Can I include home inspection or financing
conditions?
Can I include a home inspection or financing condition in my offer? Yes — and here’s exactly how to do it so you win the house and protect your money.
Why conditions matter
A conditional offer gives buyers protection. Home inspection and financing conditions are the two most common. They let you back out or renegotiate if an inspection finds major defects or your mortgage falls through. In a seller’s market, conditions can cost you the deal. In a balanced market, they’re smart and expected.
How to include a home inspection condition
- Be specific: say “This offer is conditional upon a satisfactory home inspection to be completed within X business days.”
- Use a clear timeframe: 5–10 business days is standard. Shorter windows are stronger offers; longer windows protect you more.
- Define “satisfactory”: major structural, safety, and mechanical defects, or else specify repair or credit limits.
Sample clause: “Offer is conditional on the buyer obtaining a professional home inspection within 7 business days. If inspection reveals defects exceeding $3,000, buyer may request repairs or cancel.”
How to include a financing condition
- State the exact condition: “Buyer obtaining mortgage financing of $X at Y% interest or better by date Z.”
- Include a financing deadline: 5–10 business days after acceptance, or align with lender processing timelines.
- Attach proof requirements: lender pre-approval or current mortgage commitment.
Sample clause: “Offer conditional upon buyer obtaining lender commitment for a mortgage of $X by 5:00 PM on [date]. If not obtained, buyer may terminate.”

Practical examples
Example 1 — Buyer protection: A first-time buyer adds a 7-day inspection and 10-day financing condition. Inspection finds a major roof leak. Buyer negotiates a $6,000 credit and stays in the deal.
Example 2 — Competitive bid: In a hot market, a buyer offers a 3-day inspection and provides a strong financing pre-approval. Seller accepts because the short condition window reduces risk.
Benefits and pitfalls
Benefits:
- Risk control: walk away or renegotiate if big problems appear.
- Time to verify financing without losing deposit.
Pitfalls:
- Weak offer in a seller’s market: conditions can be rejected.
- Poorly written clauses create disputes. Vague terms like “satisfactory” without limits can be challenged.
Negotiation strategy
- Use shorter windows to get preferred offers accepted. If you must include conditions, offer a higher price, a larger deposit, or a clear repair cap.
- Consider a pre-offer inspection for confidence in competitive markets.
- If waiving conditions, increase due diligence elsewhere: pre-approvals, contractor quotes, or escrow holdbacks.
If you want the offer accepted without giving up buyer protections, use a math-based strategy: shorter condition windows + clear limits + proof of financing. That’s how deals close fast and smart.
For a tailored offer strategy in the Toronto market, contact Tony Sousa: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















