Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:For this sort of thing just write a check for like $150 at closing.
$150
that doesn't being to pay for the fridge issue. As the buyer i would demand the value of a new fridge, it's clear the current one is past it's life expectancy.
OP write a check for $500.
Insane. No.
As a buyer, I want it fixed or money towards a new fridge. I don't want $200 to fix something that may not even be fixable
Be careful how you behave. I live in an old townhome community (Howard County), townhomes in the 300's, so not ultra expensive housing, but in a good school zone. Two weeks ago, he listed the home on Thursday. Friday-Sunday they had 63 showings. Monday 5pm, they had 29 offers. If you want to win the bid and be stickler like this, be prepared to keep renting or living in your current home for the foreseeable future. If you tried that on my neighbor, he'd decline your counter, and move on to the next offer.
And for most of DCUM, they are living in much more expensive parts of the area. Most are spending $800K to over $1M. Many have been searching months or years and frustrated with the lack of inventory. You really want to FINALLY have found a house, bid on it and won it, and then quibble over $300-400 when you had to bid $50K or more over listing price just to win the bid?
Grow up and stop acting Veruca Salt. Negotiate like a mature adult instead of a pampered child and you'll probably get a better deal.