Do Florida buyers have to pay their real estate agent in 2026?
In 2026, Florida buyers have to sign a written buyer broker agreement before they tour most homes listed on the MLS. The agreement names who pays the buyer's agent and how much. According to a HomeLight survey of top agents, 92% of sellers in 2026 are still covering the buyer's agent commission, usually as a seller concession at closing rather than an offer published on the MLS. If a seller declines, you have three real options: negotiate the commission into your purchase offer as a seller concession, build it into your offer price and adjust accordingly, or pay your agent directly. The right path depends on your loan type, the seller's position, and the local market.
By Amber Welch | April 28, 2026
If you're buying a home in Clermont this spring, you've probably heard one of two stories. Either your agent now costs you thousands of dollars out of pocket, or nothing has really changed. Both are wrong.
What actually happened is more nuanced, and the version most Florida buyers hear from headlines, group chats, and well-meaning relatives doesn't match how transactions are actually closing in Lake County right now. Let me walk you through it the way I walk every buyer client before we tour a single home.
What changed: the NAR settlement and Florida's new buyer broker rules
In November 2024, a federal court approved a national settlement in the Burnett v. NAR case that ended the old model where sellers automatically published an offer of compensation to the buyer's agent on the MLS. The settlement required two big practical shifts in how Florida transactions work:
- MLSs can no longer publish offers of compensation to buyer brokers.
- Buyers have to sign a written agreement with their agent before that agent shows them MLS-listed properties, whether in person or virtually.
Florida Realtors rolled out updated buyer broker agreement forms in January 2026 to bring contracts into full compliance with the settlement and the new MLS rules. If you've been touring homes recently, that's why you were asked to sign something at the start of your relationship with an agent.
The settlement didn't make commissions illegal. It didn't ban sellers from paying the buyer's side. It just removed the assumption baked into the MLS and made the conversation about who pays what an explicit one between buyer, seller, and their respective agents.
What's actually in the agreement
The agreement names a few things directly:
- Term. The start and end date of your relationship with the agent. Some are 30 days, some are six months. This is fully negotiable.
- Exclusivity. Whether you're working with this agent only, or whether you're keeping options open. Most buyers sign exclusive agreements, but you don't have to.
- Geographic scope. The areas the agreement covers. A Clermont buyer's agreement usually covers Lake County and may extend to Orange, Polk, Osceola, and Seminole if the search is broader.
- Compensation. The fee owed to the buyer's brokerage and how it gets paid. This is the heart of the contract.
- Cancellation terms. Some Florida buyer broker agreements allow either party to cancel with written notice. Others don't. Read this section carefully.
The most important line is the compensation paragraph. It usually expresses the fee as a percentage of purchase price, commonly 2.5% to 3%, or a flat dollar amount. The paragraph also addresses what happens to that fee depending on who actually pays it.
Who actually pays the buyer's agent in Florida in 2026
This is the part most buyers get wrong. Despite the settlement, sellers still pay the buyer's agent in the overwhelming majority of Florida transactions. According to a recent HomeLight survey of top agents, 92% of sellers in 2026 continue to cover the buyer's agent commission. They do it because most buyers in Florida work with agents, and a listing that doesn't address buyer-agent compensation gets shown less, gets fewer offers, and often sells for less. In a leveling market like Clermont's right now, where homes are sitting on the market 68 days on average and inventory has grown, sellers know that covering the buyer's side can be the difference between an offer this week and silence for another month.
Three paths in 2026
The mechanics changed post-settlement, but the dollars usually still flow the same way. Here's how it actually works:
- Seller concession at closing. The seller agrees in the purchase contract to credit a specific dollar amount or percentage of the purchase price toward the buyer's agent commission. The credit shows up as a seller-paid line on the buyer's closing disclosure. The buyer doesn't write a separate check.
- Negotiated into the offer. The buyer's offer specifies that the seller pays the buyer's brokerage fee out of the sale proceeds. Same financial outcome as a concession, just structured differently in the contract.
- Buyer pays directly. If the seller refuses to cover the fee, which happens more often with FSBOs and some new-construction builders, the buyer pays the brokerage. This usually gets collected at closing from the buyer's funds and shows on the closing disclosure as a buyer-paid line.
The third path is the one buyers fear, and it's the one that gets the most airtime online. In practice, it's the least common in Lake County resale transactions. It's more common with new construction along Wellness Way or off Hancock Road, where some builders treat buyer-agent compensation as a separate line that a buyer's agent has to register before the first showing. Even then, the builder almost always pays. But the rules are firm and the registration has to happen before you walk in the door.
The procuring cause clause, and why you need to read it twice
Here's the trap that gets first-time buyers in trouble: most Florida buyer broker agreements specify that the agent's commission is earned when the purchase contract is signed, not when the deal closes.
That means if you sign a buyer broker agreement, write an offer, get under contract, and the deal collapses for a reason that isn't your fault, you may technically still owe your agent the commission under the literal terms of the contract. Reasons can include a failed inspection, financing falling through, or an appraisal coming in low.
In practice, this rarely gets enforced. Most agents and brokerages don't pursue commissions on dead deals. But the language is in the form, and you should know it's there before you sign. If you're worried about it, ask the agent to add language that ties commission to closing. Some firms will, some won't. It's part of the negotiation.
What this looks like for Clermont buyers specifically
If you're buying resale in Clermont, say a 2008-built single-family home in Heritage Hills or a townhouse in Greater Pines, the most common 2026 path looks like this. You meet with an agent and sign a buyer broker agreement that names the brokerage's fee at 2.5% to 3%. You tour homes. You find one. You write an offer that asks the seller to credit your buyer-agent fee at closing as a seller concession. The seller, who is sitting on a home that's been on the market 60-plus days, agrees to the concession because they want the deal done. The credit appears on the seller-paid side of the closing disclosure. You don't pay your agent out of pocket.
If you're buying new construction along Wellness Way or in one of the master-planned communities tied to the Schofield Road extension, the path can look different. Some builders cap buyer-agent compensation at a fixed dollar amount or a lower percentage. Some require pre-registration. Before you walk into a builder's model home, ask your agent to verify that builder's buyer representation policy. This single phone call has saved buyers I've worked with from compensation disputes that aren't worth the headache.
If interest rates are part of your decision, my recent piece on what the Fed's recent rate cut means for your home buying power walks through how the math actually changes for buyers in this market.
What I tell every buyer before they sign
Three things, every time:
- Read the term and the cancellation language. If the cancellation clause requires mutual consent or a long minimum commitment, that's worth a conversation before you sign. A reasonable buyer broker agreement gives both parties a clear exit if the relationship isn't working.
- Understand the compensation paragraph completely. Know the percentage, know what happens if the seller doesn't pay, and know what happens if you find a home through your own efforts. A short walk-through of the agreement before signing is normal and expected.
- Don't assume the worst. The vast majority of Clermont buyers in 2026 are not paying their agent's commission out of pocket. They're getting it covered as a seller concession at closing. The settlement changed how the conversation happens, not how the dollars flow in most transactions.
This is exactly the kind of thing I walk buyers through before we look at a single home. Every buyer I represent gets a free home warranty included as part of working with me, and the up-front conversation about compensation, agreement terms, and what to expect at the closing table is something I do with every client whether they ask for it or not. You shouldn't have to learn this stuff by accident.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I legally have to sign a buyer broker agreement in Florida before touring a home?
You're required to sign a written agreement with an agent before they can show you most MLS-listed homes, in person or virtually. This is an MLS rule that affects nearly every brokerage in Florida, not a Florida state law. You can still attend public open houses without signing, and a listing agent working with you on their own listing can sometimes show you their seller's home without an exclusive buyer agreement.
How much does a buyer's agent cost in Clermont, Florida?
Most buyer broker agreements in Lake County set the buyer-side fee at 2.5% to 3% of the purchase price, though it's fully negotiable. On a $400,000 Clermont home, that's $10,000 to $12,000. In about 92% of Florida transactions in 2026, the seller pays this fee as a concession at closing, so the buyer rarely covers it directly.
What happens if the seller refuses to pay the buyer's agent in Florida?
You have three options: negotiate the fee into the purchase price as a seller concession, structure your offer with the fee built in, or pay your brokerage directly at closing from your own funds. Most experienced buyer's agents structure offers to keep the buyer's out-of-pocket cost as close to zero as possible, even when sellers initially decline to pay.
Can I cancel a Florida buyer broker agreement after I sign it?
It depends on the cancellation terms in your specific agreement. Some allow either party to cancel with written notice. Others require mutual consent or a minimum commitment period. Read the cancellation paragraph carefully before signing, and ask the agent to explain what would and wouldn't trigger a cancellation right.
Does the buyer broker agreement affect new construction in Wellness Way or other Clermont developments?
Yes, but the rules vary by builder. Some Lake County and Wellness Way builders cap buyer-agent compensation at a fixed dollar amount or specific percentage, and most require your agent to register you on the first visit. Before you walk into a model home, have your agent confirm the builder's buyer representation policy. Skipping this step is one of the most common avoidable mistakes I see in new-construction transactions.
If you're buying in Clermont or the surrounding area, every client I represent gets a free home warranty included, because protecting your investment from day one matters. I'll also walk you through the buyer broker agreement line by line before you sign anything, so you go in eyes open. Ready to start your search? Let's talk through what you're looking for and build a plan that fits your budget. Start at amberinorlando.myflodesk.com/homepage.
About Amber Welch
Amber Welch is a Realtor® and SFR (Short Sale and Foreclosure Resource) with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Results Realty, serving buyers, sellers, and investors in Clermont, FL and across Lake, Orange, Seminole, Osceola, and Polk counties. Before real estate, Amber guided multimillion-dollar companies as a CFO, and she brings that same precision and strategy to every transaction. She specializes in affordable housing, first-time buyers, and helping sellers maximize their equity in Central Florida's rapidly growing market. Connect with Amber at amberinorlando.com.


