Seller Resources

Listing Agreements Explained: What Austin Home Sellers Need to Know

Selling a home in Austin starts with a single document — the listing agreement. It tells your agent how to market your home, how long they have to sell it, and how they get paid. Knowing what's inside before you sign makes the whole process feel a lot less scary.

If you're thinking about selling your home in Austin, you'll likely run into three main documents: the Residential Listing Agreement, a Three-Phased Marketing Disclosure, and (if you own a condo) a Condominium Addendum. We use these forms with our clients every day, and we want you to feel confident about what each one really means.

Let's walk through them in plain English.


What Is a Listing Agreement?

A listing agreement is the contract between you (the seller) and your real estate broker. It says you're hiring that broker to sell your home, and it spells out the rules everyone has to follow.

In Texas, most agents use a standard form called the Residential Real Estate Listing Agreement — Exclusive Right to Sell (form TXR-1101). The word "exclusive" is the key part. It means that during the time the agreement is active, your chosen broker is the only one who can sell your home, and they earn their fee no matter who finds the buyer.

Why "Exclusive Right to Sell" Matters

When a broker has the exclusive right to sell, they're willing to invest real money up front — professional photos, staging advice, marketing, signage, online ads. That investment only makes sense if they know they'll be the ones representing you through closing. It's a fair trade: you get full effort and we get a fair shot at earning the business.

The Big Sections to Understand

The agreement is eleven pages long, but the parts that matter most to you fit into a handful of buckets. Here's what to look for.

1. The Property and What's Included

Section 2 lists exactly what you're selling. This isn't just the house and the land. It also covers things attached to the home like ceiling fans, light fixtures, appliances, garage door openers, and even smart home controls. If there's something you want to take with you — grandma's chandelier, a special mounted TV bracket — it has to be written into the "Exclusions" line. Otherwise, the buyer assumes it stays.

If you're selling a condo, you'll also sign a Condominium Addendum (TXR-1401). This adds details about your parking spot, your HOA fees, and which utilities those fees cover. It also reminds you that Texas law requires you to give the buyer the condo's governing documents and a Resale Certificate before they sign a contract. Missing that step gives the buyer the right to back out.

2. The Listing Price and Term

Sections 3 and 4 cover the asking price and how long the agreement lasts. Most listings run six months, though the timeline is fully negotiable. The price you list at isn't a price you're forced to accept — it's just where marketing starts. You always have the final say on what offer you take.

3. How Your Agent Gets Paid

Section 5 is the compensation section. After the 2024 industry settlement around how brokers are paid, this section got a lot more detailed — and a lot more important to read carefully.

Here's the short version. You agree on a total fee for your broker, often shown as a percentage of the sale price. Then you decide whether part of that fee gets shared with the buyer's agent. The form is now very clear that compensation is fully negotiable and isn't set by any association or MLS.

  • Earned means your agent has done the job — they found a willing, able buyer at a price you accept.
  • Payable means the fee actually changes hands, usually at closing when funds are wired.
  • Protection Period is a window after the listing ends (often 90 days) where, if you sell to someone your agent introduced you to, the fee is still owed. This stops buyers from waiting out the contract to skip the commission.

4. Marketing and the MLS

Section 6 is where you tell your agent how widely to market your home. Most sellers want full exposure on the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) right away, because that's how the home reaches the most buyers and gets the best price.

But some sellers have reasons to start more privately. That's where the Three-Phased Marketing Disclosure comes in.

The Three Phases of Marketing

Phase 1 — Private Exclusive: Your home is shared one-on-one with select agents and buyers. No public listing, no days-on-market clock, no photos online.

Phase 2 — Coming Soon: Your home is publicly advertised as coming to market, but still doesn't accumulate days on market or price drop history.

Phase 3 — Active on MLS: Your home goes live on the MLS and is syndicated to every major search site.

Why might you start with Phase 1 or 2? Maybe you want time to stage and paint without buyers seeing the "before" version. Maybe you want privacy. Maybe you want to test a price without the listing going stale. The disclosure is required because choosing a private start can affect how many buyers see your home, how many offers you get, and what your final sale price looks like. It's a real trade-off — one we walk through with every seller before you decide.

If you've followed the headlines about Zillow, Compass, and the fight over pre-market listings, you know how much has changed in the last year. We covered the Zillow-Compass settlement in "The Zillow-Compass Battle Is Over — Our Clients Were Never Fighting It," and we walked through the bigger industry shake-up in "The Great Real Estate Consolidation of 2026." Both pieces explain why these phased options exist today and how the rules around private listings have shifted — useful context if you're deciding how widely to market your home.

The best marketing strategy is the one that fits your goals, your timeline, and your home. There's no single right answer — just the answer that's right for you.

5. Access, Showings, and Keyboxes

Section 7 covers how buyers and their agents get into your home. Most listings use a digital lockbox (we use SUPRA) and a scheduling service like ShowingTime. You can decide whether to allow a lockbox, and if you have tenants, they need to sign off too.

6. Intermediary Status

Section 9 sounds confusing but is actually simple. If your broker also represents a buyer who wants to make an offer on your home, can they still help with the deal? Saying yes ("Intermediary Status") means your broker can work both sides while keeping each party's confidential information private. Saying no means your broker won't show your home to any buyer they represent.

7. Seller Promises and Disclosures

Sections 12 and 13 are your promises to the broker. You're confirming that you actually own the home, that you're current on your mortgage and HOA dues, and that you'll cooperate with showings. Section 19 lists the addenda that come with most listings — things like the Seller's Disclosure Notice, the T-47 survey affidavit, and the lead-based paint addendum (required if your home was built before 1978).


Why This All Matters

A listing agreement isn't just paperwork. It's the playbook for one of the largest financial transactions of your life. Understanding it gives you control over how your home is marketed, how long the relationship lasts, what happens if something goes sideways, and how much you'll pay in fees.

11 pages in the standard Texas listing agreement — every page worth reading before you sign.

The good news: you don't have to figure it out alone. A great agent will sit down with you, walk through every section, answer every question, and make sure the agreement reflects what you actually want. If anything feels rushed or unclear, that's a sign to slow down.

Questions Sellers Often Ask

Can I cancel my listing agreement?

The agreement is a contract, but most brokers will release a seller who has a real reason to stop selling — a job change, a family issue, or a change of heart. Read the contract for any termination fees. In our sample, there's a $500 listing coordination fee if the agreement is canceled before the home sells. That's standard for covering up-front marketing costs.

Is the commission really negotiable?

Yes. The form says it plainly. Total compensation, the split with a buyer's agent, and any other fees are all negotiable. What you should focus on isn't the lowest number — it's the value you get for the money. Photography, staging, online reach, agent skill, and negotiating experience all matter.

Do I have to share commission with the buyer's agent?

Not anymore — not automatically. After the 2024 changes, sellers have a choice. You can offer to pay the buyer's agent, you can let the buyer pay their own agent, or you can negotiate it as part of the offer. Most Austin sellers still offer something to attract more buyers, but the amount is up to you.

What happens if I sell to a friend during the listing?

Under an exclusive right to sell, you owe your broker their fee even if you find the buyer yourself. That's the trade-off for the broker's full effort and investment. If you have someone in mind already, mention it before signing — sometimes those names can be carved out.

How long should my listing be?

Six months is common in Austin, but the right length depends on your home, your price point, and current market conditions. Higher-priced homes and unique properties often need longer. Move-in-ready homes in popular areas often sell faster. Talk through realistic timelines with your agent before you commit.


The Bottom Line

The standard Texas listing agreement is designed to protect both you and your broker. It's thorough on purpose. The more you understand each section, the better partner you'll be in the sale — and the better outcome you'll get when it's time to close.

Before you sign anything, ask questions. Lots of them. A good agent welcomes the conversation because it sets up a smoother sale for everyone.

If you're starting to think about selling your home in Austin, browse our Austin neighborhood guides to see what's happening in your area, take a look at our featured properties to see how we present homes, or reach out anytime to start a no-pressure conversation.

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