Working Paper

Do Real Estate Contingency Clauses Affect Selling Price and Time-on-the-Market?

Bruce L. Gordon, Michael J. Seiler, Ralph Siebert, Daniel T. Winkler
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9947

Real estate contracts often contain a wide variety of contingency clauses. These third-party approvals are often outside the seller’s control and can lengthen the-time-on-the-market (TOM) and reduce the surety of close. To compensate for these undesirable attributes, buyers typically offer higher purchase prices. This study examines the factors affecting contract contingencies and the effect of contract contingencies on TOM and selling price. Using transactions from Miami-Dade County in south Florida, we find that the presence of contingency clauses is significantly related to market conditions, TOM, list price premiums, distressed transactions, brokerage characteristics, home occupancy status, size, and age. Contingency clauses have differential effects on price premia that range from -3.7% to +2.2%. However, when considering TOM, contingency clauses have significant price premia ranging from -3.3% to +2.4%.

CESifo Category
Industrial Organisation
Keywords: contingency clauses, price premia, real estate contracts, time-on-the-market, selling price
JEL Classification: R300, R310, L850