Should I include a personal letter with my
offer?
Want to beat multiple offers? Should you slip a heartfelt letter into your home offer?
Quick answer
Yes — sometimes. But only when it helps your negotiation position. A personal letter can tip a close decision in your favor. It will not fix a weak offer. It can create legal risk if it contains protected information. Use it as a precision tool, not a crutch.
Why sellers read letters
Sellers sell emotions as much as they sell a house. A short, sincere note can remind a seller why they loved the home and which buyer will care for it. In competitive listings, sellers often choose the offer that feels safest and most respectful, not just the highest dollar.
When a personal letter helps your offer
- Market is competitive and multiple offers exist.
- Your price is close to the top offers but not the highest.
- You can provide seller-friendly terms (flexible closing, few conditions).
- The seller is an owner-occupant with an emotional attachment.
In those cases a letter can nudge the seller. But it only helps if the rest of your offer is solid: strong deposit, proof of funds, quick closing and reasonable conditions.

When a personal letter backfires
- It reveals protected characteristics (race, religion, family plans, disability, age, national origin, sexual orientation). That creates fair housing risk for the seller and the listing agent.
- It’s long, emotional, or begging. Overly personal letters irritate professionals.
- The market is not competitive — a simple clean offer wins alone.
How to write a winning offer letter (short, safe, powerful)
- Keep it 2–4 sentences.
- State who you are (profession, local connection) — avoid family or children details.
- Say what you love about the home (specific features, not the seller).
- Commit to terms that matter to the seller: timing, minimal conditions.
- Sign it and attach proof of mortgage pre-approval.
Example: “We are a local couple who fell in love with the light in your kitchen and the mature maple out back. We are prepared to close on your timeline and will submit a clean offer with a strong deposit. We would be honoured to care for this home.”
Do not mention: religious beliefs, plans to have children, disabilities, national origin, or any protected class. If in doubt, drop the letter.
Alternatives that strengthen negotiation
- Increase earnest money or shorten conditions.
- Add an escalation clause or top-up commitment.
- Offer flexible closing or rent-back to match seller needs.
- Provide a professional offer presentation with proof of funds and pre-inspection.
Bottom line — strategy first, letter second
A personal letter is a tool, not a strategy. The strongest offers win with price, terms and certainty. When those are matched, a brief, neutral, heartfelt letter can provide the edge. If your agent — Tony Sousa, Toronto real estate negotiation expert — recommends it, he’ll ensure it’s legal, strategic, and tailored to that seller.
For a winning offer strategy or a safe, effective buyer letter, contact Tony at tony@sousasells.ca or 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca



















