Anonymous wrote:Ask her to send you a blank contract. We've bought 3 houses this way. You are no idiot!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
The owner is a real estate agent. Any offer we can put forward that reduces her costs and reduces ours is to our mutual benefit. Every $10,000 counts. We have the advantage of time (our lease doesn't expire 'til end of June--so she'd get the $ now rather than later, and she says she wants the equity to buy another home) and rental occupancy, meaning we leave, she has to stage and leave the house vacant.
Also, if it's a non-buyers-agent situation, she won't have to pay the 3%. So again, that's to our advantage when we make our offer as non-repped individuals.
There is no "mutual benefit" in this situation. Your interests conflict. You really need an attorney or agent to review this document.

Anonymous wrote:OP here.
The owner is a real estate agent. Any offer we can put forward that reduces her costs and reduces ours is to our mutual benefit. Every $10,000 counts. We have the advantage of time (our lease doesn't expire 'til end of June--so she'd get the $ now rather than later, and she says she wants the equity to buy another home) and rental occupancy, meaning we leave, she has to stage and leave the house vacant.
Also, if it's a non-buyers-agent situation, she won't have to pay the 3%. So again, that's to our advantage when we make our offer as non-repped individuals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't need an agent. You can do it with a real estate lawyer. We did. They can bill by the hour - MUCH cheaper than an agent. We used Paragon Title - any title company can do it. Call them and tell them you want an offer drawn up.
This.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need an agent. You can do it with a real estate lawyer. We did. They can bill by the hour - MUCH cheaper than an agent. We used Paragon Title - any title company can do it. Call them and tell them you want an offer drawn up.
Anonymous wrote:Get an agent. Don't be an idiot.