Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should be prepared to lose the home - haggling over a few thousand dollars is silly and a waste of both your time. If I were the seller I'd likely pass on your offer for that reason.
Most of the time people who are difficult in the initial negotiations are a PITA all the way through the long process (inspections, etc.).
If your house was sitting for many months, wouldn’t you just let that few thousand go?
People are irrational about the price they will sell their homes for.
And th OP is being irrational about the price as well. Just go up if you want the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should be prepared to lose the home - haggling over a few thousand dollars is silly and a waste of both your time. If I were the seller I'd likely pass on your offer for that reason.
Most of the time people who are difficult in the initial negotiations are a PITA all the way through the long process (inspections, etc.).
If your house was sitting for many months, wouldn’t you just let that few thousand go?
Anonymous wrote:I think you should be prepared to lose the home - haggling over a few thousand dollars is silly and a waste of both your time. If I were the seller I'd likely pass on your offer for that reason.
Most of the time people who are difficult in the initial negotiations are a PITA all the way through the long process (inspections, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here, it is a buyers market here, not in dc
Then why don't you move on? If you love the home, pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:Op here, it is a buyers market here, not in dc
Anonymous wrote:the only way to make it more enticing is to raise it.
I'd raise mine a little. You were dumb to offer the highest you were willing to pay as an opening offer. Does no one understand the basics of bargaining any more?