Sign in

Keller Williams Realty, Inc.

Sharing is caring! Have something to share about Keller Williams Realty, Inc.? Use RevDex to write a review
Reviews Keller Williams Realty, Inc.

Keller Williams Realty, Inc. Reviews (7)

Revdex.com:
At this time, I have not been contacted by *** *** Realty, Inc. regarding complaint ID ***
Sincerely,
*** ***

We Have notified *** Months before they moved outi have called and notified her
about the accepted offer at the beginning of Julyso she is not correct saying I gave her a month notice I am not in charge for her moving feesshe had a month to month lease so she was obligated to move outshe didn't move out on September *** like we agreed initially because of delays in the closing( that didnt happen anyway ) so she had more than enough time to make arrangements to move out - she moved on October *** 2015. p.s I have received this notice on 11/**/a not on October *** because we changed offices from *** *** *** ** *** *** ** *** ***this is the reason I have respondent until now

Keller Williams Realty and *** *** *** may or may not be co-owners with Homes.com or other housing sites which post ridiculously low housing prices listing which include the low mortgage paymentsThe square footage values also correlate to the sale price
Yet, and not surprisingly, when one contacts Keller Williams Realty, Incand *** *** *** who are the only source for the listings, then one learns the advertisement has been and Keller Williams Realty, Incand the *** *** claim no responsibility for misleading potential buyers
Although when something is too good to be true, I disregard, but since I am in earnest looking to relocate, effort nonetheless went into looking up these properties online to figure out what was the real story about these properties (iewhere was the mistake in the postingNone were to be found except blatant advertising)

We'd be satisfied with a 50% refund.
Thank you.
[redacted]

Review: Salesperson, Chen M[redacted], deceived me by promising a move out fee and not paying when we moved. Our first knowledge of request to move came via a phone call with a move out date less than a month away. Several phone calls later an agreement was reached. Although it was not the optimum solution, the sales person had agreed to provide a move out fee to assist with the situation. We moved out on the agreed date that was offered by the sales agent but the sales agent failed to pay the agreed fee. The apartment didn't close; thus, the sales agent is refusing to pay the fee.Desired Settlement: Pay the agreed upon fee for moving out.

Consumer

Response:

At this time, I have not been contacted by Keller Williams Realty, Inc. regarding complaint ID [redacted].Sincerely,[redacted]

Business

Response:

We Have notified [redacted] Months before they moved out. I have called and notified her about the accepted offer at the beginning of July. so she is not correct saying I gave her a month notice . I am not in charge for her moving fees. she had a month to month lease so she was obligated to move out. she didn't move out on September [redacted] like we agreed initially because of delays in the closing( that didnt happen anyway ) so she had more than enough time to make arrangements to move out - she moved on October [redacted] 2015. p.s I have received this notice on 11/**/2015 a not on October [redacted] because we changed offices from [redacted]. this is the reason I have respondent until now

Keller Williams Realty and [redacted] may or may not be co-owners with Homes.com or other housing sites which post ridiculously low housing prices listing which include the low mortgage payments. The square footage values also correlate to the sale price.

Yet, and not surprisingly, when one contacts Keller Williams Realty, Inc. and [redacted] who are the only source for the listings, then one learns the advertisement has been false and Keller Williams Realty, Inc. and the [redacted] claim no responsibility for misleading potential buyers.

Although when something is too good to be true, I disregard, but since I am in earnest looking to relocate, effort nonetheless went into looking up these properties online to figure out what was the real story about these properties (ie. where was the mistake in the posting. None were to be found except blatant false advertising)

Review: [redacted] Realty, Inc., and specifically [redacted] and [redacted] of the New York City Office, mislead us and did not carry out the terms of brokerage when representing a landlord. We looked at an apartment with them on March*, 2014. We reached out a day later with an offer for to rent the apartment. The broker, [redacted], reached out to the landlord with our offer, he came back with a counter offer. And we agreed to it. In all our dealings with [redacted] we used the correct unit number and address of the apartment. Then, after verbally and in writing accepting our offer we moved on to getting financial and security clearance. Once we passed those hurdles, albeit the landlord requiring an additional half-year rent because of good" but not "excellent credit; [redacted] came back and said that he had made a mistake and had told the landlord that we wanted a different (smaller, less ADA accessible - no elevator) apartment. We had always used the correct (ground floor unit) in all our written and verbal communications. We never even looked at the top floor apartment. [redacted] said, now the price has gone up another $50 a month. We told him that since it was his mistake it should come out of his broker fee not our lease. If he were to accept $1200 - we were signing a 24 month lease - less in brokerage than we would in essence be back to the amount originally agreed to. At this point [redacted] (and his team lead [redacted]) said they would not reduce their fee any less than $600 (and I quote, "we are willing to share the expenses with you expenses that we should have never incurred). At this point we decided to accept the split and move foreword with the lease. We agreed to meet the broker on Saturday, March **, 2014 to sign the lease. The lease was to begin on April*, 2014. When we arrived at the [redacted] office we signed the lease. At that time, [redacted] told us in order to get the keys we would need to meet with the broker. We were clarified that the lease was signed. The following business day, Monday, March **, we delivered three checks to [redacted] (the security deposit, the first month rent, and the brokerage fee). All checks have been cashed. Then on Wednesday, March ** we receive a phone call from the landlord informing us that if we want the keys we must travel outside of New York City (to Long Island) to get the keys from the landlord. The broker, thus far being compensated for the role of go-between the tenants (us) and the landlord should have provided us the keys. Or he should have made it clear that we would need to either drive, train, or taxi more than 20 miles out of the city on a weekday between the hours of 9am and 5pm (thus missing work) to retrieve the keys to the apartment we fully paid for and have the lease too. Today is April *, after numbers calls and emails we were filially told by [redacted] and again by [redacted] that there was nothing that could be done. Today, April *, [redacted] even said get over it, theres nothing you can do, and Ill just tear up your lease to me on the phone. At that point, because we had already paid thousands of dollars, ended the lease in our current apartment, scheduled our movers, and were technically one whole week in to our lease we gave up working with the incompetent agents, [redacted] and [redacted] and drove out to the landlords to get the keys. At which time the landlord said that (a) he had received higher offers then ours for the apartment and would be happy to let us out of the lease and (b) that it was in fact [redacted]s fault about the mix-up with the unit numbers that resulted in us paying $50 extra a month in our lease. Overall, it is our opinion that the [redacted] agents, [redacted] and [redacted], were doing everything in their power to try to get us to back out of the lease so they could rent the apartment to a higher bidder. Also, it is there incompetence that cost us money and their lack of professionalism that caused this ordeal in the first place. Note, we did not hire" [redacted], we were required to pay them if we wanted to deal with the landlord. We have also submitted this complaint to the NY State Attorney General, the Consumer Financial Services Bureau, and the National Association of Realtors.Desired Settlement: Finally, we would like to be reimbursed the full cost of the brokerage fee of $4,000. When we met with the landlord on April *th, his side of the lease was still not signed (it is now, and we are now in possession of the keys). The brokers, [redacted] and its agents [redacted] and [redacted] did not carry out all of there duties. They did not provide a completed lease before the date the lease was to begin, they did not provide keys to the apartment, and they did not adequately represent us to the landlord, effectively costing us more in monthly rent. The payment was made by cashiers check, if we had made it via credit card we would be disputing the charges with the provider immediately.

Consumer

Response:

We'd be satisfied with a 50% refund.

Thank you.

Consumer

Response:

At this time, I have not been contacted by [redacted] Realty, Inc. regarding complaint ID [redacted].

Sincerely,

Check fields!

Write a review of Keller Williams Realty, Inc.

Satisfaction rating
 
 
 
 
 
Upload here Increase visibility and credibility of your review by
adding a photo
Submit your review

Keller Williams Realty, Inc. Rating

Overall satisfaction rating

Description: REAL ESTATE

Address: 425 Park Avenue, 6th Floor, New York, New York, United States, 10022

Phone:

Show more...

Web:

This website was reported to be associated with Keller Williams Realty, Inc..



Add contact information for Keller Williams Realty, Inc.

Add new contacts
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | New | Updated