Should I waive conditions to make my offer
stronger?
Want to beat rival buyers? Should you waive conditions to make your offer stronger — or ruin your deal?
Quick answer
Yes — in the right deal, waiving conditions (removing subjects) can make your offer stand out and win. No — if you expose yourself to big financial or safety risk. This is negotiation, not luck. Know the math, the market, and the risk profile before you remove protections.
Why waiving conditions makes offers stronger
Sellers want certainty. A firm offer with no conditions closes faster and reduces the chance of a late collapse. In hot markets, offers without subjects often rise above the rest. That means fewer competing clauses and a cleaner path to closing. Keywords: waive conditions, stronger offer, conditional offer, firm offer, real estate negotiation.
When you should consider waiving conditions
- Competitive market with multiple offers. If inventory is low and demand is high, a clean, subject-free offer often wins.
- You have cash or pre-approved financing. Cash or fully underwritten mortgage reduces financing risk for the seller.
- You’ve completed a quick inspection or trust the property condition. For low-risk properties (new builds, condos with warranties), removing inspection conditions can be safer.

When you must NOT waive conditions
- You’re uncertain about financing or appraisal. Don’t remove the financing or appraisal condition unless your mortgage is guaranteed.
- The property has visible issues or unknown history. If the house looks questionable, keep an inspection condition.
- You don’t have a plan for worst-case repairs or costs. If a waived condition could leave you on the hook for huge repairs, keep the subject.
How to waive conditions smartly (practical steps)
- Run the numbers. Determine your maximum outlay if financing fails or repairs hit your budget.
- Get bulletproof pre-approval. Ask your lender for written confirmation and rapid closing timelines.
- Shorten, don’t remove. Use shorter conditional periods (e.g., 48–72 hours) instead of full removal when possible.
- Use escrow holdbacks. Negotiate a holdback to cover known issues while still presenting a strong offer.
- Add clarity. State timelines, closing dates, and deposit amounts clearly to increase seller confidence.
Negotiation play: leverage without risk
You can offer other value instead of full waiver: larger deposit, flexible closing date, or paying certain closing costs. These keep your protections but increase seller certainty. That’s intelligent negotiation: high value, managed risk.
Trusted guidance
Tony Sousa is a top local realtor with years of Offers & Negotiation experience. He helps buyers decide when to waive conditions, when to shorten them, and when to walk. Talk to someone who reads contracts, runs numbers, and negotiates from strength.
Contact Tony Sousa: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
Make offers with power, not panic. Know the market, know the risk, and act with a plan.


















