
Accepting an offer is an important milestone, but the home sale is not finished until closing and funding.
Many sellers ask what happens after they accept an offer on their home. The answer depends on the contract terms, option period, inspections, appraisal, buyer financing, title work, HOA requirements, repair negotiations, lender deadlines, and closing timeline.
This stage is commonly called contract-to-close.
Gary and Linda Bale with Bale Real Estate Group help homeowners throughout Allen, Aubrey, Celina, Coppell, Dallas, Frisco, McKinney, Park Cities, Plano, Preston Hollow, Princeton, Prosper, North Dallas, and the surrounding Greater Dallas area stay organized, understand deadlines, evaluate inspection issues, monitor buyer financing, and move toward closing with confidence.
Why Contract-to-Close Matters
Getting under contract is only part of the selling process.
After an offer is accepted, several important steps still need to occur before the transaction is complete.
These may include:
• Earnest money delivery
• Option fee delivery
• Buyer inspections
• Repair negotiations
• Appraisal
• Buyer financing approval
• Title review
• Survey review
• HOA document review, when applicable
• Seller disclosures and documents
• Closing statement review
• Final walk-through
• Closing and funding
A strong contract-to-close process helps reduce confusion, protect deadlines, and keep the transaction moving.
Step 1: Earnest Money and Option Fee
After the contract is signed, the buyer typically has deadlines to deliver earnest money and the option fee.
Earnest money demonstrates the buyer’s good faith and is generally held by the title company.
The option fee gives the buyer the right to terminate during the negotiated option period, subject to the terms of the contract.
Sellers should confirm that both items are delivered on time and properly documented.
Step 2: The Option Period
The option period is one of the most important stages of the contract.
During this time, the buyer may inspect the property, review its condition, evaluate possible repairs, and decide whether to continue with the purchase.
The buyer may:
• Complete a general home inspection
• Inspect the roof
• Inspect the pool, when applicable
• Review structural and mechanical systems
• Request repairs or credits
• Renegotiate certain terms
• Terminate when permitted by the contract
Seller preparation and experienced guidance matter during this stage.
Learn more about home inspections and repair negotiations for sellers.
Step 3: Repair Negotiations
After the inspection, the buyer may submit a repair request.
The seller is not automatically required to agree to every item.
Repair negotiations should be evaluated based on:
• Contract terms
• Inspection findings
• Seriousness of the concern
• Buyer expectations
• Current market conditions
• Seller priorities
• Estimated repair costs
• Closing timeline
• Risk of the buyer terminating
• Risk of returning to the market
Bale Real Estate Group helps sellers evaluate repair requests strategically rather than emotionally.
The goal is to protect the transaction while avoiding unnecessary concessions.
Step 4: Appraisal and Buyer Financing
When the buyer is using financing, the lender generally orders an appraisal.
The appraisal helps the lender determine whether the property supports the loan amount.
If the appraisal is lower than the contract price, the buyer and seller may need to renegotiate unless the buyer has agreed to cover some or all of the difference.
Buyer financing also needs to progress through:
• Income and asset verification
• Credit review
• Loan underwriting
• Property appraisal
• Final loan approval
• Closing disclosure requirements
• Funding preparation
Learn more about appraisals and buyer financing when selling your home.
Step 5: Title, Survey, and HOA Documents
The title company plays a major role after the contract is signed.
The title process may include reviewing:
• Ownership records
• Existing liens
• Mortgage payoffs
• Property taxes
• Title commitments
• Easements and restrictions
• Closing documents
• Funding requirements
Depending on the transaction, the buyer, lender, and title company may also review the property survey.
For homes in an HOA community, resale certificates, governing documents, fees, assessments, and association information may need to be ordered and reviewed.
Delays involving title, surveys, or HOA documents can affect the closing timeline, so organization matters.
Step 6: Seller Responsibilities Before Closing
Sellers may need to complete several items before closing.
These may include:
• Completing agreed repairs
• Providing repair receipts when required
• Maintaining the property’s condition
• Keeping utilities on through closing
• Continuing lawn and pool maintenance
• Coordinating move-out timing
• Reviewing closing documents
• Responding to title requests
• Preparing keys, remotes, and access items
• Removing personal property
• Leaving the home in the agreed condition
• Preparing for the buyer’s final walk-through
A clear checklist helps prevent last-minute problems.
Step 7: Maintain the Home Until Closing
The home should be maintained throughout the contract period.
Sellers should continue:
• Lawn care
• Pool service
• HVAC operation
• Cleaning
• Pest control when needed
• Utility service
• Property insurance
• Security and access control
Damage or a material change in the property’s condition before closing can create serious issues.
The home should remain in substantially the same condition as when the contract was signed, subject to negotiated repairs and normal wear.
Step 8: Final Walk-Through
Before closing, the buyer usually completes a final walk-through.
The purpose is to confirm that:
• The property remains in the agreed condition
• Negotiated repairs were completed
• Included items remain in the home
• Personal property has been removed as agreed
• No material damage has occurred
• The home is ready for possession
Sellers should make sure the property is clean, accessible, secure, and prepared for the buyer’s review.
Step 9: Closing and Funding
Closing is when the seller signs the required documents and the buyer completes the purchase and loan paperwork.
In Texas, signing documents does not always mean the transaction is complete.
The sale is generally complete after the title company receives the required funds, confirms funding, and authorizes the release of ownership and keys according to the contract terms.
The final stage should be coordinated carefully among:
• The title company
• The buyer’s lender
• The buyer’s agent
• The seller’s agent
• The buyer
• The seller
What Can Delay Closing?
Several issues can delay or threaten closing.
Common causes include:
• Inspection disputes
• Incomplete repairs
• Low appraisal
• Buyer financing delays
• Missing lender documents
• Title problems
• Survey concerns
• HOA-document delays
• Insurance issues
• Incomplete seller paperwork
• Final walk-through concerns
• Funding delays
Not every delay can be avoided, but strong communication and early preparation can reduce the risk.
Why Communication Matters After Accepting an Offer
The contract-to-close period can move quickly.
Deadlines matter, and even small delays can create unnecessary stress.
Strong communication helps sellers understand:
• What has been completed
• What remains pending
• Which deadlines are approaching
• Which documents are needed
• What the buyer is requesting
• Whether financing is progressing
• Whether title has identified concerns
• Whether the appraisal has been completed
• When closing and funding are expected
Gary and Linda Bale help sellers stay informed from accepted offer through closing so they are not left guessing.
How Preparation Before Listing Helps Contract-to-Close
A smoother contract-to-close process often begins before the property is listed.
Pre-listing preparation can help reduce buyer concerns, inspection surprises, and negotiation stress.
Helpful preparation may include:
• A Pre-Listing Appointment
• Home value review
• Market-based pricing strategy
• Cleaning and decluttering
• Repair review
• Professional photography preparation
• Pre-listing inspection when appropriate
• The Certified Pre-Owned Home Listing Program
Learn more about what to do before listing your home for sale.
Featured Communities and Areas We Serve
Bale Real Estate Group helps homeowners prepare, price, market, negotiate, and close home sales throughout Allen, Aubrey, Celina, Coppell, Dallas, Frisco, McKinney, Park Cities, Plano, Preston Hollow, Princeton, Prosper, North Dallas, and the surrounding Greater Dallas area.
The communities below are featured on our website because of our experience, local knowledge, and ongoing marketing in these areas. However, our seller services are not limited to these neighborhoods. We help homeowners throughout the Greater Dallas area from preparation and pricing through closing and funding.
Featured Frisco Communities
• Chapel Creek
• Country Club Ridge at The Trails
• Custer Creek Farms
• Edgestone at Legacy
• Griffin Parc
• Heather Ridge Estates
• Newman Village
• Park Place Estates
• Phillips Creek Ranch
• Richwoods
• Shaddock Creek Estates
• Starwood
• Stonebriar
• The Canals at Grand Park
• The Fairways
• The Hills of Kingswood
• Villages of Stonebriar Park
Featured Plano Communities
• Avignon Windhaven
• Cliffs of Gleneagles
• Crystal Creek
• Deerfield
• Kings Gate
• Lakeside on Preston
• Normandy Estates
• Shoal Creek
• Wentworth Estates
• Willow Bend
• Willow Bend Polo Estates
• Windrose Tower
Additional Greater Dallas Areas We Support
• Allen
• Aubrey
• Celina
• Coppell
• Dallas
• McKinney
• Park Cities
• Princeton
• Prosper
Featured Dallas and North Dallas Communities
Helpful Videos for Sellers
Elevating the Luxury Home-Selling Experience
Certified Pre-Owned Home Listing Program
Why Are So Many People Moving to Frisco, Texas?
Why Are So Many People Moving to Plano, Texas?
Frequently Asked Questions About Contract-to-Close
What happens after I accept an offer on my home?
After accepting an offer, the buyer typically delivers earnest money and the option fee, completes inspections, works through financing and appraisal, reviews title and HOA documents when applicable, completes a final walk-through, and proceeds to closing and funding.
Is the home sold once I accept an offer?
No. The home is under contract, but the sale is not complete until all contract requirements are satisfied and the transaction closes and funds.
What is the option period?
The option period is a negotiated period during which the buyer may inspect the home, request repairs, renegotiate certain terms, or terminate when permitted by the contract.
Does the seller have to agree to every repair request?
No. Repair requests are negotiable. The seller should evaluate the contract, inspection findings, market conditions, costs, buyer strength, and risk of termination before responding.
What happens if the appraisal is low?
The buyer and seller may need to renegotiate, the buyer may bring additional cash, the seller may reduce the price, or the transaction may be affected depending on the financing addendum and contract terms.
What can delay closing?
Closing may be delayed by inspection disputes, appraisal issues, financing problems, title concerns, survey issues, HOA-document delays, incomplete repairs, missing paperwork, or funding delays.
Should utilities stay on until closing?
Yes, in most cases. Utilities should remain on through closing so inspections, repairs, the final walk-through, and lender requirements can be completed.
When should the seller release the keys?
Keys should be released according to the contract and title company instructions, generally after funding unless a different possession arrangement has been negotiated.
How can sellers make contract-to-close smoother?
Sellers can help by preparing before listing, responding quickly, keeping the home maintained, completing agreed repairs, monitoring deadlines, keeping utilities on, and working with a Realtor who manages the process carefully.
Ready for a Smoother Selling Process?
If you are considering selling in Allen, Aubrey, Celina, Coppell, Dallas, Frisco, McKinney, Park Cities, Plano, Preston Hollow, Princeton, Prosper, North Dallas, or another Greater Dallas community, the best place to start is with a Pre-Listing Appointment.
You do not need to live in one of our featured communities to work with Bale Real Estate Group. We help sellers throughout the Greater Dallas area understand their home’s value, prepare for the market, develop the right pricing strategy, evaluate offers, manage inspections and financing, and move from contract to closing with clear communication.
There is no pressure. The goal is to help you understand your home’s value, preparation options, pricing strategy, marketing plan, offer terms, and what to expect from listing through closing.
Learn more about Gary and Linda Bale, read our client testimonials, and see why homeowners hire Bale Real Estate Group to sell their homes.

