What are “seller concessions”?

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You may have heard the term seller concessions in conjunction with a home purchase. What is generally meant by that term is when the seller uses part of the proceeds of the sale to pay some of the costs of the loan for the buyer. Generally speaking government loans allow up to 6% (of the loan amount) in seller concessions and conventional loans allow up to 3%.
Seller concessions are intended to pay closing costs and pre-paids, not down payment. If the seller wishes to contribute more than the allowed maximum in lender allowed concessions the simple solution is to lower the sales price. In return this lowers the loan amount and the seller can still cover the closing costs and pre-paids (taxes, insurance, HOA escrows) from the proceeds of the purchase. The proceeds, in case you are wondering, come from the money going to the seller for the purchase of the home.
Plain math example:
- Allowed seller concessions 6%
- Closing costs 1.5%
- Pre-paids 4.5%
- Sales price $200,000
- Loan amount $193,000
- 6% of $193,000 is $11,580
- Cash to seller decreased to $181,420 ($193,000 – $11,580)
- Cash from buyer $7,000 (down payment)
The seller cannot contribute (under most rules) to the down payment. Seller concessions can only go to closing costs and pre-paids. Check with your reputable lender and see what maximum concessions are and how they may be used for your particular loan program.
As a seller offering the max in concessions is a great way to attract buyers.
UPDATE: Taxes, insurance and HOA are NOT considered closing costs. Although they may be paid at the time of closing they are costs that would be required to be paid regardless of whether or not there is a loan. If you do not wish to escrow your taxes, insurance and HOA fees most lenders and most loan programs allow a “waiver of escrow” for a small increase in interest rate. The reason the interest rate increases is because loans without escrow accounts present a higher risk to the lender.
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