On a side note - do all these people putting $50-100K in earnest money just keep this money in their checking accounts while looking?
Anonymous wrote:cb21 wrote:For earnest deposit, the seller will look at the size but only up to a point. On a $900k house you'll have to put at least $15k or $20k. More than that doesn't really convey any stronger message -- if the deal goes sour this deposit is at risk, but with a $50k deposit or so it's unlikely the seller will get to keep the whole amount and they know it.
Higher downpayment of course shows that you are financially stable and not someone who is stretching.
I would never accept a $15k deposit on a $900k house.
cb21 wrote:For earnest deposit, the seller will look at the size but only up to a point. On a $900k house you'll have to put at least $15k or $20k. More than that doesn't really convey any stronger message -- if the deal goes sour this deposit is at risk, but with a $50k deposit or so it's unlikely the seller will get to keep the whole amount and they know it.
Higher downpayment of course shows that you are financially stable and not someone who is stretching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the difference between earnest money and a down payment and under what circumstances does the seller get to keep it if the deal goes sour?
Sellers can keep the earnest money if buyers backout after the seller has accepted their offer. But if buyers retract offer before seller accepts than buyers get their earnest money back.
Anonymous wrote:What is the difference between earnest money and a down payment and under what circumstances does the seller get to keep it if the deal goes sour?
Anonymous wrote:cb21 wrote:For earnest deposit, the seller will look at the size but only up to a point. On a $900k house you'll have to put at least $15k or $20k. More than that doesn't really convey any stronger message -- if the deal goes sour this deposit is at risk, but with a $50k deposit or so it's unlikely the seller will get to keep the whole amount and they know it.
Higher downpayment of course shows that you are financially stable and not someone who is stretching.
Interesting - our realtor has been telling us we should try to do 10% as earnest money, which didn't sound right to me. Is there some sort of standard that people should be doing for earnest money?
cb21 wrote:For earnest deposit, the seller will look at the size but only up to a point. On a $900k house you'll have to put at least $15k or $20k. More than that doesn't really convey any stronger message -- if the deal goes sour this deposit is at risk, but with a $50k deposit or so it's unlikely the seller will get to keep the whole amount and they know it.
Higher downpayment of course shows that you are financially stable and not someone who is stretching.
Anonymous wrote:It just shows the seller that you're serious, and that you are in good financial shape, so it is less likely that the deal would fall through at the last minute.