What a Contingency Is

A contingency is an "if/then" clause in a purchase agreement. It says: "If this condition is met (or not met), then one of the following happens: I back out, I renegotiate, or I proceed as-is."

For example: "Inspection contingency: If the home inspection reveals defects exceeding $5,000, the buyer may terminate the agreement and receive their earnest money back." That's a contingency. It protects you if something unexpected comes up.

Without contingencies, a real estate deal would be all-or-nothing from day one. You'd make an offer, the seller would accept, and you'd be locked in regardless of what you find out later. Contingencies create a window where you can investigate the property, verify the financing, and confirm the appraisal before you're truly committed.

Key point: Contingencies are your protection. Every contingency you remove or don't include is a risk you're taking. Don't remove contingencies casually or because an agent says it's "standard in a competitive market." In a competitive market, it may be standard—but it's also a risk.

The Four Main Contingencies

1. Inspection Contingency

What it does: Gives you the right to have a professional home inspector examine the property for structural, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and other defects. If the inspection reveals significant problems, you can ask the seller to repair them, ask for a credit, or back out without penalty.

Typical timeline: 7–10 days from acceptance. Some markets allow up to 14 days, depending on market conditions and negotiation.

How it works: You hire an inspector (costs $400–$800). They spend 2–3 hours examining everything. They produce a report listing defects. If the report is bad, you have options: (1) ask the seller to fix the problems, (2) ask for a credit toward repairs, (3) terminate the deal. The seller can refuse to repair or credit, in which case you have a choice: proceed as-is or back out.

What to watch: Some agreements have a threshold—meaning you can only terminate if defects exceed a certain amount (e.g., $5,000). If the agreement says "buyer may terminate for any defect," that's strong. If it says "buyer may terminate only for structural defects," that's weaker. Cosmetic issues and minor repairs won't get you out.

California note: Residential property disclosure laws require sellers to disclose known material defects. If a defect was disclosed and you're still offering, you can't later back out based on that defect. So read the seller's disclosures carefully before you make an offer.

2. Financing Contingency

What it does: Allows you to back out if you can't get a loan for the agreed-upon amount and terms. Without this contingency, if your lender denies your loan, you lose your earnest money and you can be sued for specific performance (the seller can force you to close somehow).

Typical timeline: 17–21 days from acceptance. This is the amount of time you need to get a pre-approval, pass underwriting, and get a clear-to-close from the lender.

How it works: You submit your loan application. The lender reviews it, orders an appraisal, and does an underwriting review. If everything is good, they issue a clear-to-close commitment. If something is wrong—credit issue, debt-to-income problem, missing documentation—they may deny the loan or request conditions you can't meet. If the loan is denied and you have a financing contingency, you can back out and keep your earnest money.

What to watch: The exact language matters. Some agreements say "buyer may terminate if financing is unavailable" (strong). Others say "buyer may terminate only if financing is denied due to the property" (weak—if the lender denies because of your credit, you're stuck). The strongest contingency allows you to terminate if you don't get a firm loan commitment for the full amount, at the terms agreed, by the deadline.

California note: There's no state-specific wrinkle on financing contingencies, but be aware that purchase agreements sometimes include a waiver of the financing contingency if the appraisal comes in at or above the purchase price. If the appraisal is lower, your lender won't fund, and the contingency allows you to renegotiate or walk.

3. Appraisal Contingency

What it does: Protects you if the home appraises for less than the purchase price. Without this contingency, if the appraisal is low, you still have to buy at the agreed price (or walk away and lose your earnest money).

Typical timeline: Usually falls within the financing contingency timeline (10–21 days).

How it works: Your lender orders an appraisal. The appraiser inspects the home and compares it to similar homes sold recently (comps). They produce an appraisal report. If the appraised value is less than your purchase price, the lender won't lend on the higher amount. Your options: (1) come up with more cash to make up the difference, (2) ask the seller to reduce the price, (3) back out. If you have an appraisal contingency and the appraisal is low, you can terminate without penalty.

What to watch: Some agreements don't have a separate appraisal contingency—they lump it into the financing contingency. If the appraisal is low and you have only a financing contingency, you might have a harder time proving you can back out, because the lender might have offered an alternative (like you bringing more cash). Separate appraisal contingencies are cleaner. Also: some agreements allow the seller to "cure" a low appraisal by reducing the price to match the appraised value. If the seller agrees to reduce the price, you can't invoke the contingency anymore.

California note: Appraisal disputes are common in California's hot markets. If the appraiser's value is lower than the purchase price, it's often because the appraiser is being conservative or the market has shifted rapidly. Don't be surprised if the seller challenges the appraisal or refuses to reduce the price. Have an appraisal contingency, and be prepared to renegotiate or walk.

4. Sale of Prior Home Contingency

What it does: Allows you to back out if your current home hasn't sold by a certain date, so you can't access your equity to fund the down payment and closing costs.

Typical timeline: Varies widely, but often 30–60 days. It's negotiated based on your current home's market situation.

How it works: You're selling Home A and buying Home B. To afford Home B, you need the equity from Home A. You make an offer on Home B, contingent on Home A selling by a certain date. If Home A doesn't sell by that date, you can back out of Home B without penalty.

What to watch: Most sellers hate this contingency. If they accept it at all, they'll demand a short timeline (30 days) and a clause that says "if a better offer comes in, you have 72 hours to remove the contingency or I'm taking the other offer." This puts enormous pressure on you to sell Home A quickly. Only use this if absolutely necessary, and only in a market where your Home A is likely to sell quickly.

California note: Bridge loans are common in California as an alternative to this contingency. A bridge loan lets you borrow against your Home A's equity to buy Home B without waiting for the sale. You then repay the bridge loan when Home A sells. This is more expensive than a contingency (you pay interest on the bridge loan) but it removes the contingency, making your offer more attractive. Talk to a lender about whether a bridge loan makes sense for you.

Common Contingency Timelines

Here's a typical contingency calendar for a California transaction:

If any of these deadlines are missed by you (you don't do the inspection in time, you don't submit loan docs), the contingency may be waived. If the deadline is missed by the seller or lender (seller doesn't provide appraisal documents, lender doesn't underwrite in time), you may have grounds to extend the contingency period.

Watch out: Missing a contingency deadline means waiving that contingency. If your inspection contingency expires on Day 10 and you haven't scheduled an inspection yet, you've lost the protection. Mark your calendar immediately when an offer is accepted, and build in time cushions. Don't rely on your agent to track deadlines—do it yourself.

Removing Contingencies (And Why It's Risky)

The Pressure

In a competitive market, sellers (or seller's agents) will push back on contingencies. They'll say: "We have three other offers without inspection contingencies. You have to remove it to be competitive." Or: "Most buyers are offering all-cash, no contingencies. If you want this home, you need to commit fully."

This pressure is real. In hot markets, contingencies can make your offer weaker. But removing contingencies is removing your protection. Here's why you should think carefully before you do it:

No Inspection Contingency = You Own the Problems

You make an offer without an inspection contingency. The offer is accepted. You close two weeks later. A month into owning the home, you discover the foundation has cracks and the roof will need replacing in a few years. You own both problems now. The seller is off the hook. You're looking at $50,000+ in repairs.

If you'd had an inspection contingency, you would have found these issues during the inspection period, and you could have asked the seller to fix them, asked for a credit, or backed out entirely. Without it, you're self-insuring against all defects.

No Financing Contingency = You're Committed Even If the Loan Falls Apart

You make an offer without a financing contingency. The offer is accepted. You're confident about the loan. Two weeks later, your lender pulls your credit again and sees a new collection account (you didn't know about it). They deny the loan. You don't have a financing contingency. You either need to find another lender (unlikely if the first one denied you), come up with cash instead, or face specific performance (the seller sues you for breach and tries to force the sale or claim damages).

No Appraisal Contingency = You Make Up the Difference

You offer $600,000 for a home. The appraisal comes in at $550,000. Without an appraisal contingency, you have two choices: bring an extra $50,000 in cash to make up the difference, or back out and lose your earnest money. The seller has no incentive to reduce the price.

When Removing Contingencies Makes Sense

There are rare cases where it makes sense to remove contingencies:

Renegotiating If a Contingency Triggers

Your inspection contingency triggers (you find problems), or your appraisal contingency triggers (appraisal is low). Now what?

You have leverage. The seller wants the deal to close (they've likely taken the home off the market, rejected other offers, and put their own contingencies on pending). If a significant issue comes up, you can renegotiate:

The seller can refuse all three, in which case you invoke the contingency and back out. But in practice, most sellers will negotiate. They don't want the deal to blow up.

California-Specific Contingency Notes

Seller Disclosure Laws

California law requires sellers to disclose known defects. They do this via a Transfer Disclosure Statement (TDS). You get this document early in the transaction. If a defect is listed on the TDS and you proceed with your offer, you can't later claim you didn't know about it. Read the TDS carefully before you make an offer or finalize the inspection contingency.

HOA Contingencies

If you're buying a condo or home in an HOA, California law gives you a 7-day right to review HOA documents (CC&Rs, bylaws, financial statements, etc.). After 7 days, the contingency is waived unless there's a serious issue. Most purchase agreements include a separate HOA contingency on top of the inspection contingency. Don't waive it lightly.

Mello-Roos Contingency

Some California communities have special assessment districts (Mello-Roos) that levy extra property taxes. If the home you're buying is in a Mello-Roos district and you didn't know it (or didn't know the amount), you should have a contingency allowing you to back out if the assessment is significantly higher than you expected. These can add $100–$500+ per month to your property tax bill.

The Bottom Line on Contingencies

Contingencies are your safety net. They give you time to investigate, verify financing, and confirm value before you're locked in. Removing them saves you from losing a deal to a competing offer, but it puts you at significant risk. In a competitive market, you may need to remove one or two contingencies to be competitive. But removing all of them is reckless unless you're paying all-cash and have done your homework. Know what you're giving up, and only give up what you can truly afford to lose.

Bottom line: A good offer has strong contingencies with clear deadlines and escape routes. A desperate offer has no contingencies. Be competitive, but don't be desperate. If you lose a bidding war because you kept your contingencies, that's usually the market telling you the home was overpriced anyway.

Questions to Ask Your Agent About Contingencies

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