Master how to make an offer on real estate with proven negotiation strategies. Learn tactics that win deals from pre-approval to closing.
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Making an offer on a property? That's where deals are won or lost. It happens long before you're anywhere near the closing table. A newer agent guiding clients through their first purchase needs to understand how to make an offer on real estate with precision and strategy — because that's what separates successful acquisitions from missed opportunities. This guide walks you through every stage of the offer process, from pre-approval through counteroffer negotiation, with the tactical depth that real estate professionals actually need.

Before You Make an Offer

Here's the reality: preparation wins deals. It's not just about your offer price—sellers and their agents are evaluating you. They want to know if you're ready, credible, and actually going to close. Skip the groundwork and you'll leave money on the table almost every time.
Get Pre-Approved for a Mortgage
Don't even think about making an offer without pre-approval. A pre-approval letter means you've passed income verification, credit review, and asset documentation. A lender has conditionally approved a specific loan amount. That's nothing like a pre-qualification, which is basically a guess based on what you told them.
Sellers, especially in hot markets, will straight-up reject offers without pre-approval. And if you're using alternative financing—say, a hard money loan—you need a commitment letter or proof of funds ready. Your financing type matters too. Conventional loans beat FHA or VA loans in seller preference because there are fewer lender requirements. But don't sleep on VA loans if you qualify—they come with real benefits.
Determine Your Budget and Maximum Offer Price
Know your walk-away number before you submit anything. Not just the purchase price. Factor in closing costs (2–5% of loan amount), repair reserves, carrying costs, and your projected returns. If you're running the BRRRR method, you need detailed upfront cost analysis. Overpay at acquisition and every downstream return gets squeezed.
Understand Local Market Conditions
Buyer's market or seller's market? Your answer changes everything. In a seller's market—inventory's tight, demand's high—you're up against multiple offers. Contingency windows shrink. List prices become the floor, not the ceiling.
But in a buyer's market, you've got leverage. You can negotiate harder, take more time, and use contingencies to your advantage. Pull the actual data for your zip code. Days on market. List-to-sale price ratios. Absorption rates. Don't just look at regional trends—dig into the specifics.
Find a Qualified Real Estate Agent
A good buyer's agent does way more than open doors. They're your negotiation strategist, market analyst, and deal coordinator all in one.
New to the business? The first year in real estate guide breaks down how agents develop the expertise to advise clients on offer strategy. For investors, find an agent who specializes in your property type—multifamily, distressed, commercial—whatever you're chasing. That specialization is a tactical edge.
Back to topStep 1: Set Your Offer Price

Your offer price isn't just a number. Get this step wrong—either too high or way too low—and you're either bleeding equity or watching the deal walk. It's both science and strategy, and you need both to win.
Review Comparable Sales (Comps)
Start by pulling sold comps from the last 90 days (60 days if your market moves fast). Look within a half-mile radius for similar properties—match on square footage (within 10–15%), bed/bath count, condition, and property type. The per-square-foot metric gives you a quick anchor, but here's what most investors miss: condition adjustments are everything. A property needing $40,000 in work shouldn't be priced off a turnkey comp without accounting for that gap. You'll leave money on the table if you do.
Analyzing larger deals? The commercial real estate investing guide digs into cap rate analysis and income-based valuation frameworks that go way beyond simple comps.
Balance Competitiveness with Financial Prudence
Seller's market? You might need to offer at list or slightly above it to stay in the game. But in balanced or buyer's markets, 2–5% below list usually opens dialogue without insulting anyone. And lowball offers—anything more than 10–15% below market value—get tossed in the trash, especially on fresh listings. They also brand you as someone not serious, which changes how listing agents treat your offers down the road.
Consider Escalation Clauses
Bidding wars call for a different tool. An escalation clause automatically bumps your offer above competing bids in set increments up to your max. Here's a real example: "Buyer offers $500,000, escalating in $5,000 increments above any competing offer, capped at $535,000." It works—but it also telegraphs your ceiling to the other side. Use it when you have to, not as your default move.
Back to topStep 2: Determine Earnest Money
What's Earnest Money?
It's a good faith deposit. You submit it with your offer to prove you're serious about buying. A title company or attorney holds it in escrow, then credits it toward your down payment or closing costs at closing. Walk away without a valid contingency? The seller keeps it as liquidated damages.
How Much to Offer
Most markets expect 1–3% of your offer price, but that swings wildly depending on local conditions. Here's what you're actually looking at:
| Market Condition | Typical Earnest Money % | Example on $400,000 Offer | Strategic Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buyer's Market | 1–2% | $4,000–$8,000 | Lower deposit acceptable; negotiate more contingencies |
| Balanced Market | 1–3% | $4,000–$12,000 | Match local norms; coordinate with agent |
| Seller's Market | 2–5% | $8,000–$20,000 | Higher deposit signals commitment; strengthens weak price offers |
| Competitive Bidding War | 3–10% | $12,000–$40,000 | Significant deposits differentiate offers; use when financing is strong |
And here's the thing most investors miss: earnest money is one of your cheapest weapons for making an offer stand out without bumping your price. Your financing's rock solid? The inspection's clean? A fatter deposit costs you absolutely nothing if you close — and it'll beat competing offers that look identical on paper.
Back to topStep 3: Choose Your Contingencies

Contingencies are contractual conditions that have to be met before the sale closes. They're your safety net as a buyer, but sellers hate them—and for good reason. In competitive markets, knowing which ones to include, modify, or drop entirely? That's what separates investors who win deals from those who lose them.
| Contingency Type | Purpose | Risk of Waiving | When Most Important |
|---|---|---|---|
| Financing Contingency | Protects buyer if mortgage falls through | Lose earnest money if loan denied | Any financed purchase; non-negotiable for most buyers |
| Home Inspection | Allows buyer to identify defects and renegotiate | Buy property as-is; hidden defects become your problem | Older homes, unknown condition, distressed properties |
| Appraisal Contingency | Protects buyer if property appraises below offer price | Must cover appraisal gap out-of-pocket or lose deposit | Competitive markets where offers exceed list price |
| Title Contingency | Ensures clear title with no liens or encumbrances | Inherit title defects, unpaid liens | Every transaction; rarely waived |
| Sale of Current Home | Makes purchase contingent on selling buyer's existing home | Carry two mortgages if sale falls through | Buyer's markets only; rarely accepted in competitive markets |
When to Waive Contingencies
Hot markets demand risk-taking. You waive contingencies to win deals, but you better know what you're doing. Experienced investors sometimes drop the inspection contingency on properties they've already walked thoroughly and priced specifically for renovation work. Here's the thing: you've already factored in repairs to your ARV, so you're not gambling blind.
And then there's appraisal gap coverage—a smarter middle ground. You agree to pay, say, $15K above the appraised value if it comes in short. This protects you from losing the deal while proving to the seller you've got skin in the game and real financing lined up.
Never waive a title contingency. Not ever. The financing contingency? Only drop it if you've got documented proof of funds or near-certain loan approval from your lender.
Want to avoid the contingency mistakes that cost beginners tens of thousands? Check out this breakdown on real estate investing mistakes beginners make.
Back to topStep 4: Prepare Your Purchase Offer

What Goes in a Purchase Agreement
You're signing a legally binding contract here. It's got to have all of this:
- Property address and legal description
- Purchase price and financing terms
- Earnest money amount and escrow instructions
- Contingencies and deadlines
- Closing date and possession terms
- Personal property included or excluded (appliances, fixtures, etc.)
- Seller concessions requested (closing cost credits, repairs)
- Offer expiration date and time
Most states have standardized forms from their real estate associations. Your agent fills it out, but if you're in New York, New Jersey, or Massachusetts? You're working with a real estate attorney who'll review and negotiate every line. And honestly, even in states where it's optional, attorney review pays for itself on deals north of $500K or anything with unusual terms.
Digital Offer Submission
Electronic submission is the standard now. Platforms like DocuSign dominate the market. The DocuSign for real estate guide walks you through setting up e-signature workflows that actually work when you're racing against other offers on a hot deal.
Offer Letters: Strategic or Risky?
Personal offer letters can sway sellers. Buyer stories work especially well in owner-occupied deals where emotion matters. But here's the catch—the National Association of Realtors has flagged fair housing issues. Some jurisdictions have actually restricted them. Why? Sellers might unconsciously (or consciously) favor buyers based on information in those letters that reveals protected characteristics. Talk to your agent and a local attorney first.
Back to topStep 5: Submit Your Offer
Presenting the Offer Professionally
Your agent packages everything — the signed offer, pre-approval letter, and earnest money proof — and sends it to the listing agent via email as a PDF. And here's the move that separates experienced investors from amateurs: have your agent call the listing agent before submission. A quick phone call signals you're serious. It confirms receipt. It sets a completely different tone for what comes next in negotiations.
Why does this matter? Because professionalism and responsiveness right now determine how the rest of this deal plays out.
Timeline Expectations
You're looking at 24–48 hours for a seller response in most markets. But if you're in a bidding war? The listing agent will call for "highest and best" offers by a specific deadline. Setting your own offer expiration date creates urgency — don't leave that open-ended unless you've got a reason.
Here's the full timeline from offer submission to closing:
| Stage | Typical Timeframe | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Offer Submission | Day 0 | Submit signed offer with pre-approval and EMD proof |
| Seller Response | 24–48 hours | Acceptance, counteroffer, or rejection |
| Counteroffer Negotiation | 1–3 days | Review, respond, or accept counteroffer terms |
| Earnest Money Deposited | 1–3 days after acceptance | Wire or check delivered to escrow/title company |
| Home Inspection | 5–10 days after acceptance | Schedule inspector; review report; negotiate repairs |
| Appraisal Ordered | 1–2 weeks after acceptance | Lender orders appraisal; results in 1–2 weeks |
| Loan Approval | 3–4 weeks after acceptance | Underwriting review; clear-to-close issued |
| Final Walk-Through | 1–2 days before closing | Verify property condition and agreed repairs |
| Closing | 30–45 days after acceptance (typical) | Sign documents; fund transaction; take possession |
Negotiating and Next Steps

Understanding Seller Counteroffers
A counteroffer isn't rejection. It's an opening to keep negotiating. Sellers come back on price, closing timeline, contingency windows, what appliances stay, or repair requests. The trap? Letting emotion or timeline pressure override your actual numbers. Compare each counter to your walk-away parameters—not your gut attachment to the property.
And here's where most buyers stumble: they treat every counteroffer like a final answer. It's not. Say a seller counters your $480,000 offer at $495,000 and won't move on price. You propose $487,500 while cutting the inspection period short—that signals confidence, and suddenly you've got three variables working instead of one deadlocked number.
Walking Away from a Deal
Not every deal closes. Sometimes it shouldn't.
Post-inspection findings reveal major undisclosed defects. The appraisal comes in at $465,000 and you're under contract at $485,000—with a seller who won't budge. You can't hit your numbers on cap rate, PPSF, or ARV even with maximum value-add. Those are your walk-away moments. And that's fine. Your contingency windows exist for this reason—to protect your earnest money and your investment thesis before you're truly locked in.
Knowing your walk-away number before you submit the offer takes the emotion completely out of the conversation. For BRRRR vs. fix-and-flip strategies, the acquisition numbers must support the play. A deal that "kind of works" almost never does once unexpected costs show up during construction or the unexpected roof replacement hits your timeline.
Moving Toward Closing
Once you're under contract, everything shifts. Contingency deadlines matter. Lender conditions need satisfaction. Due diligence gets serious. And if you're running a refinance play, timing's everything—understand how cash-out refinancing fits into your BRRRR acquisition so the financing structure aligns from your initial offer all the way through the refi close. Start tracking transaction costs and maintaining accurate records now. QuickBooks for real estate investors gives you the bookkeeping framework you need from day one, not day 90.
Back to topTips for Making Your Offer Stand Out

Here's the thing: sellers and their agents aren't just looking at your price tag. They're evaluating your entire offer package—your earnest money, financing strength, contingencies, and timeline. Get these details right, and you'll beat out competitors who just throw numbers at the wall.
Offer Strength Factors at a Glance
| Factor | Impact on Competitiveness | How to Optimize |
|---|---|---|
| Offer Price | Very High | Use comps; consider escalation clause in competitive situations |
| Financing Type | High | Conventional > FHA/VA in seller's eyes; cash is strongest |
| Earnest Money Amount | High | Offer above local norms to signal commitment |
| Number of Contingencies | High | Reduce or modify contingencies strategically |
| Closing Timeline | Medium-High | Match seller's preferred timeline; offer flexibility |
| Pre-Approval Quality | Medium-High | Use fully underwritten approval where possible |
| Agent Professionalism | Medium | Experienced agent with strong listing agent relationships |
| Offer Letter | Low-Medium | Use selectively; check local fair housing guidance |
Speed and Flexibility
When markets get hot, the fastest offer wins. Period. If your pre-approval's already updated, your agent knows exactly what you want, and you've got your numbers dialed in, you can hit submit within hours instead of days. That's a real edge over slower competitors.
And don't sleep on closing timeline flexibility. When two offers are essentially equal on price, a seller who needs to close in 14 days will pick the buyer offering to close in 20 before they pick the one demanding 45. What's a week or two to you might be everything to them.
Using Technology
You've got tools now that investors didn't have five years ago. AI tools for real estate investors crunch comps faster, flag off-market deals before they hit MLS, and help you build bulletproof offers in minutes instead of hours.
Why does this matter? Because in competitive markets, speed isn't a luxury—it's the difference between closing deals and watching someone else's offer get accepted.
Back to topConclusion
You need three things to win in this market: prep work, hard data, and the discipline to walk away. Most investors nail the basics—comp analysis, earnest money positioning, contingency strategy, professional presentation. That's table stakes. But the deals go to investors who understand what sellers actually care about, know their number before they make an offer, and move faster than the competition.
And here's what separates good investors from great ones. Whether you're building a real estate investing business or walking a client through their first offer, this is where everything you've studied gets tested. Every clause, every deadline, every contingency—you control all of it. Use them strategically, and you'll close more deals at better terms than the other guy.
Back to topFrequently Asked Questions
How much below asking price should I offer on a house?
Market conditions matter. A lot. In a seller's market with multiple competing offers stacked up, you're often looking at offering at or above list price just to stay in the game. But in a buyer's market or when a property's been sitting for 30+ days? That's your opening—3–7% below list is a solid starting point. Here's what separates amateurs from pros: forget the list price. Anchor your offer to comparable sales data instead.
Can you make a real estate offer without a real estate agent?
Yeah, you can. Submit an offer directly to a listing agent or skip representation entirely as a buyer. But understand what you're walking into. You're negotiating against someone whose fiduciary duty is to the seller, not you. And you'll need to source the purchase agreement form yourself, then actually understand it. If you've done a handful of transactions, this is doable. First-time buyers? The risk of missing something costly is real.
What happens if a seller doesn't respond to my offer?
Every offer has an expiration date and time. Once that clock runs out and you haven't heard back, the offer is void. You owe them nothing. That said, your agent should stay in contact with the listing side to confirm they got it and figure out their timeline. When there's no response? Usually it means a competing offer is getting serious consideration.
Is earnest money refundable if I back out of the deal?
It depends on your contingencies. If you walk because the home inspection turned up major defects and you've got an inspection contingency in place, you get your earnest money back. Same deal with financing—if your lender kills the loan and you have a financing contingency, you're protected. Back out for any other reason (or after you've already waived contingencies)? The seller keeps the money.
How long does it take to close after an offer is accepted?
30–45 days is standard for financed deals. Cash? You can hit 7–14 days easy. What actually controls the timeline? Lender processing, appraisal scheduling, and title search work. VA and FHA loans drag longer because of stricter appraisal rules. The good news: closing date is negotiable. Build it into your offer terms, whether you need more time or you're pushing for a faster close.
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