Should I include conditions in my offer?
Should I include conditions in my offer — yes, no, or smart?
Quick answer
Include conditions only when they protect real risks you can’t control. A conditional offer can save you money and stress. It also weakens your negotiating power. Know which risk you face and choose the right condition.
Why conditions matter
Conditions in an offer (a “conditional offer”) are not legal fluff. They tell the seller: I’ll buy — if X happens. Common conditions: subject to financing, home inspection, sale of buyer’s property, and status certificate review for condos. These are the difference between a safe purchase and a nightmare.
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When to include conditions
- Financing: If your lender hasn’t given final approval, include a clear financing condition and a short removal deadline (5–10 business days).
- Inspection: If the property is older, has visible repairs, or you don’t have full disclosure, add a home inspection condition with specific scope and timelines.
- Selling existing home: Only use this if you have no backup plan. Limit the condition length and be realistic.
- Condo status: Always include a status certificate review for condos unless the seller has already provided a recent one.
When to avoid conditions
- Multiple offers or hot markets: Sellers prefer firm offers. Conditions make your bid less competitive.
- You have pre-approval and full disclosure: If financing is secured and inspection risks are low, waive conditions to win the deal.
How to write tight, effective conditions
- Be specific. “Subject to financing” is weak. Specify the lender, timeline, and what happens if financing is higher than X%.
- Use short timelines. The longer the condition window, the less attractive your offer.
- Limit escape clauses. Don’t leave vague language that lets you walk away for minor issues.
- Prepare documents in advance. Pre-approvals, home inspection bookings, and lawyer availability speed up condition removal.
Negotiation strategy
Going conditional gives you leverage to back out — but costs you leverage to win. If you need conditions, compensate with a stronger price, a larger deposit, or a shorter closing date. If you can waive conditions, do it only when you’ve minimized risk.

Practical checklist
- Confirm mortgage pre-approval before buying.
- Book an inspector while your offer is active.
- Put realistic deadlines: 5–10 business days for financing, 7–10 for inspection.
- Have your lawyer ready to close fast.
Bottom line
Include conditions to manage real, measurable risks. Avoid them when the market is tight and you’re already low-risk. Treat conditions like tools — use the right one at the right time.
Tony Sousa is the local market expert who helps buyers decide when to include conditions and how to write them so they’re protective, not paralyzing. For a confident offer strategy, contact Tony at tony@sousasells.ca or call 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for more resources.



















