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We put our hearts into our renovation, but would have taken the highest reasonable offer.
The sellers wrote a very mushy letter, and their realtor (smartly) didn't give it to us until after we signed the contract on their offer about $20K under list price (we listed high). I still get a kick out of that letter. |
Yes. The buyer absolutely has to be qualified. |
Well yes, of course. That goes without saying. No one is arguing that a letter will help a non-qualified risky buyer over a solid buyer with a good offer. But all things being equal in terms of the sellers, a letter can in some cases make a difference between one offer and another, and might in a few cases be the tipping point that causes a seller to go with a slightly lower offer. |
| The only letter I care about is one that is willing to escalate over asking |
| It really depends on the seller. Since we bid on 9 homes, we went through various strategies before getting our home. While the majority wanted cash, you need to be in the ballpark of the top offer. Our first home we bid on with a letter didn't make the top 3 offers so it wasn't in contention. We found out later it closed for $90k over ask so looks like the Benjamin's won out. However, we just recently closed on our forever home and our letter helped us win it before it went to the open house. We loved the street and met the neighbors so we named dropped it to the owners. That was all she wrote and now we are happy homeowners. |
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I wonder if any of you who wrote letters and got the house were a different race from the sellers.
I like the idea of letters but wondering whether as a South East Asian, it would be in our best interest. Our agent has never suggested it and we haven't won any houses so far. |
| Why would it matter if you are SE Asian? |
| Just sold a house, chose between two offers. One had a better bottom line $, one was a lesser offer with nice letter. We went with the better bottom line. |
| It depends. My aunt and uncle, both teachers, did this in Long Island in the 1980s. They could never get close to asking but they loved the house, they had seen it at a church picnic and it wasn't even for sale. A year later the owners contacted them and asked for an offer. For some people it is not solely a financial transaction.... |
Those people are fail |
| Can't hurt to try. |
I don't know the details of the sale, but the people who bought my (white bread) parents' house were South East Asian, first generation immigrants, and it meant a lot to my parents to hear how much they loved the house. But I don't know if they learned that through a letter or it was just mentioned at closing. My parents are pretty hard-nosed about finances, but they're also able to see that if one offer is only a few thousand less than the top offer, there isn't much difference, and if you would feel better going with the lower one, that's a reasonable course of action. |
+1 Agree |
I'm the one who got a house for 50k under asking a few years ago after writing the letter. The sellers were elderly and African-American; we are white. The wife had grown up in the house and then moved when she married, and the house had sat unlived-in since her parents died 20 years ago. She and her husband visited weekly and kept the house up until they finally decided to sell (all their kids had finished college and moved elsewhere.) I really think the letter helped. It made them see that we wanted to raise a family in the house, which probably mattered to the seller since she and her siblings had been raised there. The house had been on the market for months, though, so maybe they were just ready to sell. The whole interaction with the sellers was so pleasant, though--I think the letter must have made a difference. |
In a lot of these situations, the letter is putting people over the top while they are also offering over asking, when other bidders are as well. |