What Are Seller Concessions?
Seller concessions are funds that a property seller agrees to contribute toward the buyers transaction costs at closing. Rather than the buyer paying every closing expense out of pocket, the seller covers a portion (or sometimes all), of those costs as part of the negotiated purchase agreement. This arrangement reduces the buyers total cash-to-close, which is the amount of money needed on settlement day beyond the down payment.
Seller concessions are sometimes called seller contributions, seller credits, or interested party contributions (the term used by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac). Regardless of the label, they all describe the same mechanism: the seller pays certain buyer expenses, and that amount is deducted from the sellers net proceeds at closing.
It is important to understand that seller concessions are not gifts of equity and they are not the same as a price reduction. The sale price remains at the agreed-upon amount, and the concession is handled as a separate credit on the settlement statement. Lenders, appraisers, and government agencies all scrutinize concessions to ensure the transaction remains at fair market value.
Maximum Seller Concession Limits by Loan Type
Every major mortgage program sets a cap on how much the seller can contribute. These limits exist to prevent artificially inflated sale prices and to protect lenders from financing more than a property is actually worth. The caps are expressed as a percentage of the lesser of the sale price or the appraised value.
- Conventional loans (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac): The limit depends on the buyers down payment and occupancy type. For a primary residence or second home with less than 10% down, the seller may contribute up to 3% of the sale price. With 10% to 25% down, the cap rises to 6%. With more than 25% down, the maximum is 9%. For investment properties, the cap is 2% regardless of down payment.
- FHA loans: The Federal Housing Administration allows seller concessions of up to 6% of the sale price. This applies regardless of the buyers down payment amount, making FHA loans relatively generous in this regard.
- VA loans: The Department of Veterans Affairs distinguishes between normal closing costs and what it calls concessions. The seller can pay all of the buyers normal closing costs (origination fees, title insurance, recording fees, and similar charges) without limit. On top of that, the Per VA guidelines (VA Lenders Handbook, Chapter 8), the seller may provide up to 4% of the property’s reasonable value or sale price (whichever is less) in additional concessions covering prepaid items, the VA funding fee, and discount points..
- USDA loans: The U.S. Department of Agriculture allows seller concessions of up to 6% of the sale price. Like FHA, this limit applies uniformly regardless of down payment, though USDA loans typically require no down payment at all.
These percentage caps are applied to the lower of the purchase price or the appraised value. If the appraisal comes in below the contract price, the concession limit is calculated from the appraised value, which could reduce the allowable concession amount.
What Seller Concessions Can Cover
Seller concessions can be applied to a wide range of buyer expenses associated with obtaining a mortgage and completing the purchase. Understanding which costs are eligible helps buyers and their agents structure concession requests effectively.
- Loan origination fees: The lenders charge for processing and underwriting the mortgage application.
- Discount points: Prepaid interest paid at closing to reduce the mortgage interest rate. One point equals 1% of the loan amount and typically lowers the rate by 0.25%.
- Title insurance: Both the lenders title policy (required) and the owners title policy (optional but recommended) can be covered.
- Appraisal and inspection fees: The cost of the property appraisal required by the lender, and in some cases, inspection-related charges.
- Recording fees and transfer taxes: Government charges for recording the deed and mortgage documents.
- Prepaid items: Costs that must be paid in advance, including homeowners insurance premiums, property taxes, and per-diem mortgage interest from the closing date to the end of the month.
- Escrow reserves: Initial deposits into the escrow account for future property tax and insurance payments.
- Survey fees: The cost of a property survey, if required by the lender or local practice.
What Seller Concessions Cannot Cover
While seller concessions are flexible, there are firm boundaries on what they can and cannot fund. These restrictions are set by lenders and the agencies that back the loans.
- Down payment: Seller concessions cannot be used to fund any portion of the buyers down payment. The down payment must come from the buyers own funds, gift funds from an eligible donor, or an approved down payment assistance program. Using seller funds for the down payment would be considered a prohibited inducement to purchase.
- Cash back to the buyer: The seller cannot provide cash directly to the buyer through the transaction. If the concession amount exceeds the buyers actual closing costs, the excess is typically forfeited, it does not go into the buyers pocket.
- Debt payoff: Seller concessions generally cannot be used to pay off the buyers existing debts such as credit cards, student loans, or car payments.
- Home furnishings or personal property: Concessions are limited to transaction-related costs. Agreements for the seller to include furniture, appliances beyond those considered fixtures, or other personal property must be handled separately and are not part of the mortgage transaction.
Because excess concessions are lost, buyers should work closely with their loan officer to calculate the exact closing cost total before requesting a specific concession amount. Requesting more than your actual costs provides no benefit.
How to Negotiate Seller Concessions
The success of a concession request depends heavily on local market conditions, the sellers motivation, and how the request is structured within the overall offer.
In a buyers market (more homes for sale than active buyers), sellers are often willing to offer concessions to attract offers and close deals faster. In these conditions, buyers may be able to request the full allowable concession amount without significantly weakening their offer. Some sellers even advertise concession willingness in their listing to attract more interest.
In a sellers market (more buyers than available homes), requesting concessions can put a buyer at a competitive disadvantage. When multiple offers are expected, a concession request effectively reduces the sellers net proceeds, making the offer less attractive compared to a clean offer at the same price. In highly competitive situations, buyers may choose to forgo concession requests entirely.
In a balanced market, concessions are a standard negotiating tool. Buyers can often secure partial concessions, especially if the property has been on the market for an extended period or if the inspection reveals issues that need addressing.
Common negotiation strategies include:
- Offering a slightly higher purchase price to offset the concession, keeping the sellers net proceeds neutral
- Requesting concessions during the inspection contingency period as part of repair negotiations
- Limiting the concession request to a specific dollar amount rather than a percentage, which can feel less aggressive to the seller
- Including an escalation clause with the concession request to remain competitive in multiple-offer situations
Impact on Appraisal and Sale Price
One of the most important considerations with seller concessions is their relationship to the propertys appraised value. When a buyer offers a higher purchase price to offset a concession, the property must still appraise at or above the contract price for the deal to proceed as written.
Appraisers are trained to evaluate seller concessions as part of their analysis. When reviewing comparable sales, appraisers adjust for concessions found in those transactions. If a comparable property sold for $300,000 with $10,000 in seller concessions, the appraiser may treat the effective sale price as $290,000 for comparison purposes.
The risk of price inflation is real. If a home is worth $300,000 and the buyer offers $310,000 with a $10,000 concession request, the appraisal would need to support a $310,000 value. If it does not, the buyer faces several options:
- Make up the difference between the appraised value and the contract price in cash
- Renegotiate the purchase price down to the appraised value
- Reduce or eliminate the concession request
- Walk away from the deal if an appraisal contingency is in place
For this reason, inflating the price to accommodate concessions works best when the original offer is already below the likely appraised value, giving the property room to appraise at the higher figure.
Seller Concessions vs. Price Reduction
Buyers sometimes face a choice between requesting a seller concession and simply asking for a lower purchase price. While both reduce the buyers overall cost, they work differently and each has situations where it makes more sense.
A seller concession is better when:
- The buyer is short on cash for closing costs but can handle the monthly payment at the higher price
- The buyer wants to use concession funds to buy down the interest rate with discount points, reducing the long-term cost of the loan
- The property will appraise at or above the agreed-upon price, meaning the higher figure is supported by comparable sales
- The buyer is using an FHA or VA loan where closing costs cannot come from the seller through other mechanisms
A price reduction is better when:
- The buyer has sufficient cash for closing costs and prefers a lower loan amount and lower monthly payment
- The property is at risk of appraising low, and a lower contract price reduces that risk
- The buyer wants to reduce the loan-to-value ratio, potentially eliminating the need for private mortgage insurance sooner
- The savings from a lower purchase price over the life of the loan outweigh the immediate benefit of reduced cash-to-close
In dollar terms, a $10,000 price reduction on a 30-year loan at 7% interest saves the buyer approximately $23,950 in total payments over the life of the loan. A $10,000 seller concession applied to closing costs saves the buyer exactly $10,000 at closing but does not reduce the long-term cost of the mortgage. However, if that $10,000 concession is used to buy discount points and reduce the rate, the long-term savings could exceed those of the price reduction.
Tax Implications for Buyers and Sellers
Seller concessions have distinct tax consequences for each party in the transaction, and understanding these implications helps both sides make informed decisions.
For buyers: Seller concessions are not considered taxable income. The IRS views them as a reduction in the propertys cost basis rather than as income to the buyer. This means the buyers adjusted cost basis is the purchase price minus the seller concessions received. For example, if a buyer purchases a home for $300,000 with $12,000 in seller concessions, the adjusted cost basis is $288,000. This lower basis could result in a slightly higher capital gains tax liability when the property is eventually sold, though the primary residence exclusion ($250,000 for single filers, $500,000 for married couples) shelters most homeowners from capital gains taxes.
For sellers: Seller concessions reduce the sellers net proceeds from the sale, which effectively reduces their taxable gain. If a seller has a gain on the sale that exceeds the primary residence exclusion, paying concessions lowers that gain dollar for dollar. The concessions are treated as a selling expense, similar to real estate commissions and other costs of sale.
Regarding deductibility of specific items paid through concessions: if the seller pays discount points on behalf of the buyer, the buyer may be able to deduct those points as mortgage interest on their tax return, subject to IRS rules for point deductions. Prepaid property taxes paid through concessions may also be deductible for the buyer in the year they are paid. Buyers should consult a tax professional to determine which concession-covered expenses may be deductible in their specific situation.
Working with Your Lender on Concessions
Coordination with your mortgage lender is essential when seller concessions are part of the transaction. The lender must be aware of all concessions, as they are disclosed on the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure.
Key steps to take with your lender:
- Get a detailed closing cost estimate early: Before making an offer, ask your loan officer for an itemized estimate of all closing costs, prepaid items, and escrow reserves. This total tells you the maximum useful concession amount.
- Confirm the concession limit for your loan program: Your lender will verify the maximum allowable concession based on your loan type, down payment percentage, and occupancy status.
- Discuss using concessions for discount points: If your closing costs are low relative to the concession limit, your lender can calculate whether buying discount points with the remaining concession funds makes financial sense based on your expected holding period.
- Understand how concessions appear on your Closing Disclosure: The concession will appear as a credit to the buyer on the settlement statement, reducing the amount of cash needed at closing.
Lenders are required to report all interested party contributions to the agencies backing the loan. Undisclosed concessions (including side agreements, cash payments outside of closing, or inflated personal property values), are considered mortgage fraud and can result in serious legal consequences for all parties involved.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Navigating seller concessions involves several potential pitfalls that can delay closing or cost the buyer money:
- Requesting more than your actual closing costs: Any concession amount exceeding your real costs is simply lost. It does not come back to you as cash. Calculate your costs precisely before setting the concession amount.
- Ignoring the appraisal risk of price inflation: Raising the purchase price to accommodate concessions only works if the home appraises at the higher value. Research recent comparable sales before assuming the inflated price will be supported.
- Forgetting about the concession cap: If you are putting less than 10% down on a conventional loan, your concession limit is just 3% of the sale price. On a $300,000 home, that is only $9,000, which may not cover all closing costs in areas with high transfer taxes.
- Not accounting for concessions when comparing offers: Sellers should evaluate offers based on net proceeds after all concessions, not on the headline purchase price alone.
- Making side agreements: Any arrangement between buyer and seller involving payments outside of the formal closing process is prohibited and constitutes mortgage fraud. All concessions must be disclosed in the purchase contract and on the closing documents.