Yeah, last year it had briefly seemed that broker's fees had become illegal, but this year that was "clarified" and now they're definitively legal again. [1] [2]
Previously it had seemed like nothing could get rid of them -- landlords mostly didn't care since it was mostly tenants who paid them in the end.
But COVID suddenly made everyone a bit more willing to consider other options (like virtual tours), and with some rents down landlords are perhaps a bit more willing to realize that if there's no broker's fee, tenants can pay a little more.
I'm actually really excited about this lockbox technology, I genuinely think it could be the key to "unlocking" competition again.
My only concern is that a lot of buildings don't have anything obvious in the front to lock it to, as well as plenty of buildings prohibiting tenants from storing keys in lockboxes in front, both because anyone can take a hammer to one and smash it to get the building key, and also because they don't trust it's not someone running an AirBNB.
Previously it had seemed like nothing could get rid of them -- landlords mostly didn't care since it was mostly tenants who paid them in the end.
But COVID suddenly made everyone a bit more willing to consider other options (like virtual tours), and with some rents down landlords are perhaps a bit more willing to realize that if there's no broker's fee, tenants can pay a little more.
I'm actually really excited about this lockbox technology, I genuinely think it could be the key to "unlocking" competition again.
My only concern is that a lot of buildings don't have anything obvious in the front to lock it to, as well as plenty of buildings prohibiting tenants from storing keys in lockboxes in front, both because anyone can take a hammer to one and smash it to get the building key, and also because they don't trust it's not someone running an AirBNB.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/27/nyregion/broker-fees-real...
[2] https://www.timeout.com/newyork/news/you-will-still-have-to-...