On a cash deal, the closing costs are not going to come anywhere near 3%. What costs does the buyer want covered? Inspection, survey, title fees, appraisal? The buyers costs are minimal in a cash transaction, at least in the county that I am in because seller pays title and state doc stamps here.
I use this approach for cash buyers on foreclosed properties because some lenders will look at the closing cost in the same way that they do a reduction in the offer price. Don't know if it would work for a short sale.
Why would a buyer want 3% in seller concessions? It's basically his own money. It makes no sense to write adeal like that. The lender will reject it. Just reduce the purchase price by 3% and do the deal.
Good luck! We've never seen a bank approve a seller concession (closing credit) for a cash buyer. If it's a deal breaker for them have them have them lower their offer or convert to financing and then the concession has a better chance of being granted... typically up to 3%, though we do get them higher on occasion... so much depends on the investor and the margin of FMV to NET proceeds.... typically once that ration gets below 80% things start getting slashed, and the concession/credit is one of the first to go... A cash buyer’s closing costs are usually pretty minimal…
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On a cash deal, the closing costs are not going to come anywhere near 3%. What costs does the buyer want covered? Inspection, survey, title fees, appraisal? The buyers costs are minimal in a cash transaction, at least in the county that I am in because seller pays title and state doc stamps here.
Good luck! We've never seen a bank approve a seller concession (closing credit) for a cash buyer. If it's a deal breaker for them have them have them lower their offer or convert to financing and then the concession has a better chance of being granted... typically up to 3%, though we do get them higher on occasion... so much depends on the investor and the margin of FMV to NET proceeds.... typically once that ration gets below 80% things start getting slashed, and the concession/credit is one of the first to go... A cash buyer’s closing costs are usually pretty minimal…