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The builder has a sales team. Now you have BK.

  • Jun 4
  • 2 min read

Most people spend years saving for a home. They give up weekends. They skip holidays. They watch their bank account inch upward with a patience that borders on devotion.

Then one Saturday morning, they walk into a builder's display suite.

The floors are warm. The kitchen gleams. A sales consultant — friendly, knowledgeable, subtly urgent — is ready to help. And somewhere between the free coffee and the glossy floor plan, the buyer forgets something important: that person across the table isn't working for them.

They never were.

Builders employ salespeople for one reason. To move stock. Not the wrong stock for a better suburb. Not a competitor's design that would suit you better. Theirs. Today.

For decades, buying a new home in Australia meant navigating that system alone. No independent guide. No one to say this estate has drainage issues or that builder has been missing handover dates all year or there are three better options two suburbs over.

Just you, a brochure, and someone on commission.

BK Home Broker started because that wasn't good enough.

We built something different.

Not a property portal. Not another listing site. A broker — in the truest sense. Someone who sits on your side of the table, compares options honestly, and tells you what they'd tell their own family.

We're paid by builders. We work for you.

That arrangement sounds contradictory. It isn't.

When a sale settles, the builder pays BK a commission — the same structure that makes mortgage brokers free for borrowers. The builder builds the margin in. You don't pay extra for it.

What you get, at no cost: active stock across multiple builders, honest comparisons on price, inclusions, quality, and timelines — and someone who will tell you when to walk away.

The people who call BK

Some are first home buyers who've spent six months reading forum posts and still don't know what to do.

Some are investors who've been pitched one development too many and want actual yield numbers.

Some are families who bought off-the-plan once before, got burned, and aren't making the same mistake twice.

They have different budgets, different timelines, different fears.

They all want the same thing: someone in their corner.

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