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When Does It Make Sense to Use an Escalation Clause?

Buying & Selling | 0 Likes
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When you find a house that feels like home, you want to do everything you can to make it yours—especially if you know that other buyers are eyeing it too.

In the face of such stiff competition, one potentially viable strategy is using an escalation clause to strengthen your offer. Take a closer look at what it is, how it works, and when it might make sense to include.

Exterior of house

What is an escalation clause?

An escalation clause is a provision you can add to your purchase offer that automatically increases it if a competing bid comes in higher. Typically, it indicates that you will pay a certain dollar amount more up to a maximum price.

For example, you might offer $350,000 for a home but include an escalation clause that says you’re willing to beat any higher bid by $2,000, with your ceiling being $360,000. So if another buyer puts in an offer for $355,000, yours would automatically jump to $357,000. But if someone else then came in with $362,000, you’d be unable to escalate since it would exceed your limit.

Why to consider it

In a hot housing market, homes can receive multiple offers within days—or even hours—of being listed. If you’re shopping in a high-demand neighborhood or during a season when inventory is low and buyer activity is high, an escalation clause can give you a way to stay in the race, showing the seller that you’re serious without forcing you to your top price from the start. Here are a few potential benefits:

  • Keeps your offer competitive: By automatically increasing your bid, an escalation clause helps ensure that you’re not out of luck if the bidding goes higher.
  • Simplifies negotiations: Instead of having to go back and forth with the seller multiple times, it lets your offer adjust based on competing ones right away.
  • Protects your budget: You set a maximum cap so you won’t accidentally commit to paying more than you can afford.

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Things to consider

While an escalation clause can make your offer stronger, it may not always be the right approach. Keep in mind these important factors as you weigh whether to include one.

Your true budget and loan limits
It’s easy to focus on “winning” the home, but be sure that your maximum escalation price fits comfortably within your financial plan. Double-check your loan preapproval to verify that it would cover that top amount, and crunch the numbers on your future budget to confirm that you could reasonably afford the monthly mortgage payments.

Appraisal risks
Generally, your lender will order a home appraisal when you officially apply for the mortgage to assess the property’s fair market value. If your escalated offer exceeds that number, you may be on the hook for paying the difference out of pocket. This is especially important to note in fast-rising markets, where offer prices sometimes outpace appraisals.

Maximum price disclosure
By including an escalation clause, you’re essentially revealing to the seller the highest price you’re willing to pay. While this can work to your advantage, it may also encourage them to counter at your maximum rather than accept your initial offer.

Seller preferences
Not all sellers like escalation clauses. Some prefer clean, straightforward offers without extra conditions, while others don’t like how the clause limits negotiations. And in a seller’s market, they may simply want to see how high the bidding can go.

Talk with your real estate agent first

Before deciding to include an escalation clause, it’s always best to consult with your agent. They can provide insight into how common escalation clauses are in your area, whether the seller might respond positively, and how to structure it so that it works to your advantage. Your agent can also help you weigh this strategy against other tactics, such as making a larger earnest money deposit, offering flexible closing terms, and waiving certain contingencies. Either way, together you can come up with the right plan to get you into your dream home sooner rather than later.

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