I feel I was initially misinformed about getting my earnest money back after an inspection. Tonight, the buyer's agent says I would only get the earnest money back if the inspection yields problems that would cause harm to occupants of the house. The seller has $900 available to fix any problems. What I'm thinking is that's NOT a whole lot to have available. I'd rather tell him to keep his $900 and take that off the purchase price so I don't have to finance that money. This is the same reason I'm paying closing. I'd rather pay for it upfront than finance it for 30 years and pay ridiculous amounts of interest. I feel a little misled at this point and I'd like someone to shed some light on this. The buyer's agent, even when questioned at length, did a terribly poor job with her explanation. Please help!
2007-03-01
11:24:30
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6 answers
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asked by
Gemma
5
in
Business & Finance
➔ Renting & Real Estate