Can I negotiate after accepting an offer?
Can you renegotiate after accepting an offer — and keep your deal?
Quick answer: Yes — but only under clear rules
Can I negotiate after accepting an offer? Short answer: sometimes. You can renegotiate an accepted offer if the contract allows it, both parties agree, or there’s a valid contingency (inspection, financing, appraisal). If the contract is firm with no conditions, trying to change terms can trigger a breach and legal risk.
What actually matters: contract, timing, and leverage
- Contract terms: Look for conditions like “subject to inspection,” “subject to financing,” or timelines to terminate. These give legal room to renegotiate.
- Timing: Early renegotiation (before deposit is fully released or before closing) is easier. Late-stage attempts are riskier.
- Leverage: Evidence (failed inspection, low appraisal, financing denial) gives you a legitimate reason to reopen terms.

Common real estate scenarios and how to handle them
1) Inspection finds major issues
- Example: After accepting, an inspection shows a cracked foundation. Action: Provide the inspection report, request a repair credit or price reduction, offer to split costs. Get agreement as a written amendment.
2) Appraisal comes in low
- Example: Lender values the home lower than the sale price. Action: Ask seller to reduce price, buyer to cover difference, or renegotiate financing. Document the appraisal and amend the contract.
3) Buyer’s financing falls through
- Example: Mortgage denied after offer accepted. Action: If there’s a financing condition, terminate or renegotiate. If not, negotiate new terms quickly or face potential breach.
4) Buyer changes mind without cause
- Example: Buyer simply decides they don’t want the house. Action: If no valid contingency, deposit may be forfeited and seller could pursue damages.
How to renegotiate safely: a step-by-step checklist
- Read the contract — know your legal standing.
- Gather evidence — inspection reports, appraisals, lender letters.
- Contact the other party through your realtor — be direct, professional.
- Offer fair trade-offs — credits, repair timelines, or price adjustments.
- Put everything in writing — signed amendment is binding.
- Involve a lawyer if the other side resists or stakes are high.
Practical negotiation language you can use
- “We discovered structural issues in the inspection. Can we agree to a $15,000 credit at closing?”
- “Appraisal came in $30,000 below the price. Would you accept lowering the sale price or sharing the shortfall?”
Final word — control the outcome, don’t gamble
You can renegotiate after accepting an offer, but success depends on contract terms, timing, and proof. Don’t bluff. Ask for a clear amendment and protect the deposit.
Need a skilled negotiator? Tony Sousa is a Toronto realtor who re-writes stalled deals into wins. Call Tony for a no-nonsense strategy session: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















