Offer to Purchase and Acceptance of Offer to Purchase
The purchase contract is the most important
document in any real estate sale. It must reflect
the entire agreement between the buyer and seller.
This brochure examines issues arising during
contract negotiations in residential real estate sales
transactions. In particular, it focuses on “offer” and
“acceptance”: the process by which a buyer and
seller create a binding legal contract. This process
typically begins when a prospective buyer makes an
offer. Then, the seller either accepts it, rejects it, or
rejects it and makes a counteroffer. Then the buyer
has the same options (i.e., accept, reject without
making a counteroffer, or reject with a counteroffer).
When one party accepts the other party’s offer
or counteroffer, including communicating that
acceptance to the offering party, a purchase contract
is created.
Any misunderstandings concerning offer and
acceptance can result in serious legal and financial
consequences for the buyer and seller. Therefore, it
is imperative that you carefully read and understand
the entire purchase contract and that you consult an attorney if you do not understand any issues regarding
it before you enter into a binding contract.
The questions in this FAQ
are of special concern to real estate purchasers.
Consequently, they are posed from the standpoint of
the purchaser.
Informtion on this page is NOT INTENDED AS LEGAL ADVICE and is specific to real estate in the state of North Carolina only.
Before making a decision, consult your real eastate professional or legal advisor.
Click question to view answer.
I have found a home I am interested in buying.
How do I make an offer to purchase it?
Typically, you will complete a standardized offer
to purchase form with the help of a real estate agent
— probably a buyer agent. This form will express the
terms of the purchase (purchase price, closing date,
etc.) that you are proposing to the seller. The most
common residential offer form in North Carolina is
the “Offer to Purchase and Contract” (Form No. 2-T),
jointly approved by the N.C. Bar Association and N.C.
Association of REALTORS®. Many standard “addenda”
forms also are available to add provisions of special
importance to the parties. Your real estate agent
may have a variety of these forms, but if a standard,
preprinted form is not available covering the specific
terms of your offer, you should consult a private
attorney to draft an appropriate document for your use.
Real estate agents are not permitted to draft contracts
or even special provisions such as contingencies.
Does my offer to purchase have to be in
writing?
To be enforceable, real estate sales contracts in
North Carolina must be in writing. Since only written
offers may become binding contracts, your offer should
be in writing and signed.
What should be in my offer?
At a minimum, your offer must clearly identify you
and the seller, and state the sales price, and closing date and all of the terms agreed upon by you and the seller.
It must also contain an adequate legal description of
the property (for example, a reference to a recorded
plat map or deed) — a street address alone is not
sufficient. There are many other important provisions
you should consider. For example, to assure that
items or features of the property you have seen in
advertisements or MLS information are included in the
sale, you or your agent should list them in your offer.
Any form contract supplied to you by a real estate
agent must include at least eighteen separate required
provisions. The standard form “Offer to Purchase and
Contract” includes all these and many more.
Must my offer include earnest money?
Earnest money is not required to make a binding
real estate sales contract. However, it is a common
practice for a buyer to include it with an offer because
it shows the buyer’s good faith, demonstrates some
available cash, and makes it more likely that the seller
will accept the offer. Earnest money checks must
be deposited no later than three banking days after
acceptance, but may be deposited at any time after
receipt. So, be sure your earnest money check is
good at the time you write it. (For more information
on earnest money deposits, see the Commission’s
brochure, “Questions and Answers on: Earnest Money
Deposits.”)
How will my offer be communicated to the
seller?
The real estate broker with whom you are working
must deliver it to the seller’s agent or directly to the
seller if the seller has no agent. The seller’s agent must
present it to the seller.
How does acceptance occur?
To accept your offer, the seller must sign it without
making any changes. Until you or your agent have
been notified that the seller has signed your offer, you
can withdraw it at any time — even if you have given
the seller a deadline by which he or she must respond.
Once the seller has signed my offer, does it
become a contract?
No. It does not become a binding contract until
the seller (or seller’s agent) has notified you (or your
agent) that the seller has signed it. If your agent
informs you that the seller has “verbally” accepted or
will accept your offer but has not yet signed it, there is
no enforceable contract.
How will I be notified of the seller’s
acceptance of my offer?
Unless the contract specifies the manner in which
acceptance is to be given, it may be communicated orally by the seller or seller’s agent, by personal
delivery of the signed offer, mail, facsimile (fax)
or electronic mail. If you’re told that the seller has
accepted your offer, ask whether the seller has signed
it, and ask for a signed copy of the contract. Your
real estate agent must furnish it to you.
What if the seller changes my offer in some
way and then signs it?
If the seller makes any changes in your original
offer, the offer is rejected and cannot later be accepted.
By making changes to the original offer, the seller is,
in fact, making a counteroffer to you which you can
either accept, reject without making a counteroffer, or
reject and make your own counteroffer. The process
can continue in this manner indefinitely. You and the
seller should initial and date all changes made during
the negotiation of an offer. If the offer becomes too
“messy” as a result of many changes, re-type the offer
in its final form before signing it.
What happens if someone else makes an offer
to purchase the property before the seller accepts
my offer?
Until the seller signs your offer and notifies you
or your agent that it has been accepted, the seller can
consider and accept an offer from a competing buyer — even if your offer was submitted first and is for a
higher purchase price. An agent is required to deliver
all offers promptly. In order to obtain for their sellerclients
the best possible bargain, the seller’s agent will
usually inform competing prospective buyers that
other potential buyers are interested in the property.
To treat competing propective buyers fairly, the seller’s
agent usually will not divulge the price and terms of
competing offers. Whether you have been informed
of competing offers or not, you cannot assume that
your offer will receive special consideration or that you
are the only buyer who is interested in the property.
What else might happen to my offer after I
submit it to the seller?
It may simply expire if you include an expiration
date in the offer (or within a reasonable period of
time if no deadline is set). It is terminated if the seller
sells or contracts to sell the property to someone else.
Otherwise, unless you withdraw it, the offer remains
an offer.
What happens if the sales transaction does
not close?
If there is any dispute between you and the
seller and you cannot agree to a resolution of your respective claims, you may sue the other party in
the appropriate court to resolve them. With regard
to any earnest money you may have paid, the real
estate agent must retain it in an escrow account
until you and the seller reach a written agreement
for its disbursement or a court resolves the dispute.
Alternatively, with proper notification to you and
the seller, the agent may remit it to the clerk of court
in the county where the property is located. When
attorneys hold earnest money, they must hold or
dispose of it in accordance with the rules of the
North Carolina State Bar.
The seller has accepted my offer but the
resulting contract requires that certain things
(loan approval, inspections) be done by a
certain date. What happens if they are not
completed by this date?
The seller has accepted my offer but the
resulting contract requires that certain things
(loan approval, inspections) be done by a
certain date. What happens if they are not
completed by this date?
Generally, these “conditions” and
“contingencies” must be performed by the dates
specified in the contract or very soon thereafter,
depending upon whether the contract states that
“time is of the essence.” If time is of the essence,
and you or the seller fail to perform by the stated
deadline, the other party may terminate the contract.
If the contract does not state that “time is of the
essence”and, through no fault of your own, you are
unable to complete the inspections by the deadline,
but do so within a reasonable time, the seller must still go forward with the transaction. Although the
seller may be able to recover damages from you for
your failure to perform by the stated date, the seller
must still perform his or her obligations under the
contract.
Once I have entered into a contract with the
seller, is there any way I can cancel it?
Not without the consent of the seller unless a
particular law or special (non-standard) provision
in your contract grants you a right of rescission. For
example, the law grants a rescission right in the
following limited circumstances:
- Residential Property Disclosure Act. At or
before the time you make your offer in a residential
transaction, the seller (whether or not a real estate
agent is involved) must provide you a written form
disclosing certain conditions and characteristics of the
property. If the seller does not, any resulting contract
is subject to a limited right of rescission — usually up
to three calendar days from the time the contract is
formed. You should be aware, however, that there
are a number of exceptions to this requirement.
Consequently, for application of this law to a
particular situation, you should consult your attorney.
- Lead Paint Disclosure. If you are purchasing
a residential building constructed before 1978, federal
law requires sellers and their agents to provide you
written information about the possible presence of lead
paint and the associated hazards. If you are not given
this information (and an inspection period) before
entering into the purchase contract and have not
signed a written waiver of your rights, you have a ten
day inspection period during which you may be able
to cancel the contract.
- Condominiums. If you are purchasing a
new condominium from a person classified by law
as a developer, you have seven days to rescind your
purchase contract. When the seven day period begins
or ends can vary from one transaction to another, but it
usually begins when you are given the required public
offering statement. During this period, all monies
paid by you must be held in escrow by the developer.
Immediately contact an attorney for advice if you have
questions about your rescission rights. (For more
information on condominiums, see the Commission’s
brochure, “Questions and Answers on: Condominiums
and Townhouses.”)
- Timeshares. If you are purchasing a new
timeshare in North Carolina from a seller classified by
law as a developer of a timeshare project, you have five
days to cancel your purchase contract which you can do by mail. If you are a resident of another state, you
may also have additional rescission rights under the
laws of your home state. The developer must hold
all funds received from you in an escrow account
for at least ten days. However, if you are purchasing
the timeshare from another consumer or through
a foreclosure sale, there is no rescission period or
mandatory escrow of payments.
Are there ways to purchase real estate other
than using the standard offer to purchase and
contract?
Yes. Here are a few:
- Option to Purchase. With an option to
purchase, you have the right during the option period
to buy property at an agreed upon price. For this
right, you will pay option money to compensate the
seller for taking the property off the market during
the option period. Although subject to negotiation,
option money is non-refundable and paid directly to
the seller at the signing of the option. Depending
upon the terms of the option agreement, you may or
may not receive credit for some or all of your option
money against the purchase price if you “exercise”
your option. The standard “Offer to Purchase and
Contract” form allows the buyer to pay an “Option
Fee” in exchange for the right to terminate the contract
for “any reason or no reason.” You should read any
option contract carefully and consult your attorney if
you have any questions.
- Lease with Option. When a lease is coupled
with an option to purchase, you have the right to
buy property at a set price while leasing it. There
are no standard forms available for this purpose.
Attempting to modify other standard forms for such
use may result in a muddled or even unenforceable
contract, and constitutes the unauthorized practice of law when performed by real estate agents. Since
these transactions may be riskier than a conventional
purchase, you should consult your attorney before
entering intosuch agreements.
- Lease-Purchase. In lease-purchase
transactions, you occupy property as a tenant but agree
to purchase it at a future date. There is no standard
lease-purchase form available, so you are again advised
to consult your attorney.
- Installment Land Sale. In an installment land
sale (also known as a contract for deed), title remains
with the seller while you make payments to the seller.
Usually, the contract allows you to possess and use
the property while making payments but such terms
are not legally required. If you are in possession of
the property and default on your payments, the seller
can sue you to regain possession of it and is generally
entitled to retain all the money you paid under the
contract.
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