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DFW homebuyer reviewing a Texas buyer representation agreement and agent compensation terms in 2026

Who Pays Your Buyer's Agent in DFW in 2026?

July 10, 2026

Who Pays Your Buyer's Agent in DFW in 2026?

By Steven J. Thomas

DFW homebuyer reviewing a Texas buyer representation agreement and agent compensation terms in 2026

Two years after the commission rules changed, most DFW buyers still walk into their first showing with no idea who is paying the person standing next to them. Some think it is free. Some think they now owe three percent out of pocket on top of a down payment. Both are wrong, and the gap between them is thousands of dollars. Here is how buyer agent compensation actually works in Dallas-Fort Worth right now.

Direct Answer

In DFW in 2026, the seller still pays the buyer's agent in most closings. What changed is that the offer is no longer published in the MLS. Your agent's fee is set in a written buyer representation agreement before you tour any home, then the seller is asked to cover it during offer negotiation. If the seller covers less, you pay the gap. Book a call to see your numbers.

Neighborhood Spotlights: How This Plays Out Across Southwest DFW

DeSoto

DeSoto sits in a price band where most sellers are still offering to cover the buyer's agent fee in full. It is a competitive resale market with steady demand, and sellers who refuse to contribute typically watch their listing sit. Practically, that means a DeSoto buyer signs a representation agreement stating a fee, the offer asks the seller to pay it, and the seller almost always does. Where buyers get burned is signing an agreement with a high fee and no cap language, then discovering at contract time that the seller will only cover part of it. Look at what is moving on your street through neighborhood reports before you sign anything.

Cedar Hill and Duncanville

These markets skew slightly older and slightly more equity-rich, which gives sellers room to negotiate. In 2026 I am seeing more hybrid deals here: the seller covers 2%, the buyer's agreement calls for 3%, and the buyer brings the 1% difference to closing or negotiates it into a broader concession package. That difference on a $350,000 home is $3,500. It is real money and it needs to be in your budget before you write an offer, not discovered on the settlement statement.

New Construction Communities Across the Corridor

Builders handle this differently than resale sellers. Most DFW builders publish a set buyer agent compensation and honor it, but only if your agent registers you on your very first visit. Walk into a model home alone, and you can lose your representation entirely. That is not a technicality. It is the single most expensive mistake new construction buyers make in this market. Register first, tour second.

Pro Tip: Buyers who use my team on a new construction purchase get up to 1% back at closing, capped at $10,000, through the New Construction Rebate Program.

Local Market Trends (Summer 2026)

  • Texas Occupations Code Section 1101.563 now requires a signed written buyer representation agreement before an agent shows a buyer any residential property, effective January 1, 2026, per HousingWire.
  • Buyer agent compensation is no longer displayed as a blanket offer in the MLS following the NAR settlement, though sellers may still pay it.
  • Active DFW inventory reached roughly 39,971 homes in May 2026, with months of supply at 5.4, per Homes.com (May 2026).
  • About 26% of Dallas-area listings took at least one price reduction during May 2026, giving buyers meaningful negotiating room.
  • The 30-year fixed averaged 6.49% the week of July 9, 2026, per Freddie Mac PMMS.

Put those together and you get a market where buyers have negotiating room they have not had since 2019. With over five months of supply and a quarter of listings already cutting price, asking a DFW seller to cover your agent's fee is not an aggressive ask. It is a normal term. The buyers who struggle are the ones who never asked, because nobody explained that they could.

"The commission did not disappear. It moved from a line in the MLS to a line in your negotiation. If your agent treats it like a formality instead of a term, you are the one who pays for that."

Cost Breakdown for DFW Buyers

Here is what buyer agent compensation looks like on a $400,000 DFW purchase under the common 2026 scenarios.

  • Seller covers the full 3% agreed fee: you pay $0 toward your agent
  • Seller covers 2%, agreement calls for 3%: you bring $4,000 at closing
  • Seller covers 2.5%, agreement calls for 2.5%: you pay $0, everything matches
  • Seller covers nothing, agreement calls for 3%: you bring $12,000, and your lender may or may not allow it to be financed
  • Flat-fee arrangement, common on new construction: typically $3,000 to $6,000, usually builder-paid

The number that matters is the gap, not the fee. A 3% agreement is not expensive if the seller pays all of it. A 2% agreement is expensive if the seller pays none of it and you are short on cash to close. Negotiate the gap, in writing, before you tour. And know that loan program rules differ on whether a buyer-paid fee can be financed, which is a conversation to have with your lender on day one, not day thirty.

Builder and Community Insights: Know the Competition

DFW builders across DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Red Oak, Waxahachie, and Midlothian are still competing hard for buyers in 2026. Standing inventory carries rate buydowns, flex cash toward closing costs, and finish-out credits. Builders also continue to pay buyer agent compensation in nearly every community I work in, because it is far cheaper for them than an unsold spec home carrying interest.

What that means for you is straightforward. Bringing your own agent to a new build costs you nothing in almost every case, and it gets you someone reading the builder contract who does not work for the builder. Browse what is available across the metro on the DFW new construction hub before you set foot in a sales office.

Financing and Incentives That Change Your Math

Say the seller will not cover your agent's full fee. You have more room than you think. Concessions are fungible. A seller who balks at "paying your agent" will often agree to a $10,000 credit toward closing costs, and that credit can free up the cash you needed for the gap. Same money, different label, and sellers respond to the label.

The bigger lever is the rate. At 6.49%, a seller-paid temporary buydown on a $400,000 loan can drop your first-year payment by a few hundred dollars a month. Weighed against a 1% agent-fee gap of $4,000, most buyers should take the buydown and fund the gap themselves, because the buydown returns more over the years you actually hold the loan. Nobody runs that comparison for you unless you ask.

I am both a licensed broker and a licensed loan officer, so I model the concession structure and the loan side together instead of guessing at one of them. If you want to see the real numbers on your budget, you can get started here.

Conclusion

The rules changed. The economics mostly did not. In DFW in 2026, sellers still pay buyer agent compensation in most closings, builders pay it in nearly all of them, and the buyers who end up writing a check are usually the ones who signed a representation agreement without reading the compensation line. Read that line. Ask your agent what happens if the seller covers less. Get the answer before you tour, because Texas law now requires the agreement to be signed first anyway.

Representation is not the expensive part of buying a home. Going without it is.

Book an appointment today and we will walk through your budget, your agreement, and your options.

Search every active DFW listing yourself on the Lone Star Living App.

Or get pre-approved so you know exactly what your cash to close looks like.

You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.

Key Takeaways

  • Sellers still pay the buyer's agent in most DFW closings, but the offer no longer appears in the MLS.
  • Texas law requires a signed written buyer representation agreement before your agent shows you any home, as of January 1, 2026.
  • The number that matters is the gap between what your agreement says and what the seller agrees to cover.
  • Nearly every DFW builder pays buyer agent compensation, but only if your agent registers you on your first visit.
  • With 5.4 months of supply and a quarter of listings cutting price, asking a seller to cover your agent's fee is a normal negotiation term in 2026.

FAQ: Buyer Agent Compensation in DFW

When do I have to sign a buyer representation agreement in Texas?

Before your agent shows you any residential property, or before they present an offer on your behalf if no showing occurs. Texas Occupations Code Section 1101.563 made this mandatory as of January 1, 2026.

Do I have to pay my buyer's agent out of pocket?

Usually no. In most DFW closings the seller or builder covers the fee. You pay only the difference if the seller agrees to cover less than your agreement specifies.

What happens if the seller refuses to pay anything?

You can negotiate a closing cost credit instead, ask your agent to reduce the fee, or walk. Confirm with your lender whether a buyer-paid fee can be financed under your loan program, because rules vary.

Do DFW builders pay buyer agents in 2026?

Nearly all of them do, across DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Red Oak, Waxahachie, and Midlothian. The catch is registration. Your agent must be with you or register you before your first model home visit.

How long is a buyer representation agreement binding?

The term is negotiable and written into the agreement. Ask for a shorter initial term and a clear termination clause rather than accepting a default that runs six months or longer.

Where can I search DFW listings on my own first?

Use the Lone Star Living App to browse every active listing in the metro with live MLS data before you commit to touring anything.

This article is general information, not legal advice. Market data reflects conditions at the time of publication. Equal Housing Opportunity. Steven J. Thomas is a licensed Texas real estate broker with Refind Realty DFW and a licensed loan officer with Envision Home Lenders, NMLS #689220.

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Steven J Thomas

Steven J. Thomas

Steven J. Thomas has been in the financial services industry for the past 19 years and started my career as a Financial Planner for American Express Financial Advisors. I entered into banking with JP Morgan Chase as personal banker in 2003 and was promoted several times up to Small Business Specialist. I earned multiple Million Dollar Club awards and was ranked in the top 5 Small Business Specialist before I branched out in 2005 to start my own Financial Management Company. I ran a successful company before family circumstances lead me to Wachovia Bank in 2008 where I worked as a Senior Financial Specialist. As a Sr. Financial Specialist; I was responsible for the P & L and revenue growth of my banking center. The elimination of my role thru a bank merger lead me to BBVA Compass. I have held various leadership roles at BBVA Compass including Personal Relationship Manager, Branch Retail Executive, Workplace Solutions VP, and his current role as a Retail Manager. As the Regional Workplace Solutions VP, I was responsible for the strategic, tactical, and execution of Partnership Banking relationships, promotion and activity with corporate and non-profit companies in my footprint. I was responsible for the acquisition production for three districts, which includes 51 banking centers and over 300 employees. In May of 2014, I joined the team at Refind Realty and became one of the managing partners in mid-2015.

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Ask Us Anything

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do you need a Realtor?

When buying or selling a home, there are so many options…which can also present a lot of obstacles. Laws change, forms change, and practices change all the time in the real estate industry. Because it’s our job to stay on top of those things, hiring a realtor reduces risk, and can also save you a lot of money in the long run.

When you work with me as your Realtor, you’re getting an expert who knows the area; knows how to skillfully guide your experience as a seller or buyer; can easily spot the difference between a good deal and a great deal. My job is to translate your dream into a real estate reality, and I work hard to earn and keep my business. This also means earning your trust: When you work with me, you’ll be working with a realtor who looks out for your best interests and is invested in your goals.

Which loan should you choose?

There are two different types of loans conventional loans and government-backed loans. The main difference is who insures these loans:

1 - Government-backed loans (FHA, VA and USDA):

(a) - Are, unsurprisingly, backed by the government.

(b) - Include FHA loans, VA loans, and USDA loans.

(c) - Make up less than 40 percent of the home loans generated in the U.S. each year.

2 - Conventional loans

(a) - Are not backed by the government.

(b) - Include conforming and non-conforming loans (such as jumbo loans).

(c) - Make up more than 60 percent of the loans generated in the U.S. each year.

What is the difference between FHA, VA and USDA loans?

1 - FHA LOANS:

FHA loans, which are insured by the Federal Housing Administration, are typically designed to meet the needs of first-time homebuyers with low or moderate incomes. FHA loans can be approved with a down payment of as little as 3.5 percent and a credit score as low as 580.

FHA loans are often called “helper loans,” because they give a leg up to potential borrowers who may not be able to secure one otherwise. For this reason, FHA loans have maximum lending limits, which are determined based on housing values for the county where the for-sale home is located.

Because the agency is taking on more risk by insuring FHA loans, the borrower is expected to pay mortgage insurance both at the time of closing and on a monthly basis, and the property must be owner-occupied.

2 - VA LOANS:

VA loans are backed by the Department of Veterans Affairs and they are guaranteed to qualified veterans and active-duty personnel and their spouses. VA loans can be approved with 100 percent financing, meaning VA borrowers are not required to make a down payment.

Unlike FHA loans, borrowers do not have to pay mortgage insurance on VA loans.

3 - USDA LOANS:

You may also hear about USDA loans, which are backed by the United States Department of Agriculture mortgage program. USDA loans are intended to support homeowners who purchase homes in rural and some suburban areas. USDA loans do not require a down payment and may offer lower interest rates; borrowers may have to pay a small mortgage insurance premium in order to offset the lender’s risk.

What’s a conventional loan? Understanding what it means to be conforming and non-conforming

Buyers who have a more established credit history and a larger down payment may prefer to apply for a conventional loan. These loans may offer a lower interest rate and only require the home buyer to purchase monthly mortgage insurance while the loan-to-value ratio is above a certain percentage, so a conventional loan borrower can typically save money in the long run.

Conventional loans are divided into two types: Conforming loans and non-conforming loans.

1 - CONFORMING LOANS:

Conforming loans are those that meet (or conform to) predetermined standards set by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — two government-sponsored institutions that buy and sell mortgages on the secondary market. By selling the loans to "Fannie and Freddie," lenders can free up their capital and return to issue more mortgages than if they had to personally back every loan that they approve.

The main standard for conforming loans is that the amount borrowed must be under a certain amount; in Alaska, a single-family home loan must be under $647,200 in order to be considered conforming.

Properties with more than one unit have higher limits.

2 - NON-CONFORMING (JUMBO) LOANS:

But what happens if a borrower wants to borrow more than the Freddie- and Fannie-approved loan amount? In this case, they would have to apply for a “jumbo loan,” which is the most common type of non-conforming loan.

Because the lender cannot resell the jumbo loan (or any non-conforming loan) to Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae, jumbo loans are considered to be riskier than a conforming loan. To protect against this risk, the bank will typically require a higher down payment; the interest rate on a jumbo loan may also be higher than if the same borrower applied for a conforming loan.

What kind of rate should you choose?

Rate types: Fixed-rate vs. adjustable-rate mortgages.

In addition to the loan type you choose, you’ll also have to determine if you want a fixed-rate mortgage or an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM). A fixed-rate mortgage has an interest rate that does not change for the life of the loan, so it provides predictable monthly payments of principal and interest.

An adjustable-rate mortgage typically offers an initial introductory period with a low-interest rate. Once this period is over, the interest rate adjusts periodically, based on the market index. The initial interest rate on an ARM can sometimes be locked in for different periods, such as one, three, five, seven, or 10 years. Once the introductory period is over, the interest rate typically readjusts annually.

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