For Halifax senior sellers who last bought or sold a home twenty or thirty years ago, the offer process today may look quite different from what you remember. Understanding what to expect when real estate offers come in, and what the key terms mean, puts you in a much stronger position to make good decisions quickly.
What Is in an Offer
A purchase offer is a legal document that sets out the terms under which a buyer is willing to purchase your home. The key elements are the purchase price, the deposit amount, any conditions the buyer is including, and the proposed closing date.
The offer may also include requests for items to be included in the sale, such as appliances, window coverings, or light fixtures. These are negotiable, and your agent will walk you through what is reasonable to accept or push back on.
Understanding Conditions
Most offers include one or more conditions, which are essentially requirements that must be satisfied before the sale becomes firm. The two most common conditions are financing and home inspection.
A financing condition gives the buyer a set number of days to confirm that their mortgage has been approved. If it is not approved within that window, the buyer can walk away and have their deposit returned.
A home inspection condition allows the buyer to have the property professionally inspected. If the inspection reveals significant issues, the buyer may request repairs, a price adjustment, or in some cases, choose to withdraw from the purchase.
Offers without conditions, sometimes called clean or firm offers, are more appealing to sellers because there is no risk of the deal falling apart. However, conditional offers are still common and not a cause for alarm.
Responding to an Offer
When you receive an offer, you have three choices. You can accept it as presented, decline it entirely, or counter-offer with different terms. Most transactions involve at least one round of negotiation.
Your agent will present the offer to you, explain all the terms, and advise you on the strength of the offer relative to market conditions. You are never required to accept any offer, and you should never feel pressured to make a decision before you understand what you are agreeing to.
Choosing a Closing Date
The closing date is the day when ownership of the property officially transfers to the buyer and you receive the sale proceeds. In Nova Scotia, most closings are handled through lawyers, and the typical timeline runs from four to eight weeks after an accepted offer, though this is negotiable.
As a senior seller, the closing date matters for practical reasons. You need enough time to arrange your move, sort out where you are going next, and manage any overlap or gap between leaving one home and settling into the next. A good agent will help you negotiate a closing date that works with your timeline, not just the buyer’s.
Questions about the offer process or what to expect when you list? Call me at 902-497-3031 or visit www.RoyThomas.ca/schedule to book a consultation.