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Real Estate Q&A
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Making
Offers & Related Issues
| Is
there a percentage a seller will mark up the price of a home? For
example, if the asking price is $114,000 is an initial offer of
$95,000 too low? |
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Although you can always
offer whatever you want, yes, $95,000 is generally too low too offer
for a home priced at $114,000.
It's like buying a car. You want to dicker with the salesman a little,
but there is more room to dicker on a more expensive car than if you
were going in and buying the least expensive car.
Sellers usually mark up the price a little because they realize most
buyers aren't going to make a full price offer (though in different
markets you can get offers ABOVE the listing price). In your example
above, you were offering almost 15% below the listing price. They
don't mark it up that
much, just a few percent.
Before you make an offer, get your Realtor to go over the comparable
sales of other similar homes in the same neighborhood. That is the
same data the seller looked at when he priced his house, too. Make
certain allowance for whether houses are selling briskly or slowly,
and make an offer based on that data.
Note: When you look at comparable sales, you don't know for
sure if the seller paid closing costs for the buyer or provided some
other financing incentive, so keep that in mind. |
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| I am
looking at putting an offer in on a house listed for $134,900. The
house is vacant and I believe it has been on the market for over 6
months. My realtor is saying is should bid 134,00 with the seller
paying my closing cost and paying for a 2/1 buy down. I want to try
and offer less. What do you think? |
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Your closing costs should
be approximately $4000 or so (depending on what type loan you get, how
many points, etc.). The 2/1 buydown (assuming it is an annual buydown)
will cost the seller about $4000, too. By paying for these costs, if
you offer a price of $134,000, the seller is netting the same as he
would on if he accepted an offer of $126,000 and paid no costs.
If you think the house is worth less that $126,000, then make a lower
offer. If you think it is worth more than $126,000, then you would be
getting a deal with your Realtor's suggestion.
Your Realtor provides advice. You
decide what to offer based on that advice. |
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| If
you make an offer on a house and the owner comes back with a counter
offer and you agree to it can the owner still change his mind and sell
to someone else? |
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| A seller is free to
withdraw the counter-offer any time prior to your acceptance of it.
The communication method for acceptance is usually described in the
contract. If your acceptance was communicated to the seller in the
method required by the contract (prior to the seller withdrawing the
offer), the seller should honor the contract with you and not
entertain other offers.
But people don't always do what they should.
The problem then becomes whether you try to enforce your contract
or not, which requires legal advice and expenses. For that, you have
to consult an attorney.
Although you could probably technically enforce the contract, you
have to reach a decision on whether it makes sense to expend the time
and money to do so. Or does it make more sense to realize the seller
is unethical and just move on to buy something different? |
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| Can
you negotiate when making an offer on a new home? |
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| Making an offer on new
construction is not the same as making an offer on a resale. Most of
the time, the margin for profit is so small on new construction (per
unit) that there is basically little or no negotiating. You can try,
of course, because "everything in real estate is negotiable," but do
not expect too much. |
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| If
you make an offer on a house and the owner comes back with a counter
offer and you agree to it can the owner still change his mind and sell
to someone else? |
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| A seller is free to
withdraw the counter-offer any time prior to your acceptance of it.
The communication method for acceptance is usually described in the
contract. If your acceptance was communicated to the seller in the
method required by the contract (prior to the seller withdrawing the
offer), the seller should honor the contract with you and not
entertain other offers.
But people don't always do what they should.
The problem then becomes whether you try to enforce your contract
or not, which requires legal advice and expenses. For that, you have
to consult an attorney.
Although you could probably technically enforce the contract, you
have to reach a decision on whether it makes sense to expend the time
and money to do so. Or does it make more sense to realize the seller
is unethical and just move on to buy something different? |
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Can you
negotiate the price of a bank owned home? |
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| Everything in real estate
is negotiable. However, banks are more sophisticated about pricing
than they were years ago. So those "Get a great deal on a
foreclosure!" days aren't what they used to be. Lowball offers
generally don't go very far. |
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