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How to Sell a House Without a Realtor in Florida (2026 Guide)

Selling a house without a Realtor in Florida is completely legal — and thousands of Florida sellers do it every year. However, the single most important decision is how you get on the MLS. Without MLS access, your home is invisible to the buyer agents who drive 85% of sales. Flat fee MLS solves that for $99. Here's the complete step-by-step process.

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How to Sell a House Without a Realtor in Florida: Step by Step

Step 1: Price accurately. Pull recent comparable sales (comps) from Zillow, Redfin, or hire an appraiser for $400. Pricing at market value generates the most offers — overpricing is the #1 reason FSBO homes sit unsold. Step 2: Get on the Florida MLS. Only a licensed broker can submit MLS listings in Florida. Flat fee MLS gives you that access for $99 — the broker places your listing while you handle showings and negotiations. Step 3: Professional photos. Budget $150–$300. Homes with professional photography sell faster and for more than those with phone photos. Step 4: Complete all Florida disclosure forms. Step 5: Schedule and host showings yourself. Step 6: Review offers using the standard FARBAR As-Is contract. Step 7: Hire a Florida title company to handle closing — they prepare the deed, run the title search, and disburse funds.

Why Flat Fee MLS Is the Smart Way to Sell Without a Realtor

Pure FSBO (no MLS, just yard signs and Craigslist) limits your buyer pool to roughly 15% of active buyers. Moreover, buyer agents won't show homes not listed on the MLS — so 85%+ of the market never sees your home. Flat fee MLS solves this: for $99, a licensed Florida broker places your listing on the MLS, which then syndicates automatically to Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin, and hundreds of local buyer-agent portals. Therefore, you get full market exposure without paying a 3% listing commission. On a $425,000 home, that's $12,651 back in your pocket. Additionally, you keep complete control — all buyer leads come directly to you, you negotiate directly, and you set your own showing schedule.

Florida-Specific Requirements for Sellers Without a Realtor

Florida law requires sellers to disclose all known material facts that affect the property's value — including roof condition, water intrusion history, HOA information, and permit history. First, you'll need the Florida Seller's Property Disclosure form, which covers the major required disclosure categories. Additionally, a Lead-Based Paint Disclosure is federally required for homes built before 1978. After the 2024 NAR settlement, buyer-agent compensation is no longer mandated in the MLS, but most Florida sellers offer 2–2.5% to attract buyer agents. Finally, ensure you have a licensed Florida title company selected before accepting any offer — they handle all closing documents.

How Much Do You Save Selling Without a Realtor in Florida?

The savings depend on your home's price. For example, on a $350,000 Florida home, a traditional 3% listing commission costs $10,500. Flat fee MLS costs $99 — you save $10,401. On a $550,000 home, a traditional 3% listing commission costs $16,500. Flat fee MLS costs $99 — you save $16,401. In fact, the average Florida home price is approximately $425,000, meaning the average seller saves $12,651 by replacing a full-commission listing agent with flat fee MLS. These savings go directly into your net proceeds at closing.

The Biggest Mistakes Florida FSBO Sellers Make

Overpricing is the most common error — without an agent's market analysis, sellers often start too high and sit on the market for months. However, the fix is simple: pull three to five recent comparable sales within half a mile and price within 3% of the median. Undershooting photos is the second mistake — $150–$300 for professional photography returns multiples in final sale price. Slow response time costs showings — buyer agents have competing properties and move on quickly. Finally, skipping the title company is a serious risk — always use a licensed Florida title company or real estate attorney for closing. They ensure the deed is properly prepared and the transaction is legally complete.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Common Questions

Can I legally sell my house without a Realtor in Florida?
Yes — Florida law does not require sellers to use a real estate agent. However, Florida law does require that all MLS listings be submitted by a licensed broker. That's why flat fee MLS exists: a licensed broker places your listing on the MLS for $99 while you handle the rest of the transaction.
Do I need an attorney to sell a house in Florida without a Realtor?
Florida does not require a real estate attorney for residential sales. A licensed title company handles the closing, prepares the deed, and disburses funds. However, for complex transactions (estate sales, divorce, litigation history), an attorney is worth the $300–$600 cost.
What forms do I need to sell FSBO in Florida?
Required: Florida Seller's Property Disclosure (required for all residential sales), Lead Paint Disclosure (pre-1978 homes), property deed (prepared by title company at closing), and settlement statement. The purchase contract is typically the standard FARBAR As-Is or standard form — or the buyer's agent provides it.
How do I handle the closing without a Realtor in Florida?
A Florida title company or closing attorney handles the closing regardless of whether you have a listing agent. They prepare the deed, conduct the title search, obtain title insurance, hold escrow, and disburse funds at closing. Cost: $500–$1,200. Select your title company before accepting an offer.
Can I sell FSBO in Florida and still offer buyer agents a commission?
Yes — and most sellers do. Via flat fee MLS, you can specify buyer-agent compensation directly in your MLS listing. Offering 2–2.5% keeps buyer agents motivated to show your home while you still save the full listing commission.
How long does it take to sell a house without a Realtor in Florida?
Homes listed on the Florida MLS via flat fee sell in comparable timeframes to full-service listings — typically 30–60 days in most markets. Pure off-MLS FSBO homes (no MLS) take significantly longer due to limited exposure. The key is getting on the MLS immediately.
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