What Does Realtors Want to Know About You

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Real manor is frequently portrayed every bit a glamorous profession. Reality television has given us peeks into the lives of real estate agents who sell one thousand thousand-dollar mansions and assist clients find their dream homes, but is working in real estate actually anything like that in real life? Not surprising, those aren't the experiences most realtors have on the job. It'southward typically rather mundane — simply then in that location are the exceptions.

Existent estate agents, clients and colleagues have posted some hilarious stories on Reddit filled with all the juicy details nigh the nearly out-of-the-ordinary things they have experienced during showings. Allow'south but say you never know what you will observe when you walk into a stranger'due south firm.

Literal Bats in the Attic

I was a realtor in upstate NY dorsum in grad school. The worst business firm I always saw was pretty junky within, with paths through the garbage which was at least a foot deep in each room.

Photograph Courtesy: Todd Cravens/Unsplash

Worse, we looked in the attic and found that in that location had been a hole for years, allowing bats, birds, etc. access. The channels between the attic beams were completely total of guano, so then we realized why the rest of the house was "dusty." Every time they slammed a door, everything was sprinkled with a new layer of bat guano.

–AU_is_better

We were doing the pre-purchase inspection and noticed a kid in the back yard near some woods kneeling and excavation with a shovel. We walked over to say how-do-you-do and see what was upward. He turned and said, "Get out of my face," so nosotros decided it was all-time to exit him alone.

Photo Courtesy: Craig Whitehead/Unsplash

Information technology turned out the domicile auction was due to divorce, and he was the son of the sellers. He had just come to become the last of his things out of the garage, and they somehow had run over his domestic dog with his Jeep, so he decided to bury the dead canis familiaris in the backyard of the house we were ownership. I felt bad for the kid.

–Imalittlesleastack

A Strange Welcome

I scheduled a showing at a belongings occupied by renters. They were fully aware of the showing. I had talked to the husband direct. And so, I showed up with my client and his ii-year-old, and the whole family was there, the husband and two kids nonchalantly watching TV in the living room. The wife was lying on the bed in the master bedroom, door open up, watching Television set — in her lace bra and panties.

Photo Courtesy: Gustavo Ferreira/Unsplash

Every bit we walked by, she simply looked over and said, "Come on in and take a await around." Nosotros opted out of the business firm immediately. I later on talked to the listing amanuensis, and nosotros were not the beginning to social club a complaint.

–PaperCutRugBurn

How Many People Live Here?

I piece of work for a brokerage, and we manage most 1,000 units in our city. The weirdest showing I ever had by far had to be when I was going to a overnice part of boondocks to show a two,200-square-human foot, 2-story habitation to what I idea was a single mother. It turned out that she and her friend were moving in together, and they both brought their children — all 6 of them. They were all running around screaming, slamming doors, locking each other in closets and the similar, and the moms were both only ignoring it.

Photo Courtesy: Trinity Kubassek/Pexels

Not surprised? There's more. About x minutes into the moms exploring the firm, ane of them gets a phone telephone call and has a shouting match with what I presume to be her baby daddy. This then turns into her locking herself in the upstairs master sleeping accommodation, noisy kids running wild for xv minutes. All I could do was twiddle my thumbs and wait. Yeah, that was fun.

–jobohimbo

When Clients Are Criminals

And then, my mom was at a showing at the end of the day, just showing this home to a unmarried guy (couple bedrooms, bath, garage) nothing special. He asked to meet the garage, and co-ordinate to her, that is typically just opening the door and looking in, and that's all.

Photo Courtesy: PIRO4D/Pexels

The guy motions her to enter, then she walks in alee of him. The guy moves in behind her, shuts the door and so jiggles the handle to make sure he locked it — he did. Mom left right out the side door the instant she saw him jiggle the handle and took off. She carries mace with her now.

–TwoFlyingNuns

Is Anybody Habitation?

I have been a realtor for 14 years hither. A few months ago, I went into a house in a nice area, but there was apparently no maintenance done on the outside, which was unusual for the area. We went in, and in that location were piles of stuff everywhere — stacks and stacks everywhere you looked. The place was a mess.

Photo Courtesy: Norwood Clemency/Wikipedia

My clients commented on how much of a mess information technology was and that they couldn't believe someone was living here. We went downstairs, and there was this lxxx-year-one-time guy sitting in a corner on a desktop computer. I don't even know if he knew we were there. Information technology was weird considering whenever I enter a house, I always ring the bell and yell hello.

My clients were so embarrassed they left without seeing the basement. The house is still unsold. I don't know if that guy is still in the basement.

–Addictshow

Barb'due south Real Manor Adventures

My mom's friend, Affront, had the worst, well-nigh bizarre luck with clients. These are two stories I remember hearing. I, she was showing a very former (1930s?) fixer-upper when water started leaking onto her and her clients' heads. Upon farther investigation, it wasn't water. It was a stray dog peeing upstairs. That's right. All three of them had just been peed on.

Photo Courtesy: Brett Hashemite kingdom of jordan/Unsplash

Second, she was showing a very nice home to a very immature couple. They were in the lobby when a "New York-sized rat" dragged its poisoned torso past its forepart paws to the heart of the room, hissed at them in one case and promptly died.

Also, (not Barb related) my mother was once trying to sell a firm that had renters in it who didn't want to get. They got evicted simply kept squatting. Finally, they left a small surface-to-air missile on the front porch to scare her. My mother brought me to make sure it was a dud. Needless to say, I now ain a small, empty SAM.

–MadPoetModGod

Clients with Viscous Fingers

I'yard not in the business anymore, but I did hundreds of showings. I'm kind of jealous of some of the weird stories hither, because my weirdest doesn't approach them. My milder story is that one of my vendors used to exit $50 on the kitchen bench to pay the cleaner — they were childless professionals with nobody home during the day.

Photograph Courtesy: Andressa Voltolini/Unsplash

While showing one day, a man claimed it was his and that he must have dropped it. I didn't allow him take it, but I did get through the polite pantomime of searching the whole house for the $50 he was sure he had dropped.

Other than that, the weirdest showing I did was for a house with three chain smokers. The walls and roof were yellow (bordering on brown in places) with smoke stains. Information technology made me want to wretch.

–GunPoison

Don't Wake the Officer!

A practiced friend of mine was showing a house, and he was the listing agent, then he had keys and was under contract to show the business firm. He tried to call the owners merely got no reply. He tried both cell numbers on the way over but still no answer. He showed upwards at the firm but as the potential buyers were pulling upwards.

Photo Courtesy: Tobias Kleinlercher/Wikipedia

The house looked empty, then they went in knocking, announcing — literally yelling — that they were coming in. They toured the whole downstairs and moved to the upstairs and were looking through the bedrooms. They were talking, laughing, commenting about the house and such. They got to the end of the hall, opened the double doors to the bedroom and there was the owner.

He was a police officer in full compatible laid out on top of the bed in the principal sleeping accommodation. He was comatose with one of those masks roofing his eyes. The broker and the couple saw him most the aforementioned time and froze, standing there for a few very long awkward seconds of full stunned silence. Needless to say, they all turned around and left very quietly. And, no, they didn't buy the house.

–xwwariorx

The "Dingy" Side of Real Estate

Foreclosure sales are often super depressing. They usually occur because people are down on their luck and in a tough spot in general. The owners frequently go out stuff behind. I saw one concluding year where they abandoned a bunch of kids' toys and school projects.

Photo Courtesy: Luca Masters/Wikipedia

Generally, y'all'd be surprised at how people live. You find filth and chaos in a neat trivial house, or that big, gorgeous mansion you lot drive past all the time is probably only half furnished, while condos and apartments nearly always have way likewise much furniture in them.

–tallmiller

We Don't Desire Prissy Things!

I used to be in real estate investment, and I saw some interesting properties in the Milwaukee area. One property that we actually ended upward buying was a nine-unit efficiency. Viii of the units shared ii.five baths, and one unit was the "management apartment" on the first floor. Plainly, the owner didn't tell his tenants, and then when we walked in, he told u.s. to human activity like we were insurance agents so the tenants wouldn't get an thought what was going on.

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Anybody in the property was very odd. We still ended upwards ownership the property because nosotros got information technology nearly 60% below request price. We went to each tenant and told them we wanted to redo their carpets, repaint their walls a color of their choosing and install some Ac units in the windows. They all declined. We chose not to renew whatever leases at the end of their terms, redid the place and turned it into pupil housing.

–realdrizzy

Renting from the Wrong Owner

When I was in leasing, I went to view a house in order to assess information technology before it went on our books for rent. I was looking around, and it was a very nice, modernistic three-bedroom, discrete house.

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Well-nigh the end of information technology, a woman came in off the street and went absolutely ballistic. It turned out it was half her house, and she was living in information technology. The guy I was with endemic the other half simply moved out a week earlier after having an affair. To spite his partner, he was going to change the locks and rent it out. I don't know how he idea he'd get abroad with it.

–DanTastic

When Nature Calls

We just bought a house, and on ane set of showings, we had to take our iv-year-old daughter along. Nosotros got to the last firm, a vacant, winterized firm, and she said she needed to pee. I told her to concord it, and we went through the house with its sometime, outdated, smell of smoke (and I'm an outside smoker).

Photo Courtesy: Alexander Drummer/Pexels

We were locking up and talking to our realtor when I realized I didn't run into our daughter. We walked around the bushes at the front porch, and in that location she was — peeing in the middle of the front yard. We didn't purchase that firm.

–Aubear11885

Welcome to the Landfill

I'one thousand just a heir-apparent here, simply I'll share. Nosotros bought a FSBO property — no realtors. Both parties were pretty thorough, and the deal was pleasant. We got to the endmost, and the seller had not done the math correctly and misunderstood how much we had asked for in closing costs. He wrote me the bank check, but he was mad.

Photo Courtesy: Magda Ehlers/Pexels

I took possession of the firm the side by side forenoon. He and his married woman had dumped garbage from ane terminate of the house to the other. I had a full-sized truck, and we ended upwardly raking up the garbage and hauling it — three truckloads — to the dump.

–illannoysnazi

Finding a Squatter

In South Central Los Angeles, I was attacked past a skeleton-looking crackhead with a knife once. She had broken in and started living in a room, and so she was yelling at the states to get out of her domicile.

Photo Courtesy: Roman Koval/Pexels

Another time, I entered a dwelling that had newspapers and mail piled about 4 anxiety deep throughout the entire home. The walls and decor were nevertheless very well taken care of, and it was a weird sight, specially since there were no foul odors or other signs of hoarding.

–frankieman70

How Practise We Become Out of Here?

When I was in eighth form my parents were looking for a house, then my sis and I spent many Sunday mornings being dragged from showing to showing. I will never forget i for this house in the eye of a prissy suburb. From the outside, information technology looked like it had all these big windows around the front of the house, and yous could see the curtains were closed.

Photo Courtesy: Patrick Tomasso/Unsplash

We walked in, and there were no windows anywhere. They were all covered with drywall and painted to lucifer the rest of the room. At that place was a line of electric outlets around the base of the entire room and in a solid line upwards one wall to the ceiling. Upstairs was the same situation — only worse. All the windows were a facade, and the master sleeping accommodation had a toilet in one corner and a shower in the opposite corner. There was no separation of any kind, just the aforementioned carpet all around the shower and the toilet.

You could tell the realtor was super uncomfortable. She didn't actually say anything, just kind of led u.s. around in silence. Needless to say, we did non buy that house.

–LaurnaMae

The Creepy Bedroom

Imagine a room full of dolls, the ones with the glass eyes that look into your soul, and they are all bundled to "look" at the door when you walk in. Yeah, no auction!

Photo Courtesy: Alexas Fotos/Pexels

–tallmiller

A Funny Mode of Decorating

Eagles — i homo had bald eagle paraphernalia in every corner of the condo. There were entire shelving units packed to the brim with hawkeye statues, and as of fabric — draperies, blankets, rugs — was eagle themed. Mayhap the weirdest part was there wasn't a unmarried American flag to be seen anywhere.

Photograph Courtesy: Alexas Fotos/Pixabay

Jedibob7

In that location'south Not Always Running H2o

This next story might seem crazy, but any existent manor agent will tell y'all that it happens way more often than you might think. I was looking at a multifamily building with a realtor I utilize a lot, and nosotros were meeting a contractor. He showed up looking kind of pale. He kept talking really fast then simply said he had to get to the bath.

Photo Courtesy: Christa Grover/Pexels

Of course, the place had been winterized since it was vacant, which meant no water. He took the smelliest dump ever. I swear, he must have had a touch on of the bird flu or something. We merely left after that. I hope they didn't have trouble selling it with frozen diarrhea in the toilet.

–particle409

The Subconscious Problem in the Basement

I'chiliad a home inspector, then I have a bad experience at least once a month. The most notable one was when I caught an agent and possessor covering up a major deficiency. There was an open waste product pit in the basement, and they covered it with boxes. I'm very lucky I defenseless it.

Photograph Courtesy: Oleg Magni/Pexels

Equally I was leaving, the tenant told me i of my "friends" was at that place last week. I asked if she remembered his name, and she said he was bald. Since I piece of work in a relatively modest area, I called the only bald home inspector in town, and he brought me upward to speed and told me where to wait. Sure enough, there was an open pit of sewage. It turned out the last buyers paid a plumber to come out and quote information technology, and it was $18K fix.

It gets worse. I got a call from another customer a calendar week subsequently looking for an inspection on the aforementioned property. I told them I was there earlier, and we scheduled an appointment. That time the selling amanuensis was as well acting equally the ownership amanuensis. When we showed upwards, I asked if a number of the big deficiencies were disclosed. Both clients looked at me oddly and told me zero was disclosed. I looked at the amanuensis, and she face palmed herself.

–ArtieLange

You Might Desire to Become That Repaired

I went out to a firm on the hill that had snapped in one-half. They had gamble tape all over the place but notwithstanding had a Supra (lock box) on the holding.

Photo Courtesy: Martin Pechy/Pexels

–nofishies

Indoor Garage

My seller liked to tinker with cars — a lot — only he didn't have a garage, so he used his living room instead. He wasn't happy when I told him he had to dismantle the vehicle and get it out of the living room before we put the house on the market.

Photo Courtesy: Malte luk/Pexels

–slutasaurusrex

The Extremely Phobic Customer

Surprise! Many people take dogs, cats, parrots and even pet rodents. Somehow, these houses are inevitably paired with potential clients who are afraid of said animal. 1 actually fainted. Who is that afraid of birds?

Photograph Courtesy: Johannes Plenio/Pexels

nofishies

The Cats Come up Out to Play

So, a broker calls to set an appointment for his buyer. The seller agreed and asked for an hour so he could get the cats out. Okay, fine. The broker and client prove up an hour later.

Photograph Courtesy: ilyessuti/PIxabay

The seller had overlooked at least one cat, and the place smelled horrible. The broker tried to go his customer out of there immediately, considering after all, they had seen amend houses for less money that day. The heir-apparent said, no, he had to know why the seller thought it was worth that much.

–ShortWoman

The "New" Roof

One time, an enterprising roofer had laid a new roof right over rotting wood shingles.

Photo Courtesy: Adrien Olichon/Pexels

–nofishies

Who Puts Trash in the Trash Can?

My grandma sells and rents houses in the Denver area. A few weeks ago, I had to help her evict a few college brothers from one of her properties. It was a cottage-style home, so no second floor, no basement.

Photo Courtesy: Steve Johnson/Pexels

These guys had literally dug a hole in the woods flooring and made a basement where they had been throwing trash away for the last yr. Like, it's a living room with a Tv set and a couple of armchairs — and a giant hole in the ground filled with ice foam wrappers, pizza boxes and cigarette butts.

–deleted

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Source: https://www.consumersearch.com/home-garden/realtors-strangest-experiences-showing-houses?utm_content=params%3Ao%3D740007%26ad%3DdirN%26qo%3DserpIndex

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