Most real estate FSBO scripts you'll find online are 30 years old, dressed up for 2026. They open with a pitch, push for the appointment in the first 90 seconds, and treat the seller like a transaction in a track suit. They don't work — not because the words are wrong, but because the FSBO has already been called 30 times that week with the same opener.

The data is on your side. According to NAR's 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, FSBOs are at a record-low 5% of all home sales — and 91% of sellers used a real estate agent. Only 11% of FSBO sellers complete the sale without ever calling an agent. The other 89% list with somebody. The 9 scripts below are designed to make that somebody you.

The FSBO market in 2026, by the numbers

Before any script, the math needs to be in your bones. When a FSBO objects, you're not selling against an agent — you're selling against the version of themselves they imagined when they planted the sign in the yard. Numbers reset that imagination.

FSBO vs agent-assisted sales (2025 NAR data)
Median sale price and market share. Source: NAR 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers.
FSBO median sale price
$360K
Agent-assisted median price
$425K
FSBO share of all sales
5%
Sellers who used an agent
91%
FSBOs that sell without an agent
11%
The 18% price gap is your strongest opener. Most FSBOs go solo to save 6% in commission and end up netting 18% less than agent-listed comps. Lead with that math, not the script.

Why most FSBO scripts fail (the mistake to avoid)

Most agents fail FSBOs in the first sentence. They open with "Hi, I'm calling about your home for sale — are you working with an agent?" The seller's been asked that 30 times this week. They have a reflex no, and you've burned the only at-bat you'll get.

The fix is one word: curiosity. The best FSBO scripts from REDX, Vulcan7, and Mike Ferry all share one structural pattern — they ask a question that the seller hasn't been asked 30 times today. That's the entire game.

9 real estate FSBO scripts that convert

Each script below has the same three parts: opener, transition, and "why it works." Use them on phone calls, door-knock visits, or as text-message starters. Substitute names and addresses where bracketed.

1
The "Buyer's Agent" Opener
"Hi [Name], this is [Agent] with [Brokerage]. I had two buyers walk out of a showing this week saying nothing in your neighborhood fit. Before I bring them by your place, can I ask — are you open to working with a buyer's agent if I bring you a qualified, pre-approved buyer?"
Why it works It's the only opener that's not about you listing them. You're offering a buyer, which is what they actually want. Once they say yes to the buyer-side commission, the listing conversation is a 30-day relationship, not a 90-second pitch.
2
The "Ideal Agent" Reverse
"I get it — you've decided to sell on your own and you don't need an agent. Quick question though: if you ever did decide to interview agents, what would the perfect agent for you look like? What would they have to do to earn the listing?"
Why it works The seller is now describing their own buying criteria, which gives you a roadmap. Most FSBOs say something like "communicate well, price it right, market it everywhere." You just got their objection list — for free.
3
The "Net Number" Frame
"What's the number you have to net to make this move work? … Got it, $[X]. So if I could show you a path that nets you $[X] or more — even after commissions — would that be a conversation worth having for 15 minutes?"
Why it works FSBOs are not anti-agent. They're anti-losing-money. Per NAR, the median FSBO nets $65,000 less than the agent-assisted median ($360K vs $425K). If you can credibly net them more, you've reframed the entire conversation around their goal.
4
The "Pricing Help" Door-Knock
"Hi [Name], I'm not here to pitch you on listing — I drove by, saw the sign, and I just sold a house two blocks over for $[X]. I thought you'd want to see the comp before you set a final price. Can I email you the CMA? No commitment, no follow-up call unless you ask."
Why it works Per NAR, 17% of FSBOs say pricing is their #1 struggle — more than any other concern. You're solving the problem they admitted to themselves at 11pm last Tuesday. The CMA is the wedge; the relationship is the listing.
5
The "Marketing Audit" Text
"[Name] — saw your home on Zillow. Your photos look like you took them yourself (no shade, mine would too). Real estate's #1 lever right now is photo + listing-syndication quality. Want me to send you a 5-minute audit on what to fix? Free, no agent pitch attached."
Why it works FSBOs hate getting cold-called but answer texts. NAR says 40% of FSBOs don't actively market their homes at all. Offering a marketing audit (instead of a listing pitch) lands as help, not hustle.
6
The "Day 14" Follow-Up
"Hey [Name] — just checking in. Two weeks ago you mentioned you wanted to sell by [Date]. Just curious: where are you on showings, and is the timeline still realistic? If it's slipping, no judgment — just want to make sure you have options if you need them."
Why it works Most FSBOs hit a stall around day 14–21 when showings dry up and the price they picked starts looking optimistic. Your job is to be the agent already in the inbox when that moment lands. NAR data: 13% of FSBOs cite "selling on time" as their top pain.
7
The "Paperwork" Reframe
"Out of curiosity — when an offer comes in, who's drafting the contract? The buyer's agent, an attorney, you? I ask because the disclosures and contingency language are where most FSBO deals fall apart. I have a sample disclosure packet I can send you to look over — saves you a few hundred in attorney prep either way."
Why it works Per NAR, 10% of FSBOs name paperwork as their biggest hurdle. Sending a free disclosure packet positions you as the safety net for the moment everything gets real (offer received, contract due in 72 hours).
8
The "Open House Coverage" Offer
"Are you doing your own open house this weekend? If you want, I can come sit it for the first hour for free — I'll bring sign-in sheets, a couple of cookies, and stay out of your way. You handle the conversations, I just keep the foot traffic moving."
Why it works In-person time is the relationship-builder no script can replace. You spend 60 minutes earning trust, and you walk away with a list of buyer leads from the sign-in sheet. By Monday, you're not a stranger — you're "the agent who helped me Saturday."
Stop forgetting follow-ups

FSBO conversion is a 60-day cadence game. Jtek auto-tags every FSBO lead, drops them into a 30-touch sequence (call, text, email, drive-by), and reminds you of the day-14 stall check-in. Run the ROI calculator to see the math.

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9
The "Permission to Stay in Touch" Close
"I respect that you're committed to selling on your own. Last ask: if it doesn't sell in the next 30 days, would you mind if I checked back in? No pressure — just want to be useful if the situation changes. What's the best way to reach you?"
Why it works This is the close every script should end with. You're not asking for the listing — you're asking for the right to follow up. Once granted, your CRM runs the cadence and you've built a 30-day option on every FSBO that didn't say yes today.

The 5 FSBO objections you'll actually hear

If you call 20 FSBOs this week, you'll hear these five objections in some combination on every call. Here's how the top FSBO coaches (Ferry, REDX, Vulcan7, Espresso Agent) handle each:

"I'll save the commission"
$65K
NAR: FSBO median is $360K vs agent-assisted $425K. The 6% saved becomes 18% lost.
"Bring me a buyer"
Yes
Confirm: "So you'll pay an agent who brings a buyer?" They just conceded the buyer-side commission.
"I'll list on the MLS myself"
~3%
Most qualified buyers are repped, and most agents skip flat-fee MLS listings due to disclosure risk.

"I priced it to sell fast — I can't afford a commission."

Mispriced homes don't sell fast. They sit. Per multiple FSBO surveys, FSBOs that price too low raise a "what's wrong with this house" red flag and end up with longer days-on-market than agent-listed homes priced correctly. Your script: "Quick question — what would it cost you if it sat for 90 extra days?"

"I don't have a timeline."

Mike Ferry's classic counter: "Got it. So if you don't sell on your own, when would you start interviewing agents?" Whatever they say is your follow-up date. Stamp it in your CRM and call them on day 29.

The follow-up cadence that wins FSBO listings

Scripts open the door. The follow-up wins the listing. Industry-standard FSBO follow-up cadences from the major coaches converge on roughly the same shape:

No human can run that cadence on 50 FSBOs at once. You don't have to — your CRM does. A 7-touch follow-up sequence as the floor and an automation that fires the day-14 check-in solves the entire problem. (See also: why speed-to-lead matters even more for FSBO.)

Bottom line

The best real estate FSBO scripts don't win listings — your follow-up does. FSBOs convert on the 14th call, not the first one. Run the cadence in a CRM that doesn't forget, and the math (89% of FSBOs eventually list with somebody) does the rest.