How Does Earnest Money Work? - YouTube

Channel: Win The House You Love

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Hey, Kyle here with winthehouseyoulove.com.
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Today, we're talking about how does earnest money work.
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You're going to understand #1 how you can keep your earnest money if
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a deal falls apart and why it might be helpful to have earnest money
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to be able to have your offer stand out amongst all of the other offers.
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Okay.
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So first of all, earnest money, people also call this a good faith
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deposit and it means exactly that.
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It means, hey, this is money that we're going to put on the contract when you put
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in an offer on a home to be able to say, hey, we're putting some skin in the game.
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We're serious about buying this home because the seller wants to know that
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you're serious when you put in an offer if they're going to accept it.
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So earnest money is paid upfront with the accepted offer.
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So what that means is let's say you see house it's 123 Main Street.
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You say, hey, we want to write an offer.
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So you write an offer for maybe $200,000 and you say, hey, we want to put $2,000
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in earnest money on that contract.
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So the seller now sees that.
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You don't have to give up the $2,000 until they accept that offer.
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Okay.
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So it's money that you're putting on the contract is to tell the seller,
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Hey, when you accept this offer, we're going to go ahead and put some money in
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that's going to be held by a third party.
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So they're going to hold it so there's no dispute over somebody taking the money.
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But just to show you that we're going to put money up front and you don't have
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to wait all the way until the end to see if we're actually going to follow
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through with our promise on this contract.
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So the main point of this is it gives the seller some compensation if the buyer
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backs out, because put yourself in the shoes of a seller, imagine you accepted
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an offer for somebody to buy your home and you go through a whole process and
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maybe you're 25 days in and then all of a sudden, the buyer says, you know what?
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Eh we just don't feel it anymore and they walk away.
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Well, you, as a seller, you made plans around somebody purchasing your home.
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So earnest money can be some compensation for the seller when things don't
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work out in the seller's favor.
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Now there are protections for the buyer.
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There are a lot of circumstances when the buyer can get that money back.
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And circumstances where the buyer can lose the earnest money.
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And we'll talk about those here at the end.
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So when we're talking about how much earnest money do you need, it's
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really going to be best to talk with a Realtor about how much earnest
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money you want to put on a contract.
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For instance, it's very common in my local market for people
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to not use earnest money at all.
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Earnest money in some markets is becoming a little bit of an outdated
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practice and it really just depends how competitive the market is and
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what's going on in that market.
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For instance, you know, I'm in Dayton, Ohio, so or average median
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income is lower than most areas, most bigger metropolitan areas.
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So most people don't put a lot of money down, up front, but you go to a higher
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income area, let's say somewhere like Brentwood, Tennessee, or Nashville, then
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you're going to see earnest money be higher because people have more income
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and assets to put down on contracts and the market's really, really crazy.
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So now let's talk about why would we want to do this.
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Number one, i's going to help your offer stand out.
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Okay.
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If you have, if a seller sees two identical offers, they're both the same
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purchase price all the details are the same, but one buyer says I'm not going to
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put any earnest money down and the other says, we're going to put $3,000 down.
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Then the seller is going to say, well, this buyer is more serious.
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They're willing to put more money up front.
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Okay.
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Also contracts are a big deal.
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This is why earnest money exists in the first place.
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Sometimes what people will do is they'll go write on a home, they'll
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write an offer for a home, but they're not actually willing to
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follow through with that contract.
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And that becomes a really big issue because you're tying a lot
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of people up in the process when you're trying to get a home.
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And so you need to treat it like a contract that you need to execute.
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You have to follow the rules inside of that contract.
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If you get out of it, then you run the risk of losing your earnest money.
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Okay.
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So do you need it?
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Again, this is going to depend a lot on the market that you're in.
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If you can, it's always best to not put earnest money down
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or put as little possible down.
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So you're risking as little as possible and just creating less complexity
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in your loan or in your purchase.
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But some markets might require it.
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So again, talk with your Realtor about, hey, is earnest money needed?
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If so, how much do you think that we actually need to be
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able to get this offer through?
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Now, at the very end your earnest money is credited towards your closing costs.
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Okay.
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So it's not an extra fee.
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Sometimes people feel like it's an extra fee.
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Think of it almost like a pre down payment.
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Okay.
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So, let's say that you put $2,000 earnest money on an offer.
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Okay.
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Well, within maybe the first week of being under contract, you'll go and
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submit that $2,000 to a third party.
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Maybe it's the seller's Realtor or it's your buyer's realtor.
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It really just depends on who's holding it.
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Maybe a title company is holding it.
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So you submit that $2,000.
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Now let's say at the very end of the contract we're maybe 25,
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30 days later, and your final cash due at closing is $10,000.
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What will happen is the $2,000 that you already submitted is going to
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be deducted from the final amount.
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So you actually owe $8,000 because you already prepaid $2,000.
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Okay.
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And the reason why you prepay that amount is it gets held in this contingency
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fund in the event that there has to be a dispute over who gets earnest money.
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So we're gonna talk about how to make sure you don't lose the
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earnest money in that account, but first let's have a CalmMoment.
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Okay.
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So if you're considering earnest money, you're probably in a competitive market.
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All right.
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And it can feel like things are moving so fast.
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And when everything's speeding by us, it's easy to make decisions that we
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maybe didn't think through very quickly.
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And this happens, I see this happen so often with buyers where they
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go and write an offer on a home because they kind of were feeling it
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emotionally, but, then they didn't go follow through with that contract.
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They got cold feet and had to walk away and ran the risk of
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losing their earnest money.
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So really what I would say is take a moment to really consider: is
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this something that you want to do?
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Sometimes it's really helpful to just begin writing down: why
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do you want to purchase a home?
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Are these numbers going to make sense for you?
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Did the logistics make sense?
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Don't go through this process and just get caught up and be led by
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the emotion, through the process because the emotion will carry you
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way too far in a direction and a distance that you don't want to be in.
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Okay.
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So how do we make sure we don't lose our earnest money.
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First we need to talk about and understand contingencies.
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So contingencies are going to be this little blue line here, and your
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contingencies are elements of your contract that basically give you
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a period of time, a little window where you can exit the contract
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completely legally with no problems.
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So a couple of those are you have an appraisal contingency.
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So this is where it says, hey, the home has to appraise for the purchase
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price or the buyer can back out.
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You also have an inspection contingency and the inspection contingency normally
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says something like the buyer has 10 to 15 days to inspect the property as long
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as it meets the buyer's standards, then they can move forward with the contract.
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If the buyer, for any reason, doesn't like what they see in the inspection.
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They can exit the contract legally.
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Then you also have another one which is financing.
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So if you're getting a loan for home, this financing contingency, says the
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buyer has a certain amount of days to get approved for a loan and if they don't,
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they can exit the contract legally.
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So these contingencies give you outs in the contract if you need them.
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And this is important when it comes to earnest money, because if you get
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out of a contract pre contingency, meaning you're still within those
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windows where you're allowed to exit, you can get your earnest money back.
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If you exit a contract post contingency, then your earnest money is in jeopardy.
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Okay.
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So again, earnest money is held by another party and it's refundable if
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you're in the pre contingency period.
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So let's run through an example.
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Let's say you put $2,000 in earnest money.
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Let's say the title company is holding it right now.
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And then let's say the property appraises for $10,000 lower than the purchase price.
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Well, you can back out of the contract and get your earnest money back.
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It's refundable to you because you're in your contingency period.
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Or let's say you have an inspection and you got that done and came
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back and there was a bunch of mold and maybe some structural issues.
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You can back out and get your earnest money back.
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Now, some things you have to watch for is if you get outside
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of your contingency windows.
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So for instance, like an inspection might say, the buyer
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has to do this within 15 days.
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Well, if you do your inspection on day 16, and then you want to
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back out, you're outside of your contingency window for the inspection.
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And if you back out because of the inspection results you fall under this
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post contingency category and the seller might be able to keep your earnest money.
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So if you try to back out of the contract, post contingency,
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meaning, you know, you're, you're following everything in the contract.
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There's no more out anymore.
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Your appraisal came in fine, you have financing, your inspection came back fine.
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If you back out, just because you got cold feet or you don't feel it anymore,
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or some other deal came up, the seller has the potential to keep that earnest money.
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Now, it's not an automatic thing.
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Earnest money can kind of have some drama going on to it because it has to be agreed
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upon or arbitrated on how it gets handled.
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So first it has to get agreed upon.
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So no matter what happens, pre contingency or post contingency, both parties
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have to sign on the earnest money saying, hey, you know, as a seller,
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I agree to give it back to the buyer.
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Or maybe the seller says, hey, I don't agree to give it back.
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And it might have to be arbitrated.
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Now different contracts, spell out how earnest money
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is handled in different ways.
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For instance, in our local market if a seller wants to keep the earnest
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money, it actually has to go into a trust fund for two years and then it
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gets, it's given back to the buyer unless they pursue legal action.
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In other markets, it's not like that.
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Read your contract and it's going to spell out how earnest money is handled.
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But what this is really doing for the seller is it's giving them
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compensation if a buyer backs out.
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And it's preventing buyers from just going around and making offers that they're not
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really serious about following through.
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So the biggest thing to remember is make sure you're meeting
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these contingency dates.
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Okay.
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Ask your realtor what those are, make those notes on your calendar.
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So, you know, like, hey, our inspection date is coming up here.
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Our appraisal dat is up here.
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Everything's moving along fine.
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That way you don't run into any of these issues with earnest money.
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Earnest money really doesn't give too much of a hassle, but sometimes
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it can add a little bit of drama if things go a little bit south.
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So it's always good to know what's going on with the earnest money.
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How much you need to put down and then those dates to keep in mind as well.
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If you want to learn how to write a good offer, that's going to stand
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out to a seller, this video over here is going to help you do just that.