Good Faith Deposit - Real Estate Transactions
In a real estate transaction, a touchy issue is how much trust
the seller has in a buyer. The existence of a good faith deposit
helps put a seller at rest.
Good Faith Deposit
If you are selling your home, condominium or other real estate,
you should always require a buyer to make a good faith deposit.
The good faith deposit simply establishes that the buyer is
serious and, to some extent, has the financial capacity to
follow through on the purchase.
The amount of the good faith deposit is dependent upon the
agreed sale price of the real estate. Although percentages vary
from state to state, a cash deposit equal to three percent of
the sales price is typical. For instance, the deposit would be
$9,000 for home selling at a price of $300,000. As with most
transactions, this percentage is negotiable. I don't recommend
that you accept anything less than two percent.
Once the buyer and seller agree to the amount of the good faith
deposit, you have to figure out what to do with the deposit.
Importantly, the seller should not hold the deposit as doing so
could make the buyer very uncomfortable. Instead, the money
should be deposited with a third party and held "in trust."
Potential third parties include escrow and title insurance
companies as well as an attorney if your state requires their
involvement.
A good faith deposit acts like an insurance option for a seller.
Moving through escrow can take 30 to 60 days, during which the
property is off the market. The good faith deposit essentially
compensates the seller for this time in the event the buyer is
unable to follow through on the purchase of the property.
Depending on the laws in your state, a buyer who can't close
will lose the deposit. Typically, the only exception to this is
when the seller allows language indicating the deposit will be
returned if the buyer can't get a home loan. Of course,
including such language can open the seller up to repeated
frustration when bad credit buyers repeatedly fail to get
funding.
Good faith deposits are a fundamental part of a real estate
transaction. Buyers should expect to pay them and sellers should
demand them.