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The closing date. See if the date
the buyer wants to take title is reasonable for you.
-
Date of possession. See if the date
the buyer wants to move in is reasonable for you.
-
The earnest money. Look for the
largest earnest money deposit possible; since it is
forfeited if the buyer backs out, a large deposit is
usually a good indication of a sincere buyer.
-
Fixtures and personal property.
Check the list of items that the buyer expects to
remain with the property and be sure it's
acceptable.
-
Repairs. Determine what the
requested repairs will cost and whether you're
willing to do the work or would rather lower the
price by that amount.
-
Contingencies. See what other
factors the buyer wants met before the contract is
final—inspections, selling a home, obtaining a
mortgage, review of the contract by an attorney. Set
time limits on contingencies so that they won't drag
on and keep your sale from becoming final.
-
The contract expiration date. See
how long you have to make a decision on the offer.
Reprinted with permission from
Real Estate Checklists and Systems,
www.realestatechecklists.com.
Reprinted from Realtor(R)Magazine
Online permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS(R)
Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.
www.realtor.org/realtormag.
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