Jan Gordon Vice President ABR, ASP, CRA, CRS, GRI, MMDC, NAR, SRES jgordon@crye-leike.com
Making an Offer to Purchase
After you find your dream home, you're ready for the next action step
in the negotiating process -- making an offer to purchase. No standard,
universally accepted real estate purchase contract is used throughout
the country. On the contrary, purchase contracts vary in length and
terms from state to state and, within a state, from one locality
to another. A good agent or lawyer will use the most current version
of the contract.
Common Aspects of a Good Offer
Good offers are based on a realistic
offering price.
You shouldn't pull the offering price out of thin air. Instead, base
your offering price on houses (comparable to the seller's house in age,
size, condition, and location) that have sold within the past six months.
Sellers' asking prices are often fantasy. Actual sale prices
of comparable houses are facts.
Good offers have realistic financing terms.
Your mortgage's interest rate, loan-origination fee, and time allowed
to obtain financing must be based upon current lending conditions.
Some offers get blown out of the water because a buyer's loan
terms are unrealistic.
If you've been pre-qualified or, better yet, pre-approved for a
loan, you or your agent should stress that advantage when you present
your offer. This proves to the sellers that you're a creditworthy buyer
who's ready, willing, and financially able to purchase their house.
Good offers don't ask the sellers
for a blank check.
At the time that your offer is initially submitted, you won't know
the degree to which corrective work is needed unless property defects
are glaringly obvious. Under these circumstances, it's smart to use
property inspection clauses that enable you to reopen negotiations
regarding any necessary corrective work.
Negotiation is an Ongoing Process
After the action of having your offer accepted, your property inspectors
gather information. After they've determined what is actually required
in the way of corrective work, you and the sellers can renew your
negotiations armed with hard facts.
If the sellers agree with the price and terms contained in your
offer, they'll sign it. Their agent should give you a signed copy of the
offer immediately. When you actually receive a copy of the offer signed
by the sellers, you have what's called a ratified offer (that is,
a signed or accepted offer). This doesn't mean that you own the house
or that it has been sold. All you can say for now is that a sale
is pending.