It is frustrating, but it is not the end of the road. Probate sales can feel particularly exposed when a buyer withdraws because the estate may have been carrying costs and building expectations for months. The best…
It is frustrating, but it is not the end of the road. Probate sales can feel particularly exposed when a buyer withdraws because the estate may have been carrying costs and building expectations for months.
The best response is to review the reason carefully. Was it price? Survey findings? Delay? Mortgageability? Poor communication? Once you know that, the next strategy becomes clearer.
Sometimes a relaunch is straightforward. Sometimes the lesson is that pricing, paperwork or presentation need adjusting before going back to market.
Related reading
- How to sell a probate property: a clear step-by-step guide for executors and familiesHow to sell a probate property: a clear step-by-step guide for executors and families/probate-guides/how-to-sell-a-probate-property/
- Can you market and accept offers on a probate property before probate is granted?Can you market and accept offers on a probate property before probate is granted?/probate-guides/marketing-a-probate-property-before-probate-is-granted/
- A realistic probate property timeline: where delays usually happen, and which ones you can actually controlA realistic probate property timeline: where delays usually happen, and which ones you can actually control/probate-guides/probate-property-timeline/
- What is probate — and do I need it?What is probate — and do I need it?/knowledge-hub/what-is-probate-and-do-you-need-it/
- How long does probate take?How long does probate take?/knowledge-hub/how-long-does-probate-take/
- Do I need a solicitor?Do I need a solicitor?/knowledge-hub/do-you-need-a-probate-solicitor/
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