You've found a home that's right for you, and it's time to make an offer. So what actually happens when you negotiate a real estate purchase? Here's the process, step by step — and how I help at the table.
Three steps get you from "I want this home" to a signed, final contract.
Depending on market conditions, you may need to act quickly before another buyer steps ahead of you. The best approach is to arm yourself with facts and plan a negotiating strategy together. I can counsel you on current market conditions, price ranges, comparable properties, and appropriate strategies — especially in a multiple-offer market.
Real estate transactions require a written contract — and in New Mexico, that's the only kind that counts: only written offers have legal bearing; an oral offer doesn't. Your written offer specifies a price plus all the terms and conditions you want to negotiate, on current NMAR standard forms. I help you use those forms and explain the negotiating impact of the terms you include — one part of everything a buyer's agent does for you.
Earnest money in New Mexico is usually delivered a few days after your offer is accepted — often within about three to seven days — rather than with the offer itself. It's held in a broker's or title company's trust account as a credit to you, and it signals your good-faith intent to follow through.
New Mexico also now requires a small, separate payment called independent consideration to help make your contract enforceable — a recent change built into the NMAR purchase agreement. Here's how it works (more just below).
Once your offer is presented, the ball is in the seller's court. They have three possible moves.
When your offer lands, the seller can…
If the sellers sign their unconditional acceptance, you have a binding contract as soon as you're notified.
You're released from any obligation. Sellers can't change their minds later and bind you to an offer they rejected.
They send back a written counter with their changes — which you can accept, reject, or counter again.
Your offer — a price plus your terms and conditions.
A written counteroffer with the changes they'd like.
Accept it, reject it, or send your own counter back.
…and so on — as many rounds as it takes.
Negotiations are over, and the terms of the sale are final.
In most cases, yes — up until your offer is accepted. If you want to withdraw after acceptance, consult a real estate attorney first: backing out can put your earnest money deposit at risk or expose you to a claim for damages the sellers incurred. It's worth a quick conversation before you act.
Every enforceable contract needs three things: an offer, acceptance, and consideration (something of value exchanged). Because New Mexico buyers now have broad rights to terminate during due diligence, a purchase agreement could otherwise look like an option the buyer isn't truly bound to — so the NMAR purchase agreement now requires independent consideration to keep the contract solid.
When this guide says your rep helps you "plan a negotiating strategy," here's the New Mexico version: I typically work as a transaction broker. I help you research comparable sales and price ranges, build your strategy, and prepare, present, and counter offers — while keeping your negotiating position, like your top price, confidential from the seller. A full agency relationship is used only in specific situations, and broker compensation is always negotiable. See what your broker owes you.
The buyers who do best aren't the loudest — they're the best prepared. As an Accredited Buyer's Representative (ABR®), I bring the market facts, the right strategy, and a steady hand to every round, so your offer is strong and your position stays protected.
There are three main steps. First, research and planning: you arm yourself with facts and build a negotiating strategy with your buyer's rep. Second, submitting a written offer, usually with an earnest money check, that specifies your price plus the terms and conditions you want. Third, the seller's response — they can accept, reject, or counter, and counteroffers can go back and forth until both sides agree and sign.
Three. They can accept — once they sign their unconditional acceptance and you're notified, you have a binding contract. They can reject, which releases you from any obligation (and they can't later change their minds and bind you to a rejected offer). Or they can counteroffer with the changes they'd like, which you're then free to accept, reject, or counter again.
In most cases you can withdraw an offer up until it's accepted. After acceptance it's more complicated — consult a real estate attorney first, because backing out can put your earnest money deposit at risk or expose you to a claim for damages the sellers incurred. Note, too, that negotiations only move forward: you can't accept a counteroffer you already rejected; you'd have to submit a new offer if the home is still available.
I typically work as a transaction broker. That means I help you research comparable sales and price ranges, build your strategy, and prepare, present, and counter offers — while keeping your negotiating position, like your top price, confidential from the seller. A full agency relationship is used only in specific situations, in writing. Either way, broker compensation is negotiable, and you get knowledgeable help at the table.
They're separate and serve different purposes. Earnest money shows your good-faith intent to follow through — it's held in a broker's or title company's trust account as a credit to you, usually delivered a few days after acceptance (often three to seven), and typically refundable if you cancel in good faith under the contract's terms. Independent consideration is a newer NMAR requirement: a small, separate, generally non-refundable payment that helps make the contract enforceable, and the title company won't open the order until it's received. This isn't legal advice — review the purchase agreement and consult a real estate attorney.
When you've found the one, I'll help you craft a strong offer and negotiate with confidence. Reach out anytime — no pressure, no obligation.