Anonymous wrote:You make your best offer with 24 hours deadline.
The last thing you should do is to allow seller to shop around due to your offer.
Anonymous wrote:I do escalation but with a 24 hour time out. I don't want the seller to shop my offer around to jack up the price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where I've seen it useful and to the buyer's advantage is when the seller's agent announces that that are taking offers until a certain deadline (usually 2-3 days after going on the market).
Many times, I see house still listed after a week of so called deadline.
Just ignore all these antics, make the offer when you are ready and make the offer with a price making sense to you.
As a seller, there were no antics. We did post a deadline once it was clear we would have multiple offers, and we did use the escalation clauses. I think the agent circled back to everyone before we ratified? But maybe not because it was basically immediate. There was no lying and it was all honestly very orderly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where I've seen it useful and to the buyer's advantage is when the seller's agent announces that that are taking offers until a certain deadline (usually 2-3 days after going on the market).
Many times, I see house still listed after a week of so called deadline.
Just ignore all these antics, make the offer when you are ready and make the offer with a price making sense to you.
Anonymous wrote:Where I've seen it useful and to the buyer's advantage is when the seller's agent announces that that are taking offers until a certain deadline (usually 2-3 days after going on the market).
Anonymous wrote:You make your best offer with 24 hours deadline.
The last thing you should do is to allow seller to shop around due to your offer.
Anonymous wrote:Don't do escalation. Agents abuse them and will just tell other buyers that you've made an offer at the top of your escalation. Also, you never know what games are played to trigger the escalation.
In almost all situations, if you don't do an escalation but your offer is competitive, agents will try to get you to counter -- so that's the better route. There's still abuse here (agents sometimes lie and say that there's a higher offer when there isn't), but it's not as terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My experience is that the agents communicate verbally about the potential competition and may mishear (bad cell phone reception, new secretary, etc.) so we got the wrong information. The agents are picking up a call while doing something else, and may not really be checking notes. They are not typing into a portal or text message, so miscommunication happens more easily than if the numbers are written down.
That said, the fall market moves more slowly so I might take a risk at this time of year and save some money. In a hot area in the spring, go with an escalation clause.
What??
Anonymous wrote:We sold in July. We had 5 offers the first day, 3 with escalation clauses. We did not go back to the others at all, we took the 2 highest clauses and chose the one with better terms, that ended up being #2 in price, but the $5k extra on the top one didn’t beat out the better terms. I’d guess no escalation, you won’t get the chance to counter.