『WARNING: Your Florida Agent May Not Actually Represent You』のカバーアート

WARNING: Your Florida Agent May Not Actually Represent You

WARNING: Your Florida Agent May Not Actually Represent You

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Most people sign a Florida real estate form and assume they just hired someone who will fight for them like a fiduciary. That assumption can be expensive. Florida is different, and the default relationship in many transactions is “transaction broker,” which can mean the deal gets facilitated while neither side gets full, loyal representation unless something specific is signed.

I’m joined by attorney Lauren Cole of Gibson Cole in Sarasota County to unpack what Florida representation really means for buyers and sellers. We walk through the history that led here, from the old seller-only world to the buyer-broker movement, and then into the transaction broker model that became the industry norm. Along the way, we connect it to today’s pressure for transparency, including the wider conversations happening across real estate after the NAR lawsuits.

Lauren also shares a concrete closing story where confidentiality and fiduciary duty changed the outcome, plus the practical reason a real estate attorney at closing can be a major upgrade over a title-only closing. We talk about common legal issues that show up late, like condo reserve changes and increased dues, how spouses should take title, when an LLC or trust may matter, and why attorney-drafted addendums can put agents in a tough spot since they can’t practice law.

If you’re buying or selling in Florida, this is your reminder to ask one question early: who actually represents me here, and in what capacity? Subscribe, share this with a friend moving to Florida, and leave a review so more buyers and sellers stop finding out the hard way.

Steve Martin Smith is a Licensed Florida Real Estate Broker and the owner of Slice of Florida Realty in Sarasota County Florida.

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