Manage your own listing, keep your commission, and sell with confidence using Show & Disclose.
Start Managing Your ListingNew Rochelle has an active real estate market with a median home price of $620,000. For sellers looking to maximize their net proceeds, a seller-managed listing offers significant savings over the traditional agent model.
Median Home Price: $620,000 · Population: 79,726 · State: New York
On a $620,000 home in New Rochelle, a traditional 2.5% listing agent commission would cost $15,500. With a seller-managed listing, you keep those funds.
With modern tools like flat-fee MLS services and Show & Disclose, selling without a listing agent is more accessible than ever. You get professional showing management, organized disclosure delivery, and automated feedback collection — the key services you'd normally pay a listing agent for.
New York requires sellers to complete a Property Condition Disclosure Statement covering 48 questions about the property, OR provide a $500 credit to the buyer at closing in lieu of disclosure.
Start by pricing your home using comparable sales data from Zillow, Redfin, or a local appraisal. Get a flat-fee MLS listing for exposure, use Show & Disclose to manage showings and disclosures, and hire a real estate attorney for legal protection. Many New Rochelle homeowners successfully sell this way.
New York requires sellers to complete a Property Condition Disclosure Statement covering 48 questions about the property, OR provide a $500 credit to the buyer at closing in lieu of disclosure. Read the full New York disclosure guide →
On a $620,000 home in New Rochelle, a traditional 2.5% listing agent commission would cost $15,500. With a seller-managed listing, you keep those funds.
Yes. Buyer agents are obligated to show properties their clients want to see. If you offer buyer agent compensation through the MLS and provide a professional showing experience via Show & Disclose, agents will bring their buyers.
Highly recommended. A real estate attorney costs $500–$1,500 and provides legal protection that agents can't offer. Some states require attorney involvement in real estate transactions.