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Top 3 Deal Killers for Buyers

By
Real Estate Agent with Steele Action Team - Keller Williams Realty

Top 3 Buyer Deal Killers!

March 31st, 2011 Categories: Austin Real Estate News

Hello Readers,

I ran across the great article on Trulia regarding the top things buyers can do to kill a deal... 

1. Talking Trash. Trash-talkers are the home buyers who think they're going to negotiate the list price down by slamming the house, telling the sellers how little it is really worth, how the house across the street sold for nothing, why the school on the corner should make them desperate to give the place away, etc. This strategy never works; in fact, when you attack a seller and their home, you only cause them to be defensive, and think up all the reasons that (a) their home is not what you say it is, and (b) they shouldn't sell their home to you! 

Sometimes this happens with buyers who actually love a house and just walk around it fantasizing about all the ways they would customize it to their tastes while a seller is there.  Sellers: avoid being at home while your home is being shown.  Buyers: save your commentary for your agent; if you do encounter the seller in person keep your conversation respectful and avoid critiquing the house or the list price.

2. Making unjustified lowball offers.No one likes to feel like they are being taken advantage of.  And sellers generally know the ballpark amount that their home is worth, as well as what they need to sell it for to get their mortgage paid off.  Yes - the price you pay for a home should be driven by its fair market value, rather than the seller's financial needs, and deals are more available in a market like the current one, in which supply so vastly outpaces demand. But just throwing uber-lowball offers out at sellers hoping one will hit the spot is not generally a successful strategy, especially if you really, really want a given property.

Sellers: Don't get overly emotional about receiving a lowball offer; counter at the price you and your agent decide makes sense based on the total circumstances, including your motivation level, recent comps and the interest/activity level your listing is receiving. Buyers:  Work through the similar, nearby homes that have recently sold (a/k/a comparables) before you make an offer to factor the home's fair market value into your offer price - also factor in how much you want the place, too.  Don't be amazed if you make an offer far below asking, and don't get a response.

3. Renegotiating mid-stream. Sellers plan their finances, moves and  - to some extent - their lives around the purchase price a buyer agrees to pay for their home.  If you get into contract to buy a home, find out during inspections that costly repairs need to be made, then propose a lower sale price, repair credit or even actual repairs to the seller, that's sensible and fair.  But if you were aware that the property needed a lot of work before you made an offer on it, then you come back asking for beaucoup bucks' worth of credit or price reductions midstream, expect the seller to cry foul.  And holding the seller up two weeks into the transaction because you caught a case of buyer's remorse? Not cool, and not likely to foster the spirit of cooperation you may need to get your deal closed.

Sellers:avoid mid-stream price renegotiations by having a full set of inspection reports and repair bids at hand when you list your home. Buyers: try to avoid renegotiating the entire deal unless you get some major surprises at your inspections or inflating small repairs to try to justify a major price cut.

This blog was brought to you by Jeremy K. Frost - REALTOR

Dawn Workman
Veracity Real Estate Group, LLC - Camas, WA
Camas Real Estate Expert, MBA, 480-540-8100

How true is that.  Last week I had an agent send over a very low ball offer for one of my listing and included a letter saying how much improvement the house needs.  UGH, talk about kicking the seller when they are down. 

Apr 01, 2011 05:51 AM
Judith Abbott
Coldwell Banker Residential - Dallas, TX

Historically a low-ball offer just made the Sellers angry.  In the current market, I think Sellers are just relieved that someone, anyone, is interested in their property.  What I tell my Sellers is that you have to respect someone for at least asking.   Where a low-ball offer gets to be a problem is when there is no flexibility after that original offer is made.  Negotiation is about give and take.  Some people think it is just take take take.

Apr 01, 2011 06:02 AM