What are conditions in an offer?
What are “conditions” in an offer — and why they can make or break your deal?
Quick answer: conditions in an offer explained
Conditions (also called clauses or subjects) are specific requirements a buyer or seller places inside a purchase offer. They must be satisfied or waived before the sale becomes firm. In plain terms: conditions control risk. Get them right and you protect your money. Ignore them and you risk losing your deposit, or worse — buying a home with hidden problems.
Real story, fast
A young couple fell in love with a century home. They waived the inspection to be more competitive. Two months after closing, a rotten beam forced a costly repair and long court calls. If they kept a common inspection condition and removed it only after a clean report, they’d have avoided that headache.

Top conditions you’ll see in real estate offers
- Subject to financing / mortgage approval: sale depends on the buyer securing a mortgage. Essential for most buyers.
- Home inspection clause: lets buyers inspect and back out or negotiate repairs.
- Status certificate (condo): verifies condo finances and rules.
- Appraisal condition: ensures the property’s value supports the mortgage.
- Lawyer review / title search: confirms clear title and legal issues.
- Sale of buyer’s home: buyer must sell their property first.
- Closing date and possession conditions: timing details that matter to both sides.
Why conditions matter for negotiation
Conditions give leverage. A smart buyer uses them to avoid surprises. A smart seller evaluates the strength of a buyer’s conditions and response time. In a hot market you may get fewer conditions; in a slow market you can insist on more protections.
How to use conditions to win — practical steps
- Prioritize: keep financing and inspection conditions unless you have cash and expertise.
- Set clear timelines: 5–10 business days for inspection or financing reduces uncertainty.
- Make conditions specific: name the inspection type, acceptable financing terms, and appraisal value threshold.
- Know how to waive: work with your realtor and lawyer before removing conditions. Don’t waive anything on emotion.
- Use conditional dates: tie conditions to firm deadlines so the deal doesn’t stall.
Negotiation tactics that work
- Shorten condition deadlines to make your offer cleaner and more attractive.
- Offer a higher deposit while keeping conditions — it signals strength.
- If seller asks to remove a condition, negotiate a compromise: limit the condition or accept only specific repairs.

Final word — play defense and offense
Conditions aren’t paperwork—they’re protection and negotiation tools. Use them to control risk, speed up deals, and win negotiations without unnecessary losses. If you want confident guidance on structuring strong offers, work with a local expert who knows how to balance competitiveness and protection.
Contact Tony Sousa — Local Realtor for Toronto buyers and sellers
Email: tony@sousasells.ca
Phone: 416-477-2620
Website: https://www.sousasells.ca



















