Utah Buyer's Program

Buy a home.
Get half our
commission back.

At least half. Sometimes more.
Full-service representation — and a check at closing.

Book a Free Call → See how it works ↓
50%
Commission back to you
Utah
County
Our home turf
Salt Lake
County
Also covered
Award Recognition
Top 250 Utah Central Realtors 2023
2023
UCAR Top 250 2024
2024
UCAR Top 250 2025
2025
Top 250 Utah Central Realtors 2023
2023
UCAR Top 250 2024
2024
UCAR Top 250 2025
2025
How It Works

Simple as it sounds.
Really.

1

You hire us as your buyer's agent

Full-service representation from search to close. We negotiate hard, we know the Utah market, and we don't cut corners.

2

The seller pays our commission

Standard practice — the seller generally covers buyer's agent fees as part of the transaction. You pay nothing out of pocket to us.

3

We write you a check at closing

Half of what we earn comes back to you — either as a credit toward closing costs, or as a check after closing. Unconditionally.

The Promise
Half our
commission.
Yours.
No hidden catches. No lender requirements.
Rebate applies when the seller offers a buyer's agent commission. In rare cases where no commission is offered, we'll work together on a good faith arrangement — we'll always discuss it with you before submitting an offer. Rebate paid at closing as a credit or check. Subject to lender approval for credit application.
The Math

Let's talk real numbers.

On a $500,000 home, here's what working with us looks like compared to a traditional buyer's agent.

Traditional Agent
Home price $500,000
Buyer's agent commission (3%) $15,000
Goes to agent $15,000
Goes back to you $0
Your rebate $0
the Broker Split
Home price $500,000
Buyer's agent commission (3%) $15,000
We earn $7,500
Goes back to you $7,500
Your rebate $7,500

Example based on 3% buyer's agent commission on a $500K home. Actual commission varies by transaction.

A note on the NAR settlement

In March 2024, the National Association of Realtors settled a landmark antitrust lawsuit for $418 million, fundamentally changing how buyer's agent commissions work. As of August 17, 2024, sellers are no longer required to offer buyer's agent compensation on the MLS — and buyers must now sign a written agreement with their agent spelling out compensation before touring any home.

What this means in plain English: buyer's agent commissions are now openly negotiated, and the traditional 2.5–3% rate is no longer guaranteed. Some sellers still offer it. Some don't. Commissions may trend lower industry-wide as competition increases.

For you, working with us: none of this changes our promise. Whatever commission we earn on your transaction — whether it's 3%, 2.5%, or something else entirely — we split it with you 50/50. The rebate scales with the deal.

Your Agents

Real people.
Real results.

Rusty Boshard
Rusty Boshard
Broker · Buyer's Agent

Rusty has spent 20+ years in Utah real estate, with 500+ custom and semi-custom builds to his name. He's a Central Utah Top 250 Realtor two years running and the creator of the Broker Split program.

Book with Rusty →
Campbell Wright
Campbell Wright
Buyer's Agent · Listing Agent

Campbell moved to Utah for college and never left. She sold $18.8M in her first two years, earned a spot on the Central Utah Top 250 Realtor list in 2025, and knows Utah County like she grew up here.

Book with Campbell →
Todd Ashman
Buyer's Agent · Listing Agent

Todd got his first real estate license right out of high school and has been at it for 28+ years. In between he built two businesses from scratch — both sold in 2025 — which means he brings a level of business sense to transactions that most agents simply don't have.

Book with Todd →
Get Started

Ready to buy smarter?

Book a free 15-minute call with one of our agents. No pressure, no obligation — just an honest conversation about what buying a home in Utah looks like with us.

Book a Free Call →

Free · No obligation · 15 minutes

Selling a home? We're focused on saving buyers money — but on the seller side, we help you get top dollar.
List Your Home →