Salary.sg Forums

Salary.sg Forums (https://forums.salary.sg/)
-   Income and Jobs (https://forums.salary.sg/income-jobs/)
-   -   Property Agents make A LOT of Money (https://forums.salary.sg/income-jobs/642-property-agents-make-lot-money.html)

Salary.sg 20-04-2008 10:31 PM

Property Agents make A LOT of Money
 
I think the Straits Times over-glamorised the real estate profession in its multi-page spread on "Rodeo Realtors" yesterday.

In terms of their income.

Maybe the writers were being very selective and showcased only the highly successful property agents.

But I don't think it's a stretch to say that the article may mislead a few young minds, much like the way some insurance agencies and MLM firms "encourage" their new recruits (see comment).

The ST article showcased 7 real estate agents:

- Male, 36, 2 months' experience, $10k average monthly income
- Male, 53, 2 years' experience, >$50k average monthly income
- Female, 35, 4 years' experience, $10k average monthly income
- Female, 26, 3 years' experience, $10k average monthly income
- Female, 38, 7 years' experience, $7k to $10k average monthly income
- Male, 36, 2 years' experience, $5k average monthly income
- Female, late 40s, >10 years' experience, >$26k average monthly income

But, according to the MOM Report on Wages, the top 25% of real estate agents make a gross monthly income of $4,647 (at the 75th-percentile mark). See post.

So the agents listed above are all in the top 25%, with 6 of them hugely successful by most standards.

Or, if these agents are the "average", there may be a discrepancy between the MOM numbers and reality.

Either way, people will be flocking to be property agents. Hopefully they will not be too disappointed.

http://www.salary.sg/2008/property-a...-lot-of-money/

Ag--- 21-04-2008 12:09 AM

1446
 
I read the article and hmmm.. who should i believe the ST or MOM..
What is the reality?
These few years, estate is blooming, they will earn a lot. When market is bad, will they earn so much?

wait and wait--- 21-04-2008 01:06 PM

1454
 
Reality is it's not possible to find the "average pay" for real estate. It can range from negative(after cost) to more than a million SGD per year. Also the pay is gross, so must still deduct expenses, about roughly 20% - 30%.

Property agents are not employees, they are considered business owners. Therefore a business owner earning a few hundred thousand dollars is ok when compared to other businesses.

It's only when you conmpare them to employment income then you feel they are earning alot. The popular curry puff owner makes alot more than $100k a year.

SmartTrader--- 25-04-2008 01:12 PM

1496
 
I don't have information about what property agents take home pay is. But even if it is not $10K, $5K monthly is still a lot for a Sales position that does not require a Degree. All being said, when during downturn, the pay will be substantially reduced. Also, my perception is that there are more people making big as property agents than insurance agents. Just imagine 1% commission per transaction, average price of a HDB house is probably about $300K, you just need to close 1-2 deals a month.

The article may over-glamourize, but I feel that it is a very lucrative career if you are okay with house viewing on weekends and weekday nights.

wait and wait--- 25-04-2008 08:07 PM

1500
 
I agree with smart trader that it can be a lucrative career only if one works hard and smart. No degree and earn more than $10k a month is very common in singapore. I remember there is an article in salary.sg about hawkers earning >$100k a month in sales. Even after say 50% expenses, still can make $50k a month. Maybe they don't even have PSLE.

I believe the higher your education, the less you will start your own business, therefore less chance to become rich. Being employed and earn $5k a month is good pay. Being self employed and earn $20k a month is normal.

Vic--- 25-04-2008 10:34 PM

1502
 
Property business is the one for any who like to start to be your own boss with no high start up cost. Maybe some money for buying nice shirts, ties, handphone bills and transport fees. But in this business I think you must like sales and like to mingle with people from all walks of life.

However, you are competing with more than 30000 in the market and how you can stand out among them will determine how much you gain. The fear of not clinching a deal for months will make you sweat. I am sure there will be a lot that fail no matter how hard they try but the newspaper only feature those super successful. Anyway, no pain no gain.

Reader--- 28-04-2008 10:32 AM

1533
 
My understanding is that a lot of those real estate agents DO NOT declare their true income to evade income taxes.

Yet they boast--- 28-04-2008 12:02 PM

1534
 
@Reader - yes I think so too. Yet some of them have the cheek to boast about their astronomical income in newspapers such as the one mentioned in the blog article above.

wait and wait--- 28-04-2008 06:41 PM

1537
 
Most of them only state about $10k a month. Don't think is boasting. In fact very humble already. Real estate agent if cannot earn > $10k a month is considered below average. Even sell cars also can earn about ths figure after including all the loan and insurance referral commission.

Anyway how much you earn is not the most important. How much you spend and how much you can save is. Earn $10k, spend $9.5k is not rich.

earn and earn--- 02-05-2008 09:35 AM

1561
 
My property agent told me he earned more than 300K last year and 50K alone last month. And he is a resident agent and does not have a car, he only sells apartments within our condominium.

Imagine his savings!

But if the market spirals downhill things may turn out differently of course, after all last year was a bumper crop year for all in property line...

Steven--- 02-05-2008 02:42 PM

1566
 
some earn more some earn less. but its really very tough market. I should know cause i'm an agent.

Realtor--- 02-05-2008 02:50 PM

1567
 
Well, amist all the comments.. I find that most people still think that property agents earns good money based on simple work.

It is only when you are in the field itself than you would truely understand how it is really like.
For those who think it is easy, why not try giving up stability in your fixed pay job and give it a try for 1 year. you will understand what it feels like then (As a agent yourself).

People alway comment on things based on a empty head. If it is so easy a job / career, Nobody would be working for a lowly paid job anymore.
Have anyone really think of what the job is truely like??
1)Competition - More than 300,000 agents and increasing, fighting for the same rice bowl.
2)High Overhead Expense - Where you get some of your leads from, Flyers ($500monthly), Distribution ($20~25/1000pcs), Advertising (min $500 per month), transportation, phone bills, administration stuff, legal issues, follow-ups.

Basically Cost & Competition would be enough, it is like a self run business, sometimes you earn but you need to prepare for the rainy days. 1-2 deals monthly?? only enough to cover what you have spend on the overheads, not enough to give you & your family a good life.

Those who think it's still easy, just give it a try. After that, than you'll know how "EASY" it is..

neuromanticx--- 02-05-2008 03:43 PM

1568
 
I guess ST "average" is miscommunicated. There are some months that they make and some months that they don't. So its an unsteady stream of income, and when you average it out over 12 months it is as if they make more than 10K each month, which I don't think so if there's nothing to sell and nobody buys anyway. So that's why they agents want to make big bucks whenever they get a chance to even out the days that they don't make.

wait and wait--- 02-05-2008 07:25 PM

1570
 
Salary.sg is a good site. Good job admin. I realised there is a trend here. Most people want to find out what's the average pay of any vocation. When they see somebody getting good pay, they assume he is the best of the best and they want to know what the average get.

You know what? My opinion is that if you are average, you should be paid average. Period. There is a saying, "In any business and any industry, the top 3 companies make almost all the $$ and the rest of them just struggle to survive."
Same for jobs. The top management make most of the $$, the rest of the staff get enough to pay their bills. Same for footballers. Our S-league players maybe earn

clowned--- 02-05-2008 10:40 PM

1573
 
i think housing agt is a very unstable job...life iua abt gives and takes. true, if house ag is so easy a job= came and try and see if u succed. i very much doubt that graduates can succeed as agent.. graduates only know how to be jealous of ag salary... everyone has the right to be succful in life, whthr they are highly educated or not.. i;m a graduate house agnt.. spasking up for my non- degree house agent frens..

wow--- 02-05-2008 10:55 PM

1574
 
you sure talk like a graduate

a simple agent--- 02-05-2008 11:35 PM

1575
 
I am a property agent and have in this biz for the past 8 mths. Like most sales line, there's a need of certain calibre in order to be sucessful in this line. To earn at least $10K per month on EVERY other month. The keyword is to MAINTAIN your results.
-Discipline, hardwork, skills of negotiation, luck, persistent
Like some said. It'a a truly unstable and stressful job when you cannot close a single deal after putting whole's month effort. Who's gonna pay for our expenses?
We are like farmers. We only get our fruit of our labour (which is cash) after we close the deal. If we don't close end of the day, we get NOTTING and nobody's gonna pay for our past effort. So sometime I called it 'business risk'.
For those listed as top earners or producers, only a business minded agent will be able to maintain their income because our salary is truly unstable.
This is really a competitive world which a lot of employed workers will never feel.

(I used to work for a gov agency for the past 7 years and I have recently quitted my full time job to work in this line. It's has never been easy for me.)

wait and wait--- 03-05-2008 12:07 AM

1576
 
Post got truncated don't know why. Continue => S-league players maybe earn

wait and wait--- 03-05-2008 12:07 AM

1577
 
there is a problem le...

chargingbull--- 03-05-2008 12:55 AM

1578
 
It is disgusting how the straits times always tell what is not the truth!

The reality of the real estate business's top agents is in the multi-level earning power of the top of the uplines, and the amount of money collected from their misleading the masses into their recruitment drives, and the collection of huge amounts of training fees, from gullible people who are misled into thinking that they can chase that singapore dream of earning big bucks!

Another words, the straits times is not telling you the truth in short that the real estate business in singapore is about multi-multi-level marketing!

And agencies earn big bucks in collecting money from training "agents"

chargingbull--- 03-05-2008 01:03 AM

1579
 
I recruit many of you and many of you pay $600 to $1500 each for training, and i get commission from your paying training fees, and i collect 5% over-riding from many of your commissions.

Many of you recruit many others under you and you get commission from training fees, and i also get to collect a cut of this commission, and many of you collect 5% over-riding from many of your recruits' commissions, and i get to collect 3% from them too.

And the same sequence goes on and on.

chargingbull--- 05-05-2008 09:33 AM

1589
 
On the average, an agent at the Director Level earns not less than $30K per month from Over-Riding Commission.

This excludes the training fee commissions they collect from recruiting newbies into the company who pay from $600 upwards for Basic Real Estate Training.

There are about 100 to 300 new recruits for each agency every month.

There are about 45,000 to 50,000 agents and the numbers are increasing.

disgusting--- 05-05-2008 11:27 AM

1590
 
and they then use these shameless training 'profits' and add them into their own income stream as proof that property agents make bug bucks. Which in turn will con the other impressionable common folk to fork in their hard earned money to contribute to their wealth. Sad but vicious cycle.

wait and wait--- 05-05-2008 01:22 PM

1592
 
But they can also earn $30k a month just by doing personal sales. No need to recruit a single person.

clowned--- 05-05-2008 01:24 PM

1593
 
wow... really?/
an agent at the Director Level earns not less than $30K per month from Over-Riding Commission??
can anyone support or tell me how true this statement is??
i always thougth life as a house ag is unstable..
if a house ag cna earn so much passive income from overriding, then it isnt so unstable afterall...

clowned--- 05-05-2008 01:29 PM

1594
 
$30k per month personal sales implies sheer hard work..
$30k per month from overridding implies sound too good to be true.. in fact a bit ridiculous?? any house ag director here to verify???

SmartTrader--- 05-05-2008 01:55 PM

1596
 
I stand corrected after hearing all the tough experiences of the real life agents here.
Seems like the experiences are similar to MLM, go in early and you can reap good money, go in late, you are feeding others.

chargingbull--- 08-05-2008 11:57 PM

1612
 
Well, since the Administrator of this blog removed my posts of the actual named agencies, let's just say that Donald Duck and his gang of Mickey Mice at the agency next to the Western Food Joint near the Toa Payoh Library, uses this selling point that he has ever not worked for a full year and yet he still earns $30k a month.

And if you want to be like him, you must join his agency; which coincidentally claims to be the biggest; in order to start earning big income like him.

Mind you, he was not talking about closing that $30,000 deal when he talked about it in the crowded classroom!

So, M-L-M is the name of the game, even the DishWasher agency claims it too.

I really hope someone brings up this blog to that stupid journalist who wrote that article to mislead people into the M-L-M of Real Estate.

cloned--- 09-05-2008 10:38 PM

1617
 
aiya.. dun scold the ke lian journalist.. she just doing her job to write articles.. anyway,i still curious as to so good oveerrriding fees.. keke..

Careerwork--- 12-05-2008 03:02 PM

1636
 
I admire the simple agent that quitted his 7 years iron rice bowl career and embark into a journey of uncertainty. Property agents are selling a service whereby any tom dick or harry can do it. Luck is very important. I strongly believe it is not an easy work although anyone can do it. Because anyone can do it means now more than 30 000 people are competing with you. You know the Maths.

a simple agent again--- 13-05-2008 12:10 AM

1638
 
seriously before i quitted my gov job (of 7 years) to join property, someone painted a rosy picture about this line and how easy we can earn big buck.

I was somehow being convinced and "conned" that it's just a 'match making job'. Any tom, dick and harry can do it.

But it was a real cultural shock to me, really harsh and cruel. No one actually said that I will earn NOTING for the first 6 months and already alot of $ was spent on course and advertisement.

My so-call upline never give me any leads and I was like left in the jungle to fend for myself. I almost regret after 3 months. I did not close a single deal and was feeling very down and losing my confidence but it was my family support and a very understanding hubby who helped me to go thru all these months of hardship.

I did not earn $10K or more every month. But for the past 8 months, I already earn what I was getting for the past seven years annually. This is what I call breakthrough and sense of achievement.

It's all from my hardship and persistent to be who I am today. I never regret joining this line as there are customers who will come to me for advice for my professionalism. I believe in sincerity and responsibility. To me, my commission is always the last thing in my mind when I am on my job. I believe in being upright and honest.

cloned--- 16-05-2008 01:39 PM

1667
 
to " a simple agent again " ...
any comments on the overriddding??

taxman--- 17-05-2008 08:23 PM

1671
 
tell the taxman to chase after all of them lah.

someone--- 18-05-2008 04:07 AM

1672
 
you mean you earned 7 years pay in 8 months?

HSR--- 19-05-2008 08:29 AM

1674
 
If you dont believe in over-riding, then come to HSR and see how much you can collect from training fees and over-riding.
ha ha

Rapanzel--- 16-07-2008 03:42 PM

2194
 
Hi! I intend to join property business but is looking at the right n good agency to stay. Wonder if there's any group out there which focus on central area, private condo. I used to be with Propnex which charge 7-3 commision which seems to be the worst ratio rate. Anyone out there can advise? Thks!
Email: [email protected]

simple agent--- 17-07-2008 01:09 AM

2197
 
well, i think for rookie, most agency paid at the same rate, unless you got kangtao.....

thinking bout it--- 19-07-2008 10:27 AM

2223
 
hmm...seems like there's the same ratio between good and bad advice on wanting to become a property agent. I'm impressed by simple agent's perseverance in this line, since I've heard many good and bad stories on those who stepped into this job as well. In my opinion, those who do well will obviously give you the better side of the story, and those who don't likewise. It's probably all about getting the right mindset before stepping into this line? Even with a high commission ratio, if you don't make any sales you will still be broke. Whereas if you push yourself and get lucky, less commission ratio you'll still earn money.

Personally I'm looking to start part time and monitor myself to see if fledging into full time , "can make it anot". I already do not have a high paying salary on my day job being am a freelance creative personnel and work part time on the other days to supplement my income and expenses for driving lessons, so no income at the start for me is something I am prepared to handle if it happens lah, since I kena lousy bosses in the past who never pay my salary on time and ran away with my CPF, nothing more sway than that I cannot tahan lol. In my situtation, I feel I'm in the worst scenario to want to start my own business since I have no money to do it and still need to bring the dollars home for myself and parents every month. But honestly in anycase for every line you really never know what will happen till you try for yourself.

Any more experienced agents have useful advise to share pls do so? It would really help to motivate and provide us with a reality check as well =)

simple agent--- 20-07-2008 11:04 AM

2228
 
To thinking bout it,

If you intent to step in this line, I suggest that you really have to do whole heartedly and in full time basis. Seriously, alot of my other co-colleages though they started early than me or have more experience cannot survive in the part time basis.

Beside doing viewing, there's alot of preparation work. If you are serving buyer, you need to find about the market price and spend time searching and arranging for the property to view. If one viewing cannot buy, we must also understand why so that when we arrange for the next viewing, we know what to avoid.

If we are serving the seller, we must spend $ on advertisement cost and to entertain viewing. In today's market, the closing rate is definately slower than before. But then, private and HDB market is a very different market. So we have to choose what we want to do.

Next, beside the basic fundamental, alot of time, we spent time negotiating, persuading and problem solving in order to close a deal.We must also be knowledgable about the procedure so that we don't over-promise something and ended up in silly situation.

So we must take care of every little details in order to close a deal. Not to forget that our cheque does not come in ASAP. For HDB we must wait for a least 8 weeks upon closing the deal for our cheq

simple agent--- 20-07-2008 11:08 AM

2229
 
for our cheque to come in. Like wise for private, 12 week generally.

So our cashflow is a BIG consideration that we need to pay for our transportation fee and advertisement cost (can range from $800 to $2000 per month)!.

And my last advice is, if you dun own a car, it's gonna be very difficult to survive in this line. because it's really very inconvenient to take public transport and to serve buyer to bring them around.

To summarise:
1) Better to own a car.
2) cash flow to "dong" you for 6 months.
3) spend time reading and doing research work for your buyer and sellers so as to advice them property.
4) Must know your paperwork well to avoid getting silly situation when you promise the terms and conditions.
5) Negotiation skills and stragise your closing.


All times are GMT +8. The time now is 07:37 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.3.2