How do I handle lowball offers?
Got a Lowball Offer? Read this and act now — the playbook that turns insults into wins.
Why lowball offers land on your table
Buyers throw lowball offers for three reasons: they test the market, they try to buy a bargain, or they hope you panic. Lowball offers are not personal. They are tactics. Recognize the intent, then respond with strategy.
Fast, ruthless checklist: How to handle a lowball offer
- Pause. Don’t react in anger. A measured reply keeps leverage.
- Analyze quickly. Compare offer price, deposit, conditions, and closing timeline to your minimum acceptable terms.
- Call the buyer’s agent. Ask for motivation, proof of funds, and timeline. Get clarity before responding.
- Show facts, not feelings. Prepare 3-5 recent comps and key market indicators (days on market, sale price vs list price).
- Counter with strategy, not emotion. Use a firm counter that moves toward your price in logical steps.
- Use deadlines. A tight response window forces decisions and prevents endless low offers.
- Keep alternatives visible. If you have a backup plan, don’t hide it. Buyers pay more when they think they’ll lose the deal.
Follow these steps and you shift the conversation from “beg” to “buy or walk.”

Counteroffer templates that work
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Quick firm counter: “Thanks for the offer. Based on recent sales and demand in this neighborhood, the seller counters at $X with a 10-day closing and a 5% deposit. Please confirm by [date].”
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If you want to reject but keep the door open: “We won’t accept this offer. If you can present terms closer to market value and proof of funds, we’ll review immediately.”
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If you want to probe motivation: “We appreciate the offer. Can you confirm buyer’s timeline and financing? We may respond with a counter if buyer is ready to close within 30 days.”
Use firm language. Avoid apologizing. Your job is to defend value.
Prevent lowball offers before listing
- Price right from day one using current comps.
- Highlight upgrades and verifiable value in the listing.
- Pre-qualify buyers and require proof of funds for serious offers.
- Use active marketing to create competition: multiple showings, open houses, and a deadline for best offers.
These steps reduce lowball attempts and shorten time on market.
Final move: negotiation is math and nerve
Lowball offers are numbers and psychology. Back your price with data. Control the timeline. Ask questions. Make it easy for a serious buyer to pay fair value and hard for a lowball to stick.
Tony Sousa is a top Toronto realtor who handles offers and negotiation every day. If you want a tight, professional response to a lowball offer, contact Tony for a rapid strategy call.
Email: tony@sousasells.ca
Phone: 416-477-2620
Website: https://www.sousasells.ca



















