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Record Detail

Subject

Carlos V.

Palmview Realty Group · Miami, FL

Poster

Simone A.

Submitted this record

Submitted Record

AI Credibility Recommendation:Opinion-Based
Submitted04/02/2026
Record IDac3d94…d1bb
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Category:Realtor
Miami, FL
Relationship:Client
Experience Details
I felt pressured by my realtor to make an offer on a property I wasn't fully comfortable with. Every time I expressed hesitation, the response was about how fast the market was moving and how I'd lose it if I waited. I ultimately made an offer I regretted. I'm not saying the property was bad — I'm saying I never felt like I had space to think. My concerns were consistently minimized in favor of moving fast.
198
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Debate Section
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Debate ended
Carlos V.
Subject · Apr 07, 2026, 2:22 PM
I presented the facts of the market as they were at the time. That area was seeing multiple offers within 48 hours of listing. I gave the client all the information they needed to make their decision. I never told her she had to make an offer — I showed her what would happen if she didn't act. Ultimately, every offer submitted went through her and required her signature.
819
Carlos V.
Subject · Apr 08, 2026, 9:41 AM
In my professional opinion, in a competitive market, hesitation has real consequences. My job is to make sure my clients understand those consequences fully. If she felt that information was pressure rather than guidance, I understand that — but I was doing my job. I always respect the final decision as the client's own.
915
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Vote Statements
qlnx@dnounce_29(Mortgage Advisor)
Apr 13, 2026, 10:30 AM
With Carlos V.
Urgency is part of the job in fast markets. I've seen clients regret moving quickly and regret waiting — it cuts both ways. The agent made the offer available, explained the stakes, and the client signed. I can't call that misconduct based on this account alone.
914
tjf@dnounce_541(Buyer's Advocate)
Apr 12, 2026, 4:55 PM
With Simone A.
A buyer expressing hesitation twice and being redirected both times toward urgency is a pattern. Good agents acknowledge doubt and work through it — they don't override it with market pressure. The client's emotional experience of the process matters.
203
mbvp@dnounce_87(Property Investor)
Apr 11, 2026, 8:17 AM
With Carlos V.
In a hot market, the agent's urgency was likely accurate. The client chose to make an offer and signed off on it. Regret after the fact doesn't necessarily mean the agent was wrong. Without knowing the specific market conditions, this reads as a legitimate difference of opinion.
119
kxr@dnounce_312(Real Estate Broker)
Apr 10, 2026, 11:04 AM
With Simone A.
Repeatedly citing urgency every time a client expresses doubt is a known pressure tactic in real estate. The fact that the client signed the offer feeling rushed — not informed — is the core issue. Agents should create space for hesitation, not fill it with market fear.
164
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