Can I negotiate after an appraisal?
Can you renegotiate price after a low appraisal? Yes — and do it fast.
Quick answer
Yes. You can negotiate after an appraisal. A low appraisal doesn’t end the deal. It creates leverage. Use the appraisal report, buyer financing options, and market data to rework price, terms, or concessions.
Why appraisals matter
Appraisals set the lender’s max loan amount. If the appraisal comes in low, the lender won’t finance above that value. That puts pressure on buyer and seller. But pressure creates opportunity for negotiation.

Can I negotiate after an appraisal? The bottom line
You can demand a price reduction, request seller concessions, split the gap, or walk. The right move depends on market conditions, contract contingencies, and the parties’ urgency. An experienced agent turns the appraisal into a negotiation playbook — not a roadblock.
Tactical options to renegotiate price or terms
- Ask the seller for a price reduction equal to the appraisal gap.
- Offer to increase your down payment to cover the difference.
- Request seller concessions (closing costs, repairs, or rate buy-downs).
- Provide additional comps or corrected data to the appraiser for reconsideration.
- Order a second appraisal or rebuttal if there are clear errors.
Step-by-step negotiation playbook
- Review the appraisal line-by-line. Spot factual errors (square footage, upgrades, comps).
- Gather stronger comparable sales within 6 months and the same neighborhood.
- Present a concise demand: lower price, concessions, or buyer covers a set amount.
- Use deadlines. Lenders and sellers move when time matters.
- If seller refuses, decide: fund the gap, ask for mortgage re-structure, or cancel per appraisal contingency.
When to push for a re-appraisal
Push for re-appraisal when the original report has factual mistakes or used distant/poor comps. Don’t waste a re-appraisal on a clear strong market shift against you.

Pitfalls to avoid
- Emotional reactions. Negotiation is numbers-driven.
- Ignoring the appraisal contingency timeline in your contract.
- Failing to document comparable sales and repairs.
Real advantage: expert negotiation
A skilled local agent converts appraisal reports into wins. They control the narrative, present clean comps, and pressure sellers intelligently. That’s how deals survive and close.
If your appraisal just came back low, act immediately. You have options. Don’t accept the first “no.”
For direct help from the market’s top negotiator, contact Tony Sousa — tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
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