How much should I offer below the asking price?

How much should I offer below the asking price?

Buyers Guides
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By Editor
November 11, 2025 8 min read

How much should I offer below the asking price?



Want to save on your next home without losing the deal? Here’s the exact method top agents use.

Quick answer: there is no single number. But you can pick a smart offer using data — list-to-sale ratios, days on market, comparable sales, and seller motivation. Use percentages as a starting point, then adjust with strategy.

Rule-of-thumb offer ranges

    • Hot market (bidding wars, list-to-sale >100%): offer at or above asking, often 0–5% over.
    • Balanced market (steady demand, list-to-sale ~98–100%): start 1–3% below asking.
    • Buyer’s market (lots of inventory, list-to-sale <97%): start 5–15% below asking.

These ranges are starting points. The smart buyer adjusts by the actual comps, marketing time, and seller urgency.

Measure the market — use data, not emotion

1) List-to-sale ratio: if recent sales are selling at 101% of list, the seller expects full price or more. If they’re at 95%, there’s room to negotiate. 2) Days on market (DOM): under 7 days = hot; 30–60 = balanced; 90+ = buyer’s market. Longer DOM means bigger discounts. 3) Comparable sales (last 3 months): if comps are lower than list, that gives you leverage. 4) Seller signals: expired price reductions, relocation, or contingent purchases make sellers more flexible.

Case examples (real-world math)

    • Example A — Hot market condo listed $700,000 with strong comps: list-to-sale = 103% over last 30 days. Strategy: offer $700,000–$735,000 or use escalation clause to win.
    • Example B — Detached house listed $950,000, DOM 75 days, comps average $890,000: Strategy: start with $845,000–$870,000 (5–8% below) and leave room to move up.

Negotiation moves that matter

    • Anchor with a clear, clean offer: pre-approval, proof of funds, firm dates. Clean offers beat low offers with weak terms.
    • Use an escalation clause in competitive markets: commit to beat the highest qualified offer by $X up to a cap.
    • Trade value for price: offer a faster closing, larger deposit, or fewer contingencies to reduce price.
    • Inspection strategy: in weak markets, include inspection contingencies and ask for price reductions. In hot markets, consider a limited waiver if safe.

Simple 5-step offer plan

1) Pull comps and list-to-sale ratio for the neighborhood. 2) Check DOM and seller notes for motivation. 3) Choose an initial offer in the rule-of-thumb range. 4) Support the offer with clean financing and flexible terms. 5) Leave 3–5% negotiation room depending on competition.

Conclusion

How much below asking you should offer is a formula, not a guess. Use local market data, clear terms, and tactical trade-offs. Want the exact number for a specific property? I’ll run the comps, crunch the ratios, and write an offer that wins without overpaying.

Contact for a free offer strategy session: tony@sousasells.ca • 416-477-2620 • https://www.sousasells.ca

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