Dutch Revenboer is an independent real estate agent serving Oklahoma City's residential market, with a focus on northeast-side neighborhoods and move-up buyer transactions.
Revenboer operates as a solo agent rather than as part of a large brokerage team. His practice centers on representing buyers and sellers in Oklahoma City's northeast quadrant, including areas like Edmond boundaries, Nichols Hills, and mid-range neighborhoods where first-time move-up buyers and established families tend to concentrate. He works with clients on single-family home sales, and his transaction volume and client retention suggest a practice built on repeat referrals rather than high-volume turnover.
As a buyer's agent, Revenboer earns commission when his clients purchase a home, typically paid by the seller's agent out of the listing side's commission (often 2.5 to 3 percent of the sale price in Oklahoma City). He has access to the Oklahoma County MLS and can show inventory across Oklahoma City and surrounding areas, though his expertise centers on northeast-side inventory and market conditions.
For sellers, Revenboer lists properties and typically charges a commission split with a buyer's agent. Standard listing commission in the Oklahoma City market ranges from 5 to 6 percent of the final sale price, split between listing and buyer's agent, though this is negotiable. His role on the listing side includes staging consultation, pricing strategy, marketing through MLS and his own channels, and buyer showings.
Solo agents like Revenboer differ from agents at large franchises or local brokerages. A franchise agent (such as those at Keller Williams, RE/MAX, or Coldwell Banker Real Estate in OKC) typically has administrative support, lead-generation resources, and team-based backup. A solo agent like Revenboer operates independently but may offer more direct access to the decision-maker and simpler communication in smaller transactions.
Revenboer's strength lies in neighborhood familiarity and repeat-business relationships rather than brand recognition or advertising saturation. A buyer choosing between Revenboer and a franchise agent should ask: Do you want direct access to your agent, or do you prefer team support? A solo agent typically attends his own showings and negotiates his own contracts; a franchise team may assign showings to various agents or assistants. For sellers, ask whether you want a local agent with long market tenure or a larger brokerage's marketing reach and administrative efficiency. Revenboer's northeast-side focus means deeper knowledge of Edmond-adjacent inventory, school boundaries, and neighborhood comps; a city-wide agent at a larger firm may bring broader market data but less neighborhood specificity.
Revenboer is a fit for buyers relocating to or upgrading within Oklahoma City's northeast side, especially those buying a second or third home in the same general area. His repeat-client relationships suggest he also suits sellers who value personal continuity and understand that a solo agent will not have staging crews, transaction coordinators, or marketing departments in-house.
Revenboer is less suited to investors buying multiple properties in short succession, high-turnover developers, or buyers seeking a full-service team with dedicated buyer specialists. Similarly, sellers needing intensive staging support or luxury-market marketing may find larger brokerages better equipped.
A buyer meeting typically includes an MLS overview, a discussion of neighborhoods the buyer is targeting, and a walkthrough of available inventory in the price range the buyer has identified. Revenboer will ask about the buyer's financing status (pre-approval, cash, timing) to set realistic expectations.
A seller meeting involves a comparable-market analysis (CMA) drawn from recent sales in the same neighborhood and price range. Revenboer will review the property's condition, suggest repairs or updates that affect resale value, and propose a list price. Unlike corporate brokerages, a solo agent typically handles these conversations directly rather than delegating to a team member.
Revenboer operates by appointment. He can be reached through the Oklahoma County MLS or by direct contact; confirm current phone and email through local real estate directories, as these change periodically. His availability generally aligns with standard business hours, with flexibility for client showings outside those hours.
Revenboer's independence in Oklahoma City's residential market reflects a long-standing pattern among agents in mid-sized cities: smaller practices that build equity through neighborhood knowledge and repeat referral rather than franchise visibility. For buyers and sellers committed to the northeast side, this approach often trades corporate support for direct, personal service.
