bookmark.com
Home About Us Privacy Terms of Service Add Your Link Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Drink & Food

Jobs & Employment

Computers & Networking

Policies & Law

Property & Estate

Children

Research & Science

Adventure & Sports

Society & Issues

Recreation & Entertainment

Banking & Finance

Malls & Shopping

Healthcare & Medicine

Online & Board Games

Automobile & Automotive

Hotels & Travel

Art & Culture

Home & Garden

News & Events

Education & Reference

Hygiene & Health

Fashion & Relationships

Self Help

Business & Services


 

Home –› Property & Estate –› Real Estate Websites
 

Offer To Purchase - Clauses You Need

 

Author: Steve Gillman
An offer to purchase is a legally binding document, not just a casual negotiating tool. The moment the seller of the real estate signs your offer, you are obligated to live up to its exact language. Since you can write the offer how you want to, why not include the clauses that smart buyers use to protect themselves? You can also use language that will save you money.

The Offer To Purchase - Important Clauses

Inspection contingency clauses. You want something like this in every offer to purchase: "Offer is contingent upon a home inspection and buyer's approval of the results; inspection to be done at buyer's expense within ten days." You can ask the real estate agent for help with the specific wording. This clause gives you the right to have an inspection done. If anything negative is found, you could refuse to "approve" of the results, and so get your deposit back. Alternately, you could renegotiate a lower price.

Earnest money clause. Real estate agents will tell you that a certain amount is necessary for a deposit, but the decision is yours. A small earnest money deposit may be taken seriously, if you include a clause like this: "$100 earnest money deposit, to be increased to $2,000 upon acceptance of this offer." Or you can have it increased "when all contingencies are met." The reason? Suppose there's an argument about you backing out because the inspector found foundation damage. You won't have your money tied up while this is being resolved.

Right to assign clause. This one is primarily for investors. Suppose your partner isn't there to sign the offer, or you want to "flip" the deal to another investor, or you may need to involve a partner for purposes of funding the deal. You need a clause in the offer to purchase that covers this. Including the words "and/or assigns" after your name on the offer is usually sufficient, but ask the real estate agent what the local custom or language is. This allows you to add another buyer or assign the whole contract to another.

Closing cost clauses. You can specify that the seller pays for the closing fee, the title insurance, the recording fees, and even the points on your loan. For many sellers the price is the most important thing, and they don't care too about the details. What if they don't want to pay the costs? You at least gave yourself some negotiating points. Now get something for dropping each of the costs you included. This could include a reduced interest rate if the seller is financing part of your purchase.

Basic financing contingency clause. If the loan doesn't come through, and you can't buy the home, you'll lose your deposit, unless you have something like this in the agreement: "Subject to buyer obtaining a firm commitment for suitable financing within ten days." Actually, the language should usually specify what "suitable" means in terms of interest rate and such.

Spousal approval clause. This clause can be as simple as "Subject to a walk through inspection and approval of home by buyer's wife (or husband or partner - state their name) within two days." If your wife says no to the deal within two days, you can back out and get your deposit back. For the seller to agree to this one you need to keep the time frame as short as you can.

Some of the above clauses are normal and acceptable to all, while others are likely to annoy the real estate agent. That's okay. The seller has the right to say no to your offer in any case, and you have the right to use these clauses to protect yourself in your offer to purchase.

Author Bio:

Steve Gillman has studied unusual ways to make money for thirty years. To learn more, visit his website, Unusual Ways To Make Money: www.UnusualWaysToMakeMoney.com

You can also reach this article by using: real estate web sites, real estate agent web sites, real estate investor websites
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Las Vegas Real Estate: Rental Options
 
The Letting Agencies of Bangkok
 
How To Spot A Grow-Op
 
Flipping Real Estate: Calculating Costs
 
Want To Be Profitable In This Real Estate Bubble? I'll Show You How In Just Three Easy Steps
 
Retiring in Costa Rica ? Why You Should Consider It
 
Real Estate Auctions Online: A Great Way to Earn and Save Money!
 
Flipping Houses
 
House Flipping - How to be More successful?
 
Want A $10,000 House?
 
 
 
 
 

Cheap Property for Sale ?C 5 Tips For Potential Triple Digit Gains!

If you want to make big gains by buying cheap property for sale and turning this into triple digit g ... - Sacha Tarkovsky
 

Luxury Modular Homes

Modular homes are made of units called modules, shipped to a building site and assembled. They are o ... - Kristy Annely
 

Investing in Baja Mexico / California real estate

This article gives the reader adequate information about Baja Mexico and its numerous attractions in ... - Phil Laboon
 
 

Consider These Four Points Before You Make An Offer To Buy An Investment Property

Four points to consider before you make an offer on a piece of investment property. In real estate c ... - Harlan Friedman
 

Sell your Home in a Slowing Real Estate Market

How to sell your home in a slowing real estate market. - Mike J Bradley
 
 
Home -> Privacy -> Terms of Service
© 2006-2008 www.bookmarkedcontent.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.