When buyers outnumber sellers, you can end up in a multiple-offer situation. If you're searching in a competitive market, it pays to understand how these dynamics work — and how they shape your negotiating strategy.
Six things worth understanding before you write an offer in a competitive market. Not sure it's even a seller's market right now? Here's how to read local real estate trends.
Not necessarily. It usually works to a seller's advantage if buyers know they're competing — but a seller must give their agent permission to disclose other offers before your buyer's rep can tell you.
The seller decides whether to review offers one at a time or in a group presentation. Once offers are in, the seller can accept or counter one, reject them all, or reject all and ask buyers to resubmit a "highest and best" contract.
In states where offer terms aren't confidential by law, the only way to keep yours private is to ask the sellers to sign a confidentiality agreement before your offer is presented — which also binds their agent. If the seller chooses a group presentation, though, you'll have to either withdraw your offer or revoke the agreement.
Not necessarily. Sellers can accept whichever offer they consider "best" — and that may hinge on more than price, like the certainty of closing (say, a fully approved mortgage) or a preferred closing date.
Beyond firming up your financing and adjusting your closing date, there are several levers we can pull together:
Yes — as long as you notify the seller that you're revoking your offer before they've accepted it.
Every buyer benefits from having their interests represented — but in a multiple-offer scenario it's especially critical. As an Accredited Buyer's Representative (ABR®), I'll help you anticipate each step of a competitive negotiation and craft an offer that gives you the best shot at success.
Tell me what you're after in Las Cruces, and I'll help you compete smartly — with an offer built to stand out for the right reasons. No pressure, no obligation.