What is flat fee MLS? The short version: you list your home on the same MLS agents use for a one-time fee — HomeRise charges $95 — instead of handing a listing agent a percentage of your sale. On a $400,000 home, that listing-side cut usually runs about $12,000. With flat fee MLS, you keep it.
That's the whole pitch. The details are where people trip up, so let's walk through what you actually get, what it costs, and the cases where it's the wrong move.
What is flat fee MLS, exactly?
The MLS — Multiple Listing Service — is the private database real estate agents use to list and find homes. It's also the source that feeds Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin, and just about every site buyers scroll through at night. Normally the only door onto it is a listing agent, who takes a percentage of your sale price in exchange.
Flat fee MLS cuts that link. A licensed broker posts your listing to your local MLS for one flat price, and from there it syndicates to the big portals exactly like an agent's listing would. Same database. Same exposure. No percentage.
A buyer scrolling Zillow can't tell how you listed. Your home looks like every other home.
How flat fee MLS listing works, step by step
You enter your home's details, set your price, and upload photos.
A licensed broker lists it on the MLS that covers your county or metro.
Within about a day, it syndicates to Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin, and the rest.
Buyers and their agents reach out to schedule showings and send offers.
You handle it yourself — or upgrade for help with pricing, negotiation, and paperwork.
The one thing to get right is the local MLS. There are hundreds of them, each covering a region, and your listing has to land on the one buyers in your area actually search. A national "we'll list you everywhere" promise usually means a weak regional feed. HomeRise lists you on the MLS for your market.
What flat fee MLS costs
Across the industry, flat fee listings run from about $99 to $1,000-plus, depending on how many photos, how long the listing stays up, and how much hand-holding is bundled in. HomeRise's flat fee is $95, and it's risk-free — you're not locked into a percentage of your sale.
Here's the comparison that matters. A traditional sale costs 5–6% in total commission, historically split between the two agents. The listing side alone — the part you're replacing — is around 3%:
Home sale price
3% listing commission
HomeRise flat fee
$300,000
$9,000
$95
$500,000
$15,000
$95
$750,000
$22,500
$95
That's not a rounding error. On a mid-priced home, you're keeping roughly $12,000–$15,000 that would have walked out the door.
One nuance people still get wrong: the buyer's agent. Before 2024, sellers were essentially expected to cover the buyer agent's commission too. That changed with the 2024 NAR settlement. Now it's your call — offer a buyer-agent commission to pull in more showings, offer a smaller one, or offer nothing and negotiate later. Flat fee MLS puts that decision back in your hands instead of baking it into a 6% default.
Who flat fee MLS is right for — and who should think twice
Flat fee MLS rewards sellers who are comfortable being in the driver's seat. If you've sold before, or you're organized and don't flinch at scheduling showings and reading an offer, the savings are close to free money.
A couple of situations where it's an especially easy yes:
You're downsizing and your equity is your retirement. Every percent you don't pay in commission stays in your nest egg. On a long-held family home that's appreciated for decades, that can be $20,000 or more.
You're an investor selling more than one property. You already know the process, and the savings compound across every door. We built HomeRise Pro for exactly this.
One honest caveat: flat fee MLS is not "agent-lite." If you want someone to run the comps, sit in on negotiations, and quarterback the paperwork while you focus on your next move — which is a lot of growing families mid-relocation — the bare listing isn't the right fit. That's what our 1% full-service option is for. Be honest about how hands-on you want to be, and pick accordingly.
Flat fee MLS vs. full service vs. a traditional agent
Traditional agent
HomeRise Full Service (1%)
HomeRise Flat Fee ($95)
Listing-side cost on a $500K home
~$15,000
~$5,000
$95
On the MLS + Zillow / Realtor.com / Redfin
Yes
Yes
Yes
Pricing, negotiation & paperwork help
Full
Full
You handle it
Best for
hands-off sellers
want help and savings
confident DIY sellers
You don't have to guess and commit forever, either. Plenty of sellers start at $95 to test the water and upgrade if they decide they want more support.
How HomeRise does flat fee MLS
You list your home on the MLS for $95, risk-free, and it syndicates to all the major portals the same day. From there you're in control — and if you change your mind, you can upgrade to 1% full service at any point without starting over.
A few things that come standard: a buyer rebate if you're buying your next place through us, an investor tier for portfolios, and real support when you hit a question you didn't expect. More than 10,000 sellers have used HomeRise, and we're rated 4.6 stars. We're available in a growing list of states — including Arizona and Colorado — so check that we cover your market.
If you're willing to handle showings and offers, yes — easily. The $12,000-plus you save on a typical sale buys a lot of "figuring it out as you go." If you want someone to do all of it for you, look at 1% full service instead.
Will my listing look worse on Zillow?
No. It's the same MLS feed every agent uses, so it shows up the same way. Buyers have no idea how you listed, and frankly they don't care.
Do I still have to pay the buyer's agent?
Since 2024, that's your decision. Offer a buyer-agent commission to attract more showings, offer less, or offer nothing and handle it in negotiation.
Can I start at $95 and upgrade later?
Yes. That's the whole point of starting risk-free — try it, and move up to full service if you want more help.
Is flat fee MLS legitimate?
Completely. It's a licensed broker placing you on the same MLS a traditional agent would use. Nothing gray about it.