Should I include a financing or inspection
condition?
Include a Financing or Inspection Condition? Read this before you sign.
Why this matters now
When you make an offer on a home, the conditions you include decide whether you win the deal or lose it. I handle dozens of offers every month. I know which conditions protect buyers and which kill deals. This guide gives clear, actionable rules to use a financing condition and an inspection condition without sabotaging your purchase.
When to include a financing condition
Include a financing condition if any of these apply:
- You don’t have a mortgage pre-approval from a credible lender.
- You’re self-employed, recently changed jobs, or have thin credit history.
- You need a specific mortgage type (e.g., high-ratio insured, assumable, or portfolio lending).
How to write it: “Offer is conditional on the Buyer obtaining mortgage financing on terms satisfactory to the Buyer by [date].” Set a short, realistic deadline (5–10 business days). Ask your lender for a conditional approval in writing and attach it to your offer. That reduces risk and signals strength.
When to include an inspection condition
Include an inspection condition unless you buy a brand-new home with robust warranties or you can absorb unknown repair costs.
Use an inspection condition if:
- The home is older than 10–15 years.
- You see visible wear, water stains, or suspect structural or HVAC issues.
- The listing says “sold as is” or inspection history is missing.
How to write it: “Offer is conditional on a home inspection by a licensed inspector satisfactory to the Buyer within [X] days.” Keep the inspection period short (3–7 business days). Limit the scope if needed: specify major systems only (roof, foundation, electrical, plumbing, HVAC) to speed the process.

How to balance both conditions and still win
Buyers need protection. Sellers want certainty. Do both without killing your chance:
- Shorten the timelines: 3–7 days for inspection, 5–10 for financing.
- Provide proof: include pre-approval and a recent credit snapshot.
- Increase your deposit: a larger deposit signals seriousness and offsets condition risk.
- Offer a fair closing date and flexible possession.
- Use repair allowances instead of demanding repairs: request a credit or price adjustment after inspection rather than full seller repairs.
Negotiation tactics that work
If the market is hot, consider narrowing or waiving conditions only after clear steps: get conditional mortgage approval and a rapid inspection booking. If you must waive, negotiate other protections—higher deposit, shorter closing, or an escrow holdback for specific repairs.
Bottom line
Include a financing condition if your mortgage isn’t locked down. Include an inspection condition unless the property is new and warranted. Short deadlines, documented proof, and thoughtful wording protect you and keep your offer competitive.
For clear, direct guidance on structuring your offer and negotiation strategy, contact Tony Sousa: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
This is practical, no-fluff advice to help you get the home you want without unnecessary risk.



















