We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience and deliver our services. By continuing to visit this site, you agree to our use of cookies.More info
Eric Marcus Chicago HomesEric Marcus Chicago Homes
Call Us:

773-732-9898

    Contact Us
    Follow us
    The Team

    About Us

    • Meet the Team
    • Success Stories
    • Read Our Blog
    • Buyer & Seller Tips
    • Contact Us

    Our Services

    • Seller Services
    • Free Home Valuation
    • Successful Seller Clients
    • Buyer Services
    • Search for Homes
    • Mortgage Calculator
    • Download Our Home Buyer Guide
    Eric Marcus Chicago Homes

    1525 W. Belmont Avenue, Chicago, IL 60657

    • 773-732-9898
    • [email protected]
    Buyer

    How to Win When You're Not the Highest Offer

    In a competitive spring market, sellers routinely receive multiple offers on well-priced properties. The accepted offer...

    • Eric Marcus
    • April 13th, 2026
    • 6 min read
    Featured Image

     

    In a competitive spring market, sellers routinely receive multiple offers on well-priced properties. The accepted offer is not always the highest one. Sellers evaluate financing certainty, closing speed, and deal structure alongside purchase price, and financed buyers who understand those variables have real tools to work with.

    The offer pool in an active market typically includes downsizers reinvesting equity from a previous sale, remote workers relocating from higher-cost markets, and investors who can close quickly with minimal contingencies. Each of those buyer types brings structural advantages. The strategies below address how financed buyers can compete on the specific terms sellers are actually weighing.

    Full Underwriting vs. Pre-Approval: Why the Difference Matters to Sellers

    A standard pre-approval letter confirms that a lender has reviewed a buyer's income, credit, and basic financial profile. It is a required starting point, but it does not differentiate a financed buyer from others in the same offer pool.

    Full underwriting means the lender has already cleared credit, income, tax documentation, and assets before a purchase contract is in place. The only remaining steps before funding are the appraisal and title search. For a seller comparing a financed offer to a cash offer, that distinction reduces perceived financing risk significantly. A fully underwritten buyer is unlikely to encounter a last-minute issue, and sellers' agents recognize the difference between that level of review and a standard pre-approval.

    Not all lenders offer full underwriting before a purchase contract is signed. Ask your lender directly what level of review they can complete before you begin writing offers, and what documentation they need to get there. For buyers whose lenders do offer it, completing this step before the search begins is one of the most effective ways to compete with cash.

    How a Faster Closing Window Affects Seller Decisions

    Sellers pay carrying costs on a property until it closes. Every week between an accepted offer and the closing date represents mortgage interest, taxes, insurance, and utilities the seller continues to cover. Cash offers are frequently attractive in part because they compress that period.

    According to ICE Mortgage Technology, the average conventional mortgage closes in 41 to 42 days, with FHA and VA loans typically running longer at 45 to 60 days. Financed buyers who are fully underwritten may be in a position to propose a shorter closing window, because the bulk of the lender's review is already complete. The main remaining variable is appraisal scheduling, which typically adds 7 to 10 days. Buyers who can offer a compressed close should state it explicitly in the offer rather than leaving the window open to negotiation.

    Offer Terms That Address Seller Logistics

    Many sellers are simultaneously managing their own purchase, which creates timing constraints that affect which offer they accept. A closing date that does not align with their move adds logistical friction regardless of purchase price.

    Two offer terms address this directly. A flexible closing date allows the seller to select a schedule that coordinates with their own transaction. A post-closing lease-back allows the seller to remain in the property for a defined period after closing, typically a few days to a few weeks, while they complete their move. Both options generally cost the buyer little and can make a financed offer more practical for the seller than a cash offer that locks them into a fixed schedule.

    Lease-back arrangements vary in structure and prevalence by market. Before including one in an offer, confirm with your agent what terms are standard locally, how rent during the lease-back period is typically calculated, and how the arrangement is documented in the purchase agreement.

    Inspection Approach in a Competitive Market

    Waiving an inspection contingency entirely carries real risk, particularly in older homes or properties with deferred maintenance. A more common middle approach in competitive markets is a threshold inspection: the buyer agrees to proceed unless the inspection identifies structural, mechanical, or safety issues above a defined dollar amount. This limits the seller's exposure to renegotiation over minor findings while giving the buyer protection against significant defects.

    The appropriate threshold depends on the home's price and the buyer's risk tolerance. Your agent can advise on what figures are currently standard in your market and how inspection terms are being structured in accepted offers.

    Listings With Less Competition

    Properties with original fixtures, older paint, or flooring that has not been updated tend to sit longer and attract fewer competing offers than recently renovated properties in the same price range. Buyers prepared to make cosmetic updates after closing can access a segment of inventory where competitive pressure is lower.

    The cost of those updates is worth calculating before submitting an offer. According to Angi and HomeAdvisor, professional interior painting for an average-sized home runs approximately $2,000 to $7,000 depending on size and scope. For flooring, installed mid-range costs vary by material: carpet runs roughly $5 to $8 per square foot installed, luxury vinyl plank $6 to $10, and hardwood $10 to $16, according to Angi, HomeGuide, and This Old House. In many cases, the total cost of cosmetic updates is less than the price premium built into a comparable move-in-ready listing.

    Your agent can help evaluate whether a home's unrenovated features are cosmetic or structural, and what realistic updates would cost before an offer is written.

    Off-Market Opportunities

    Some properties go under contract before they are listed publicly. Agents who are active in a specific market often have advance knowledge of upcoming listings through professional networks, neighbor referrals, and direct seller conversations. Buyers who are fully pre-qualified and ready to move quickly can sometimes make an offer before a property reaches the open market, which removes competitive bidding from the process entirely.

    This kind of access depends on the agent's local relationships and market activity. It is worth asking any agent you work with how frequently they come across off-market or pre-market opportunities in your target neighborhoods and price range, and what they need from you to act quickly when one surfaces.

    What Competitive Offers Have in Common

    Sellers weigh financing certainty, closing speed, and deal structure alongside purchase price. An offer that addresses each of those variables through full underwriting, a competitive closing window, and terms that reduce the seller's logistical friction can outperform a higher offer that does not.

    Competing in a busy market takes strategy, not just money. We can help you build an offer that stands out for the right reasons. Reach out any time.

    Author Photo
    About the author

    Eric Marcus

    773-732-9898
    I was born in South Bend, Indiana where my family owned and operated a small business for over 50 years. Every member of my family has been licensed to practice real estate, and my dad owns a real estate company in Indiana. After graduating with honors from Indiana University in 1991, I earned my CPA and worked for a big six accounting firm in Chicago. Combining my experience and entrepreneurial spirit, I started my own successful accounting business that I ran for 3 years. Next, I embarked on a career as a soybean trader at the Chicago Board of Trade, followed by a successful run as a stock options market maker at the Chicago Board of Options Exchange. I began my real estate career in 2003 as broker/owner of ESM Realty. My team has helped more than 600 clients buy and sell condominiums, townhouses, single family homes, multi-unit residential, and commercial properties. For 14 straight years, we were recognized by Chicago Association of Realtors as Top Producers. Our extensive marketing program includes premium placement on hundreds of websites, morechicagohomes.com and state of the art Facebook advertising. My team works tirelessly to make each client feel like they are our only client! We strive for the highest level of performance every day so that we exceed your highest expectations. Our business is 75%+ referral-based and we want you to not only be our client but our biggest raving fan. In December 2020, I brought my team to Keller Williams ONEChicago with branches in Lincoln Park, Lakeview and O'Hare. To set up a consultation or if you have any questions, please contact me at 773-732-9898.

    Similar posts like this

    Buyer

    How to Win When You're Not the Highest Offer

    Read more
    Seller

    Low Appraisal? Here's What Sellers Can Do

    Read more
    Lifestyle

    What Spring Feels Like in Chicago

    Experience spring in Wicker Park and the West Loop. From the best coffee shop patios and The 606 trail to a guide on loc...
    Read more
    Eric Marcus Chicago Homes

    Your Real Friend in Chicago Real Estate

    Keller Williams ONEChicago

    1525 W. Belmont Avenue, Chicago, IL 60657

    Keller Williams ONEChicago

    1525 W. Belmont Avenue, Chicago, IL 60657

    773-732-9898
    [email protected]

    Footer Links

    • Meet the Team
    • Client Success Stories
    • Read Our Blog
    • Contact Us
    • Seller Services
    • Get Your Home's Value
    • Buyer Services
    • Search Homes for Sale
    Join Our Email List:

    *We respect your inbox. We only send interesting and relevant emails.

    Keller Williams ONEChicago © 2026

    Privacy Policy
    Powered by