Real estate agent commissions in Chicago typically run 5% to 6% of the sale price. On a $200,000 home, that is $10,000 to $12,000 out of your pocket. On a $300,000 home, it is $15,000 to $18,000. For many homeowners, that commission represents a significant portion of their equity, and they wonder: is there a way to sell without paying it? The answer is yes, and there are several approaches, each with their own advantages and challenges.
The FSBO Challenge in Chicago
For Sale By Owner (FSBO) is the most common alternative to using a real estate agent. In theory, you list the property yourself, handle showings, negotiate with buyers, and close the sale, keeping the commission in your pocket. In practice, FSBO sales in Chicago face significant hurdles.
Marketing is the first challenge. The Illinois MLS (Multiple Listing Service) is the primary tool that buyers and their agents use to find properties. FSBO listings are not automatically included in the MLS, which means your property is invisible to the vast majority of active buyers. You can pay a flat fee to have your listing added to the MLS (services like Houzeo or Flat Fee MLS offer this for $300 to $500). Following the 2024 NAR settlement, any compensation arrangements with buyer's agents are negotiated separately and disclosed in the buyer's representation agreement rather than advertised on the MLS.
Showings and negotiations are the second challenge. You need to be available to show the property at times that are convenient for buyers, which often means evenings and weekends. You need to negotiate directly with buyers or their agents, who are professionals trained in negotiation. Without experience, sellers often leave money on the table or make concessions they did not need to make.
Paperwork and legal compliance are the third and potentially most dangerous challenge. Illinois has specific legal requirements for real estate transactions, including the Illinois Residential Real Property Disclosure Act, radon testing disclosure, lead paint disclosure for homes built before 1978, and various municipal transfer requirements. Missing any of these can expose you to legal liability after the sale.
The Attorney Review Period: Illinois's Built-In Protection
One advantage of selling in Illinois is the attorney review period. Unlike many states where a signed contract is immediately binding, Illinois real estate contracts include a five-business-day attorney review period during which either party's attorney can modify or cancel the contract. This means even if you negotiate the contract yourself, your attorney has an opportunity to review and protect your interests. Every seller in Illinois, whether using an agent or selling FSBO, should have a real estate attorney. Attorney fees for a standard residential sale are typically $500 to $1,000, a fraction of a real estate commission.
Comparing Your Three Options
When you want to sell without a traditional listing agent, you essentially have three choices: FSBO, a discount or flat-fee broker, or selling directly to a cash buyer. Each has different implications for your time, money, and stress level.
FSBO gives you maximum control but requires maximum effort. You handle everything from pricing to marketing to showings to negotiations. You save the listing agent's commission, though any compensation arrangements with a buyer's agent are negotiated separately following the 2024 NAR settlement. The timeline is unpredictable, as FSBO homes tend to sell more slowly and for lower prices than agent-listed homes according to National Association of Realtors data.
Flat-fee brokers list your home on the MLS for a fixed fee (typically $300 to $3,000 in Chicago) instead of a percentage-based commission. You still handle showings and any negotiations with buyer's agents on a per-transaction basis. This option gives you MLS exposure without the full listing agent cost.
Selling to a cash buyer like us eliminates the entire commission structure. There are no listing agent commissions and no closing costs for you. We pay all closing costs. We also eliminate the timeline uncertainty: instead of waiting three to six months for a buyer, we present an offer within 24 hours and can close in seven to fourteen days. The trade-off is that our offer will be below full retail market value, because we are taking on the risk, repair costs, and holding costs that a traditional buyer would avoid.
When Selling to a Cash Buyer Makes the Most Sense
Selling directly to a cash buyer is not the right choice for every situation, but it is the best option in many common scenarios. If you need to sell quickly due to foreclosure, divorce, relocation, or financial hardship, the speed of a cash sale is invaluable. If your home needs significant repairs and you cannot afford to invest in them before selling, a cash buyer who purchases as-is properties eliminates that barrier. If you simply do not want the hassle of showings, open houses, and months of waiting, a cash sale gives you certainty and closure.
The math often works out better than you expect. When you factor in the commission savings (no 5-6% commission), the repair savings (no need to invest $10,000 to $30,000 getting the house market-ready), the carrying costs you avoid (months of mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, and utilities while the house sits on the market), and the closing costs we pay, our net offer is often comparable to what you would walk away with after a traditional sale.
If you are considering selling your Chicago home without a realtor, contact us for a no-obligation cash offer. We can show you exactly what you would receive and help you compare it to your other options. There is no pressure and no commitment. Just honest numbers and a fair evaluation of your property.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a lawyer to sell a house in Illinois?
While not legally required, using a real estate attorney is standard practice in Illinois and strongly recommended. Illinois contracts include a five-business-day attorney review period. Attorney fees typically run $500 to $1,000, a fraction of a real estate commission.
How much do I save by not using a realtor?
A typical listing-agent commission in Chicago is roughly 2.5% to 3% of the sale price. When selling to a cash buyer, you avoid the listing commission entirely. Any compensation arrangements with a buyer's agent are negotiated separately on a per-transaction basis following the 2024 NAR settlement.
Is selling to a cash buyer the same as FSBO?
No. FSBO means you handle everything yourself. Selling to a cash buyer means we handle everything. We present an offer, you accept, and we close. No showings, no marketing, no uncertainty. Both avoid listing commissions, but a cash sale is simpler and faster.