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Six Tips for Choosing the Best Offer for Your Home: Selling Your Home in Today's Market

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Real Estate Agent with EXIT REALTY NEXUS

mls online realtor.com realestate blaine mn housing realty minneapolis realty realtors in minnesota looking for house for sale in minnesota Great article from HouseLogic.com...      

6 Tips for Choosing the Best Offer for Your Home
By: G. M. Filisko
Published: February 10, 2010

Have a plan for reviewing purchase offers so you don't let the best slip through your fingers.

You've worked hard to get your home ready for sale and to price it properly. With any luck, offers will come quickly. You'll need to review each carefully to determine its strengths and drawbacks and pick one to accept. Here's a plan for evaluating offers.

1. Understand the process

All offers are negotiable, as your agent will tell you. When you receive an offer, you can accept it, reject it, or respond by asking that terms be modified, which is called making a counteroffer.

2. Set baselines

Decide in advance what terms are most important to you. For instance, if price is most important, you may need to be flexible on your closing date. Or if you want certainty that the transaction won't fall apart because the buyer can't get a mortgage, require a prequalified or cash buyer.

3. Create an offer review process

If you think your home will receive multiple offers, work with your agent to establish a time frame during which buyers must submit offers. That gives your agent time to market your home to as many potential buyers as possible, and you time to review all the offers you receive.

mls online realtor.com realestate blaine mn housing realty minneapolis realty realtors in minnesota looking for house for sale in minnesota 4. Don't take offers personally

Selling your home can be emotional. But it's simply a business transaction, and you should treat it that way. If your agent tells you a buyer complained that your kitchen is horribly outdated, justifying a lowball offer, don't be offended. Consider it a sign the buyer is interested and understand that those comments are a negotiating tactic. Negotiate in kind.

5. Review every term

Carefully evaluate all the terms of each offer. Price is important, but so are other terms. Is the buyer asking for property or fixtures-such as appliances, furniture, or window treatments-to be included in the sale that you plan to take with you?

Is the amount of earnest money the buyer proposes to deposit toward the downpayment sufficient? The lower the earnest money, the less painful it will be for the buyer to forfeit those funds by walking away from the purchase if problems arise.

Have the buyers attached a prequalification or pre-approval letter, which means they've already been approved for financing? Or does the offer include a financing or other contingency? If so, the buyers can walk away from the deal if they can't get a mortgage, and they'll take their earnest money back, too. Are you comfortable with that uncertainty?

Is the buyer asking you to make concessions, like covering some closing costs? Are you willing, and can you afford to do that? Does the buyer's proposed closing date mesh with your timeline?

With each factor, ask yourself: Is this a deal breaker, or can I compromise to achieve my ultimate goal of closing the sale?

6. Be creative

If you've received an unacceptable offer through your agent, ask questions to determine what's most important to the buyer and see if you can meet that need. You may learn the buyer has to move quickly. That may allow you to stand firm on price but offer to close quickly. The key to successfully negotiating the sale is to remain flexible.

G.M. Filisko is an attorney and award-winning writer who has survived several closings. A frequent contributor to many national publications including Bankrate.com, REALTOR®; Magazine, and the American Bar Association Journal, she specializes in real estate, business, personal finance, and legal topics.

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I'm armed to the teeth with Real Estate Technology, and when it comes to
negotiating on behalf of my clients, I'm a tenacious little pit bull!

Patti Ann Kasper, REALTOR®
EXIT REALTY NEXUS
763-498-2088 cell    763-548-1418 office
www.HouseHuntingHound.com

Terrie Leighton
Ferrari-Lund Real Estate - Reno, NV
Reno Real Estate Agent ~ Selling Homes in Reno

Patti ~ This is a great article. I am sure many home sellers will find it useful.

Mar 09, 2011 02:14 PM
Suzanne Taylor
Ultima Real Estate - Corpus Christi - Corpus Christi, TX
Home Sales In Corpus Christi, TX

Patti, good post, good tips.  I always tell my sellers that the first offer may be the best one they receive, so don't throw it away without giving it great consideration.

Mar 09, 2011 02:16 PM
Ellie Shorb
Compass Real Estate - Chevy Chase, MD
Realtor DC, MD & VA Luxury Home Expert

I try to make my buyers counter every offer - even if they feel insulted at first. I remind them that the buyer took the time to sit down and write, produce the earnest money and meet with a lender.... it is well worth a counter in most cases: fish on the line!

Mar 09, 2011 02:20 PM
Patti Ann Kasper
EXIT REALTY NEXUS - Blaine, MN
Blaine & North Metro Minneapolis St Paul Real Esta

Thanks for the comments Terrie Suzanne and Ellie...

Lots of good info in there.  Ellie, I like how you make your Sellers counter ever offer even if they feel insulted.  I think the key is to make people realize that it isn't personal and that if there is a similar house downt the street for a lower price...  that is going to affect them as well!

Thanks for stopping by!!!

Mar 09, 2011 02:30 PM
Patti Ann Kasper
EXIT REALTY NEXUS - Blaine, MN
Blaine & North Metro Minneapolis St Paul Real Esta

Thanks Mark!  Yep, the terms matter!  Closing dates and the other terms are just as important as the price.  Again, thanks for stopping by and commenting on my blog post. 

Mar 10, 2011 06:25 AM