How do you find a buyer’s agent in San Diego who actually fits your needs, and what should you ask before signing a buyer representation agreement?
[SNIPPET ANSWER: Interview multiple San Diego agents, verify local transaction history and neighborhood expertise, then ask about compensation structure, agreement duration, termination terms, and scope of services before signing a buyer representation agreement capped at 90 days under California law.]
If you’re buying a home in San Diego right now, you’re stepping into a market that looks nothing like it did even two years ago. The county median for single-family homes reached $1,074,000 in April 2026, up 5.8% year over year. Mortgage rates sit around 6.48% as of early June. And California’s Assembly Bill 2992 now requires you to sign a written buyer representation agreement before an agent can show you a single property.
That last part is the game changer. Before 2025, you could casually tour homes with any agent, no paperwork involved. Now, you’re entering a contractual relationship upfront. So the question isn’t just “who’s a good agent?” It’s “who’s the right agent for me, and do I understand what I’m signing?”
A cloudy mind can’t make decisions, so let me walk you through this clearly.
Here’s the core of what changed. Under AB 2992, effective January 1, 2025, your real estate agent cannot show you a property without a signed Buyer Representation and Broker Compensation Agreement (BRBC) in place first. This applies to every property type in San Diego, from a Carmel Valley single-family home to a downtown condo.
What does this mean practically? It means you should be thoughtful about who you sign with. Having closed over 275 transactions across San Diego County, I’ve seen how the right agent-buyer relationship can define the entire experience. This agreement is designed to protect you, but only if you understand it before you sign.
Not all buyer’s agents are equal, and San Diego’s roughly 100 distinct neighborhoods each carry their own dynamics. Here are the questions I recommend you prioritize.
Ask whether compensation is a percentage, flat fee, or hourly rate. Ask what happens if the seller offers less buyer-agent compensation than what’s in your agreement. In many San Diego transactions, the seller still covers buyer-agent compensation, but you need to know your exposure.
San Diego is not one market. The micro-market in Scripps Ranch (where school feeder zones drive pricing) behaves completely differently than North Park (where a Walk Score of 86 and proximity to Balboa Park shape buyer demand). A real estate agent in San Diego who quotes you the county median without understanding these micro-dynamics isn’t giving you useful information.
I tell my clients this all the time: the difference between a home on the right side of a school boundary versus the wrong side can be $50,000 to $100,000 in value, especially in areas like Carmel Valley and Poway. That knowledge only comes from working these neighborhoods consistently.
Ask for specific numbers. How many San Diego transactions has this agent closed in the past 12 months? Are they full-time or part-time? With 16 years of experience and 180 client reviews averaging 5 out of 5 stars, I’m comfortable sharing this data because I believe buyers deserve it before committing.
This is the question most buyers forget to ask. California law makes agreements exceeding three months void and unenforceable, but you also want to know: what happens if you’re unhappy at week three? A confident agent will give you a straightforward answer.
Market analysis, showing coordination, offer strategy, negotiation, inspection oversight, vendor referrals, closing coordination. Get clarity on exactly what you’re receiving. One family I worked with in Sorrento Valley had previously signed with another agent who didn’t coordinate inspections or provide contractor referrals, leaving them scrambling during escrow. When we started working together, they told me the difference was night and day, simply because every step was mapped out in advance.

Asking questions is step one. Here’s how to evaluate the answers you get.
San Diego County’s two-track market is a perfect litmus test. Detached single-family homes have held near their peak, while older condos and townhomes are down roughly 10 to 15 percent due to rising HOA dues, SB 326 inspection costs, and higher insurance premiums. If an agent can’t explain this split to you in plain language, they probably aren’t tracking it closely enough.
I had a buyer recently looking at condos in Mira Mesa. The HOA had just completed its SB 326 balcony inspection, and a special assessment was coming. We identified this early, negotiated a credit, and saved that buyer thousands. That kind of awareness comes from handling hundreds of transactions locally.
A strong San Diego broker maintains relationships with inspectors, lenders, escrow officers, and contractors. When deadlines hit during escrow, you don’t want your agent scrambling to find a roofer or a plumber. I maintain a vetted network specifically so my clients never face that scramble.
One extra layer of protection I provide is a complimentary attorney review of contracts and disclosures, covered by me, even if escrow cancels. When I mention this to buyers, they’re often surprised. But in a market where the conforming loan limit is now $1,104,000 and purchase prices regularly exceed $900,000, having an attorney review your paperwork seems like common sense.
In April 2026, the median days on market in San Diego dropped to 21 days. In competitive neighborhoods like Carmel Valley and Scripps Ranch, desirable homes can receive multiple offers within the first weekend. You need an agent who is available, responsive, and prepared to move quickly.
One family I worked with had toured homes almost every week for about three months before we found the right property in Sorrento Valley. My team and I were available on short notice for calls and showings throughout. When their offer was accepted, we made the process feel smooth because the groundwork was already done.
You might be looking at a walkable urban village like North Park, where single-family homes sit around $1.05 million and the Thursday farmers market on 30th Street feels like a neighborhood block party. Or maybe you’re targeting Rancho Bernardo, where the pace is quieter and school ratings run higher.
Each San Diego neighborhood carries its own combination of Mello-Roos taxes and HOA structures, school district boundaries, and commute profiles. In North Park, you get an 86 Walk Score and proximity to Morley Field’s tennis courts and Balboa Park. In Poway, you get top-tier schools but a longer commute. Your agent should be able to walk you through these trade-offs neighborhood by neighborhood, not just send you listings and wait.
What I always tell my clients is this: if two homes are three blocks apart but in different school feeders or different HOA structures, you could be looking at a $100,000 price difference. Knowing where those invisible lines are is what separates a knowledgeable real estate agent in San Diego from someone who is just searching the MLS.

Yes. Under California AB 2992, effective January 1, 2025, your agent must have a signed written agreement in place before showing you any property. The one exception is open houses, where you can walk through on your own without a signed agreement.
California law caps the duration at 90 days. The agreement cannot automatically renew. Any renewal requires a new written document, dated and signed by all parties, and that renewal also cannot exceed 90 days.
Yes. A single-property limited agreement is a compliant option under California law. Some agents offer this as a lower-commitment starting point while you evaluate whether the working relationship is a good fit.
Compensation is negotiable and must be disclosed in your written agreement. In many San Diego transactions, the seller still covers buyer-agent compensation, but the agreement should spell out what happens if the seller offers less than your agreed amount.
Your agreement should include termination provisions. Ask about these before you sign. A confident agent will explain the process clearly and not make you feel trapped.
There’s no magic number, but transaction volume in the local market matters. An agent who has closed hundreds of transactions across San Diego neighborhoods will have experience with inspection issues, negotiation scenarios, and micro-market pricing that a newer agent simply hasn’t encountered.
The 2026 conforming loan limit for San Diego County is $1,104,000, the highest ever. This means you can finance up to that amount with a conforming loan, potentially avoiding jumbo loan requirements.
Single-family home prices in San Diego County rose 5.8% year over year as of April 2026. However, the condo and townhome market has softened, with attached properties down about 1.5% year over year. The market is truly two-track right now.
Yes. Pre-approval clarifies your budget, strengthens your offer when you find the right home, and helps your agent narrow the search to realistic price points. In a market where homes sell in a median of 21 days, being pre-approved keeps you competitive.
San Diego County has roughly 100 distinct neighborhoods, each with its own pricing dynamics, school boundaries, Mello-Roos exposure, and HOA structures. An agent with deep local knowledge can identify value and risks that a generalist would miss.
Finding the right buyer’s agent in San Diego comes down to three things: local knowledge, transparency, and a relationship you feel good about. The new buyer representation agreement under AB 2992 is designed to give you clarity, not complicate things. Use it to your advantage by asking direct questions about compensation, scope of services, and termination terms before you sign.
If you’re looking for an Associate Broker with 16 years of experience across San Diego neighborhoods, 180 five-star client reviews, and a calm, data-informed approach to buying, I’d welcome the conversation. I’m Scott Cheng, and you can reach me at 858-405-0002 or visit my office at 16516 Bernardo Center Dr. Ste. 300. Let’s get you a clear plan you can feel good about.
Scott Cheng provides free, no-obligation consultations for buyers, sellers, and investors.
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