
Buyer's Agent or Sourcing System: Which to Choose (France)
An English brief on buyer's agent (chasseur immobilier) versus off-market sourcing system for investors in France. The tipping point is financial: agent fees of 2-3% repeat per deal, a system's cost is fixed. Pricing models, the math to run on your own numbers, the honest limits of each, and the middle path that combines both. Full breakdown in the French edition.
Buyer's Agent or Sourcing System: Which to Choose (France)
The Short Answer
Hire a buyer's agent (chasseur immobilier) for one purchase, or a few, when you want to delegate the search to someone who knows the ground. Build a sourcing system when you buy repeatedly across markets and the real constraint is covering enough terrain. The tipping point is simple math: a buyer's-agent fee of 2 to 3% of price repeats on every deal; a system's cost is mostly fixed. This is the English brief; the full breakdown is in the French edition.
When Each Wins
A chasseur wins on a one-off purchase, an unfamiliar market, when time (not coverage) is your constraint, and at the negotiating table (fees 2-3%, paid on success). Its limit is structural: one deal at a time, capped by hours. A system wins on volume, parallel markets, coverage as the bottleneck, and ownership: the system, its data, and its signals are yours, and outreach runs in your own name, GDPR-compliant, deployed on your own infrastructure. Its limit: a build cost, and it does not replace the handshake that closes.
Do the Math, and Consider Both
Take your target acquisitions over twelve months, your average price, apply 2.5% per deal, and compare to building and running a system. For many repeat buyers the switch lands around three to five deals a year, but it is your calculation. The best route is often both: a system feeding top-of-funnel at scale, a human closing the hot deals. Want to run the numbers? Do the math with us, no pitch.
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