What is a firm offer versus conditional offer?
Firm Offer or Conditional Offer? The one decision that can make — or break — your deal.
Quick answer
A firm offer is an unconditional promise to buy with no outstanding conditions. A conditional offer depends on one or more conditions — common ones are financing, inspection, or the sale of another property. Each has trade-offs: speed and strength with firm offers, protection and flexibility with conditional offers.
What a firm offer looks like
- No conditions attached. Buyer commits to purchase as-is.
- Deposit is usually higher and the offer becomes irrevocable by a fixed date.
- Seller benefits from certainty and quick closing.
Example: Buyer submits an offer with a two-day irrevocable period and a substantial deposit. If accepted, the sale proceeds without extra conditions.

What a conditional offer looks like
- The buyer includes one or more clauses that must be satisfied within a set period.
- Typical conditions: subject-to-financing, home inspection, lawyer review, or the sale of the buyer’s current home.
- If a condition isn’t satisfied, the buyer can legally withdraw — usually without losing their deposit.
Example: Buyer makes an offer “subject to financing” with a 7-day condition period to secure a mortgage. If financing falls through, the buyer can walk away.
Why it matters for negotiation
Sellers prefer firm offers. They reduce risk and speed transactions. Conditional offers weaken the seller’s position because they introduce uncertainty. Savvy negotiators know how to balance strength and protection:
- Buyers get protection with conditions but must accept weaker negotiating power.
- Sellers can counter by requesting shorter condition periods or higher deposits.
Actionable strategies to win the deal
- Buyers who want to be competitive: secure pre-approval, shorten condition periods, and increase deposit size. This converts a conditional offer into a near-firm offer in the seller’s eyes.
- Sellers who want certainty: ask for proof of financing, shorten condition timelines, and push for a higher deposit or an irrevocable deadline.
- Middle ground: use conditional offers with specific, limited conditions (e.g., inspection only) and very short timelines (48–72 hours).
Common negotiation moves and what they mean
- Waive inspection: stronger offer, higher risk. Only do this if you’ve done due diligence or plan a thorough walkthrough.
- Shorten finance condition: shows intent and often wins multiple-offer situations.
- Escalation clauses: automatic but must be used carefully — they can trigger bidding wars and paperwork scrutiny.

Final checklist before you sign
- Confirm condition timelines and what triggers removal.
- Check deposit amount and where it’s held.
- Verify irrevocable date and legal consequences of breach.
If you want an edge that gets results, work with a negotiator who knows how to structure offers to win — while protecting your interests. Tony Sousa is a top local realtor with proven negotiation strategies for buyers and sellers. Contact: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
Need a custom offer strategy for your market? Call or email now. Quick decisions win homes; slow choices lose them.



















