Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As is is pretty clear. If you want to negotiate, go ahead, but it's cheap/silly of you. The advertised price is as is.
Agree. Because when you're buying a house, it's better to take a bath on unexpected repairs than to appear "cheap/silly."
No harm in asking!
Anonymous wrote:"As Is" is a marketing term, not a legal term. It suggests the seller wants to close without lengthy negotiations. The buyer gains a bit of flexibility in price because of this.
Anonymous wrote:As is is pretty clear. If you want to negotiate, go ahead, but it's cheap/silly of you. The advertised price is as is.
\Anonymous wrote:Who does this? How is it done? Who has success or failure stories?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"As Is" is a marketing term, not a legal term. It suggests the seller wants to close without lengthy negotiations. The buyer gains a bit of flexibility in price because of this.
Tell that to every single bank which insists on putting "Property Sold As-Is, Where-Is" in the contract when they sell their REOs. When it's in the listing, it's a marketing term. When it's in the contract, it's a legal term.
It may be truly "as is" when banks sell their REOs, but when a seller markets a house "as is" and then accepts an offer that includes a general inspection contingency, they are giving the buyer negotiation leverage. Crappy inspection --> buyer considering walking away --> buyer has leverage to ask for some additional concession, because as a PP said, bird in the hand, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"As Is" is a marketing term, not a legal term. It suggests the seller wants to close without lengthy negotiations. The buyer gains a bit of flexibility in price because of this.
Tell that to every single bank which insists on putting "Property Sold As-Is, Where-Is" in the contract when they sell their REOs. When it's in the listing, it's a marketing term. When it's in the contract, it's a legal term.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get why OP would think the seller should negotiate when she entered into an as is contract. OP, what on earth do you think as is means?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"As Is" is a marketing term, not a legal term. It suggests the seller wants to close without lengthy negotiations. The buyer gains a bit of flexibility in price because of this.
Tell that to every single bank which insists on putting "Property Sold As-Is, Where-Is" in the contract when they sell their REOs. When it's in the listing, it's a marketing term. When it's in the contract, it's a legal term.
Anonymous wrote:"As Is" is a marketing term, not a legal term. It suggests the seller wants to close without lengthy negotiations. The buyer gains a bit of flexibility in price because of this.
Anonymous wrote:There are also things that are required to be in working order - the heat. If the furnance is not-functional they need to fix it - even if they say as is.