How do I negotiate when there’s multiple
offers?
Multiple buyers knocking down your door? Here’s exactly how to negotiate when there are multiple offers — and win the best deal.
Why multiple offers change the game
When more than one buyer wants your property, the negotiation shifts from price-only to certainty and terms. Buyers will try to outbid each other on price. Smart sellers win on terms: speed, certainty, fewer conditions, and cleaner financing.
Quick checklist before you respond
- Confirm all offers are complete: signed, dated, proof of funds/pre-approval, and clear timelines.
- Set your priority: highest net after costs, fastest closing, or least risk.
- Talk to your agent and set a deadline to force clean comparisons.
Step-by-step negotiation plan
- Create a fair deadline. Tell all buyers you’ll review offers at a set time. Deadlines compress buyers and often raise net offers.
- Evaluate price and net proceeds. Don’t be fooled by headline numbers. Subtract closing costs, credits, and any concessions.
- Compare terms next. A lower price with no financing condition or a cash closing can beat a higher but riskier offer.
- Use escalation clauses selectively. They can push price up, but watch caps and proof-of-funds requirements.
- Ask for clean offers. Shorten or remove subject-to clauses where reasonable (inspection, financing). Buyers who accept fewer conditions show stronger intent.
- Counter smart. If you want top dollar, counter higher with a short deadline and a request for proof-of-funds and a commitment to remove conditions quickly. Don’t open a negotiation to 10 rounds — set firm limits.

Tactics that deliver more than money
- Prioritize certainty: a strong deposit, shorter financing timelines, and a firm closing date reduce fall-through risk.
- Consider non-price wins: flexible possession dates, renting back, or accepting certain appliances/fixtures.
- Leverage escalation clauses to trigger competitors without revealing your reserve price.
- Use a blind final-round if needed: ask all top bidders to submit their best final offer in an envelope or sealed email by a deadline.
Red flags to avoid
- Offers missing proof of funds or pre-approval.
- Buyers who want long, vague condition periods.
- Low deposits paired with aggressive price offers.
Final selection and legal safety
Choose the offer that maximizes net value and minimizes risk. Have your agent and lawyer review terms before signing. Document everything and confirm timelines in writing.
If you want a one-page comparison sheet or a real-time strategy call, I’ll walk you through every line of each offer and tell you which one to accept. I handle multiple-offer scenarios every week and get sellers the best net result with no drama.
Contact Tony Sousa — Local realtor with proven results:
Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















