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The Increasingly Common Escalation Clause

  • May 28th 2015

by Lark Turner

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The Increasingly Common Escalation Clause: Figure 1
1814 Ontario Place sold on May 22 for $174,500 over asking.

The last time realtor Jen Angotti wrote an offer without an escalation clause, it was for a house that wasn’t even on the market.

“Otherwise, every offer I’ve written this year has had an escalation clause and competed against multiple offers,” Angotti, who works with DCRE Residential, said.

In 2011, UrbanTurf featured escalation clauses as one of several “lesser-known” ways to make an enticing offer. Now, they’re ubiquitous at most price points in the region.

An escalation clause is an optional part of an offer to buy a home that states the buyer will increase their offer by a certain dollar amount over a higher bid — but usually no higher than a stated amount called the “escalation cap.” The clause is only triggered by a competing offer.

Angotti mostly works with buyers looking in the $650,000-$800,000 range for their first home — a fact that’s “a little bit crazy” on its own, she said. She’s watched the typical escalation cap move dramatically in the last year alone.

“Since last year, escalating $25,000 to $30,000 over is just not sufficient,” she said. “For houses in the $600,000-$700,000 range, you need to have an escalation cap that’s $50,000 over the offered price — at least.”

She said that’s particularly true in Cleveland Park and Capitol Hill. Buyers there are house-hunting in a market so competitive that some “just don’t know what they’re going to do.”

At higher price ranges in DC, where many buyers are competing with more cash on hand, escalation clauses get more strategic. The dollar increments that a buyer decides to escalate can play a role in whether or not they win a house, Compass’ Catherine Czuba told UrbanTurf. Escalation clauses may jump a price by $2,000 over a competing bid to win a house. But in the $1 million-plus price range, that may not be enough.

“Let’s say you have an offer that has a closing date that really works for a seller, and the next offer up only raises the deal by $2,000,” Czuba said. “The seller might take the lower offer. But if the clause escalated by $10,000, that may give a seller something to think about.”

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This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/the_increasingly_common_escalation_clause/9939.

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