Broker Commission 2023: Who Pays What?

The number one controversial question when selling a house

Key Facts

  • The broker commission only has to be paid upon a successful transaction.

  • The commission can no longer be fully shifted to the buyer.

  • You can use a commission calculator to determine the Maklercourtage amount.

Who Pays the Broker Fees?

  • Brokers want to be paid for a successful sale of your property.

  • But how much is the commission? Who has to pay it? Can it be avoided?

  • What if your property does not sell?

  • All questions about broker commissions are clarified below.

How much does a broker cost?

  • The broker commission is a success-based fee.

  • This means: the broker is only entitled to a commission if a successful contract results from their work.

  • “If the broker does not sell your property, you do not have to pay.”

  • Rules differ between sales and rentals.

Broker commission for property sales

  • Commission is negotiable.

  • Typically, regional norms apply, ranging from 5.95% to 7.14% of the sale price.

Total commission by federal state:

State Total Broker Commission
Baden-Württemberg 7.14 %
Bavaria 7.14 %
Berlin 7.14 %
Brandenburg 7.14 %
Bremen 5.95 %
Hamburg 6.25 %
Hessen 5.95 %
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 5.95 %
Lower Saxony 7.14 % or 4.76 – 5.95 %
North Rhine-Westphalia 7.14 %
Rhineland-Palatinate 7.14 %
Saarland 7.14 %
Saxony 7.14 %
Saxony-Anhalt 7.14 %
Schleswig-Holstein 7.14 %
Thuringia 7.14 %

Broker commission for rentals

  • Under the “Bestellerprinzip” (2015), the person who hires the broker must pay.

  • Usually, this is the landlord. Tenants do not pay.

  • If the tenant hires a broker: maximum 2 months cold rent + VAT, often 2.38 months cold rent.

Formula:
2 * Rent + 2 * 19% VAT

Can you negotiate the commission?

  • Commission is negotiable, but brokers rarely agree, especially for rentals.

  • Reason: the commission covers costs and risk if the property isn’t sold.

  • Properties that are easy to sell may allow brokers to reduce fees.

Who must pay the broker?

  • Before 23/12/2020: buyers often paid most.

  • New law: buyers pay a maximum of 50%, the rest is covered by the seller.

  • Rentals: follows the Bestellerprinzip, the client who hires the broker pays.

Transaction Type Commission Rate Who Pays?
Sale 5.95 – 7.14 % of sale price Split between buyer & seller
Rental Up to 2 months rent + VAT (2.38 months) Client/Besteller

Types of Commission Agreements

  1. Double Commission (Doppelprovision):

    • Broker contracts with both buyer and seller.

    • Commission is split 50/50.

    • If broker works for free with one party, the other party is not charged.

  2. Commission with Refund:

    • Usually the seller pays but can be partially reimbursed.

    • Seller must pay at least 50%, buyer covers the rest.

  3. Full Commission Paid by One Party:

    • Still allowed by agreement; not mandatory to split.

    • Can be internal commission (seller only) or external commission (buyer only).

When does the broker get paid?

  • Broker is entitled to commission if:

  1. A valid broker contract exists.

  2. Broker performs introduction or mediation activities.

  3. There is a valid purchase/rental contract between owner and client.

  4. There is a causal link between broker activities and contract conclusion.

  • Commission is only due after a successful sale.

  • Advantage for sellers: the broker will work hard since payment depends on sale success.

Selling a house with a broker: what to do?

  • Compare multiple brokers in your area.

  • Use free online comparison tools to find the right broker and receive a preliminary property valuation.

How a broker comparison works:

  1. Describe your property: type, year built, address.

  2. Submit request: system finds suitable brokers near you.

  3. Receive proposals: up to 3 brokers, including a preliminary property valuation, 100% free and non-binding.

Do you have to pay immediately?

  • Usually per broker terms: 1–2 weeks after contract signing.

  • Sellers can often wait until they actually receive the sales proceeds.

Can broker fees be avoided?

  • No commission is due if:

  1. No right to mediate: e.g., economic or family relationship with the broker.

  2. Incorrect property information: broker does not verify, but cannot conceal or falsify.

  3. Missing contract information: broker must inform about commission and due date.

  4. Excessive commission: may be considered “unethical” and contract void (OLG Frankfurt 2007).

  5. Invalid main contract: if purchase contract is invalid, no commission is owed.

Can broker commission be deducted for taxes?

  • In some cases:

    • Landlords can deduct fees as advertising expenses on income tax.

    • Buyers who rent out property: include commission in acquisition costs, depreciate over time.

    • Relocating tenants for work can deduct fees on tax return.

  • Profits from property sales are taxed if not mainly owner-occupied and sold within <10 years. Commission can reduce taxable profit.

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