Christi Turrentine is a residential real estate agent representing RE/MAX First, one of Oklahoma City's largest independent RE/MAX franchises, operating in the greater OKC metro area's single-family and small multifamily market.
Real estate agents earn commission, typically split between the listing agent and the buyer's agent, with each receiving 2.5 to 3 percent of the sale price in Oklahoma City residential transactions. If you buy a home listed at $300,000, the listing agent and buyer's agent combined take $15,000 to $18,000 from the seller's proceeds, split equally between them. As a buyer's agent, Turrentine's commission comes from the seller's side of the transaction, not from your pocket, removing a direct cost barrier to hiring representation. As a listing agent, she represents the seller and is paid from the sale proceeds; the buyer does not pay her directly in that scenario either.
The commission structure matters for how agents prioritize clients. A buyer's agent works to negotiate your purchase price lower and terms in your favor, since her commission is a percentage of what you pay. A listing agent works to sell the property for as much as possible. Understanding which role Turrentine plays in a given transaction clarifies where her incentives lie.
If you are buying, working with a buyer's agent like Turrentine means someone focused on your side of the negotiation. She can access the OKC Multiple Listing Service, show you homes before or shortly after listing, explain neighborhood patterns in specific zip codes (73116, 73120, 73139, and others), and advise on inspection and appraisal contingencies before you make an offer. The buyer's agent has no commission unless your purchase closes, so her incentive is to help you move from shopping to signed contract.
If you are selling, a listing agent markets your home, prices it in the context of recent comparable sales in your neighborhood, coordinates showings and open houses, and negotiates on your behalf. RE/MAX First agents can list through the OKC MLS, which reaches agents across the metro. Listing agents also manage inspections and appraisals on the seller's side.
Some agents work both sides of transactions. Others specialize. Asking Turrentine whether her current focus is buying, selling, or both helps you understand what kind of guidance she'll prioritize.
Interview at least two agents before committing to a buyer's representation agreement or listing contract. Ask each agent for recent sales data in the specific neighborhood where you want to buy or sell—not the zip code, but the subdivision or block. For example, if you are selling in Nichols Hills, ask for closed sales in Nichols Hills in the past 90 days with price per square foot, days on market, and whether homes sold above or below asking price. An agent who can pull that data and explain it has access to tools and practices local nuance.
Ask about her transaction volume in your target neighborhood. An agent who has closed three homes in Edmond in the past year knows that market; an agent with one sale there is still building experience. Request references from recent clients—not just "satisfied customers" but past buyers and sellers in neighborhoods similar to yours.
In Oklahoma City's market, inventory and pricing vary significantly by neighborhood. South Oklahoma City areas like Mustang and Canadian County suburbs have different buyer pools and price trends than central OKC neighborhoods like Bricktown or Midtown. An agent who can articulate those differences demonstrates market depth.
RE/MAX First is one of the larger RE/MAX franchises in the metro and operates under RE/MAX's agent-centric model, where agents own their own businesses under the RE/MAX brand rather than being employees. This structure means agents like Turrentine have flexibility in commission splits and support services but also carry their own overhead. RE/MAX First's size means access to a shared database, training resources, and multiple agents if one is unavailable.
Other large brokerages in Oklahoma City include Keller Williams, Coldwell Banker, and independent firms like United Real Estate. Keller Williams and Coldwell Banker operate as traditional corporate brokerages where agents are more integrated into a single organizational structure. RE/MAX's independence-first model appeals to established agents with their own client bases.
If you are buying, a buyer's agent typically starts by understanding your budget (cash, mortgage pre-approval range), timeline, neighborhood preferences, and must-have features. From there, she arranges showings, pulls comparable sales to evaluate listing prices, and guides you through offer preparation and negotiation. Expect this relationship to develop over weeks or months, depending on market conditions and how selective you are.
If you are selling, a listing agent schedules a home inspection (separate from a buyer's inspection), discusses staging and minor repairs that affect perception, sets a list price based on comparables, photographs and describes the home for the MLS, and coordinates showings. Many listing agents recommend 30 to 90 days on market before adjusting price, though that varies by neighborhood and season.
RE/MAX First operates during standard business hours; agent availability often extends to evenings and weekends for showings and negotiations. Contact Turrentine through RE/MAX First's main office or her direct line to confirm current hours and availability. Most real estate work in Oklahoma City happens through phone, email, and MLS portal access rather than in-office visits, so immediate in-person availability is less critical than responsiveness.
Christi Turrentine's role in Oklahoma City's real estate market is representative of how agents operate in a metro where neighborhoods vary as much in character and price as they do in geography. Her specific value depends on her experience in your target neighborhood and her skill at translating that experience into a purchase or sale that matches your actual needs, not hers.
