews posted as independent opinions of ordinary impartial customers. Review solicitation is the act of asking customers to leave reviews. Businesses should not ask for or solicit reviews on GeoDoma. This includes asking customers to write reviews.
It has been confirmed by our staff that sometime in December 2019, HomeLight has solicited customers to post their feedback in exchange for cash gift cards.
Solicited reviews are posted by legitimate customers, and we are accountable to display them, however, the act of review solicitation may lead to deceptively biased content because businesses can cherry-pick their requests.
Please proceed with caution.
They then set up an appointment with only about 4 hours notice.
My wife and I had to cancel appointments and take off work suddenly to accommodate their lack of planning.
Then, they threatened to sue us because our wire transfer of the down payment had not completed. Considering the rushed timeline, it wouldn't have gone through by the time of the appointment even if we had sent it the second we got the appointment notice.
Their attorney, an inarticulate oaf who compensates for his limited vocabulary with liberal use of ALL CAPS, didn't even show up to the appointment, and attempted to cover up his lack of planning by putting about fifty people on an email and tossing out loose talk about lawsuits.
After his childish meltdown, he couldn't even do the courtesy of confirming that the down payment deposited.
Avoid these people, avoid this business.
Don’t bother giving your contact info away.
My house is valued at between 295-310k. This stupid site valued it at 189k.
Not sure where they get their data, but I think it’s all BS!
They are all the same and the realtors all LIE the same and tell you that you will get about 10% Less than market value which you're thinking "hey that's worth not having to pay the realtor and clean your house up constantly.
They quoted me 477 and I sold it myself for 575 so almost 100k MORE.
My advice is this company is only good for the very wealthy who don't care if a bunch of money is shaved off OR the very desperate homeowners.
Not worth is to the majority of thr homeowner selling-they just waste your time.
This is Fraud. False advertising. The Agents pay for the referral, that’s all.
Spent 10 minutes trying to get the valuation but never got it.
The website would not allow it because I wasn’t giving up a phone number.
When you have to force customers to provide basic info, you haven’t earned their trust?
Earn it, then ask.
I don't answer numbers I don't recognize. After several days of the same number calling, and not leaving a message, I answer, to find it's HomeLight.
No one on the other end, and as I'm about to hang up, an automated voice tells me this call is being recorded, and man comes on, saying he's from HomeLight.
I hang up. Immediately after that I receive a flurry of phone calls, emails and texts from real estate agents - completely unsolicited!
I realized that I had recently used an online home valuation calculator out of curiosity.
Apparently the information I entered was distributed to agents under the pretense that I was selling my home. I never once suggested that my home was going on the market when using the online tool.
Be warned, they will spam you if they get your information.
The clients are not paired with the best Brokers for them, they are paired with the brokers that are paying into this referral network.
Often these brokers are the less effective or experienced brokers that don't have enough of their own deal flow, and therefore have to pay someone else for leads.
I don't like that this info is hidden and the service tries to present itself as a legitimate 'matching' process for clients, when it's just a paid referral program for the owners of Homelight.
A wife and husband showed hours after soliciting Homelight.
It would be too lengthy for me to detail everything. They advised me to keep my used furniture in place, which I know is not a good idea.
They brought out clients as I warned I wasn’t ready, took clients out anyway, and then chewed me out because it wasn’t ready. The wife thought that hugging the seller a lot was a good idea. I don’t like strangers hanging me.
There’s a lot more, but suffice to say, Homelight doesn’t get the biggest sellers.
The subsequent realtor that did a great job selling in under a month, did a great job and said he’d never heard of the apparent amateurs that Homelight Dispatched.
DONT USE HOMELIGHT
THEY’RE BS. Thank you
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
10 ?? Rating.
I thank God I found HomeLight who led me to my fabulous realtor Connie @ Honey & Company Realty.
THANK YOU ??
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
All the little things I had to get done Heidi had a contact for. She was absolutely astonishing! I would recommend them to everyone who wants a professional team working for them and to be updated on the status of your home selling on a regular basis.
I can’t say enough about my outcome!
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Some other realtors were not willing to work with us to get us the sales price that we wanted for our property. Gary's wife Danette however worked very hard and make clear that we would not go below our bottom line. She believed in her ability to get us what we wanted.
Well, what do you know. Our property sold within a week of it being placed on the market. Everyone in our area, especially those trying to sell their properties through other realty companies were shocked that it sold so fast. It sold for our asking price too. This meant that we were able to pay the costs of selling, the cost of moving with National Van Lines, and the cost of buying a new house in Georgia, plus have money left over.
Speaking of Georgia, Diann Simpson of iheartatlantarealty.com was also recommended by Homelight and she worked patiently and diligently to find the house that we wanted and could afford. When properties in Marietta Georgia are going for minimums of over $300,000 our desire to buy a nice house for $140,000 seemed impossible. We had to move our search a bit south of Atlanta but we found just what we were looking for. Diann's patience and hard work definitely paid off.
I have to say that our experience with Homelight was successful and satisfying. The realtors they recommended achieved the goals given them and in a very positive way.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
I must say I am very satisfied with the service Homelight provided in helping me find the best realtor for me. Homelight suggested qualified realtors in my area and even allowed me to see their most recent sales history. From there I was immediately contacted by a qualified agent. I listed with the agent in August and my home was sold in September. Thank you to Homelight for setting me up with Lou DeMichele of One Realty.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
I’m very happy to have found HomeLight while searching online to look for an agent to help with the sale of 10324 Sandy Creek Rd Albuquerque NM. I chose John Myers based on the high rating on the site and I was not disappointed. John has been professional and attentive right from the start. He worked with me diligently to work out a plan for the sale that includes helping with the remodeling process. He was also accommodating and patience during the time of my vacation. The sale went smoothly with the expected listing price sold. I will definitely recommend HomeLight and John if other opportunities arise in the future.
Ted
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
I can’t thank you all enough at Homelite. The service you provided me was the absolute best. Your representative explained to me how your service worked and boy did it work. You paired me with the #1 agent in my area who was so wonderful in helping me sell my home. The process was so easy with my realtor Mechelle Kuld. I would be more than thrilled to recommend Homelite to anyone who is looking to sell their home. I think the service you provide is so valuable to anyone trying to sell their home especially if they are like me someone who had never sold a home before and did not know where to start. Again thank you so much for your service. And let me just say my home sold in a month of my realtor listing.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Caution: The author of this review has confirmed that his/her posting was solicited by HomeLight in exchange for a cash gift card.
Of course, they do make money. When you are referring to an agent, that agent will pay a referral fee back to HomeLight.
This referral fee is between the agent and HomeLight and is not the customer's concern. Go ahead and find a great real estate agent with HomeLight.
The 4% fee may be worth the referral if the deal closes as the company says it doesn't collect the fee until the deal actually closes,
however from the agent side, they are looking for 25% of the agent's commissions. In addition, they also want to collect a fee from any transactions that transpire downstream.
Compare HomeLight to:
Thank you!
Your review has been successfully received. Please allow 24 hours for your review to become available.
Feel free to contact us if you need further assistance. At Geodoma we aim to make the opportunity of homeownership transparent, affordable and an open experience.