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Khánh Vy Nails
Khánh Vy Nails
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Thursday 11 June 2026 11:18:46 GMT
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duy.phong1992
Duy Phong :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰tt
2026-06-12 06:08:00
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besau536
Bé sâu 🐛 :
Đỉnh quá
2026-06-12 03:24:15
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cm.t09817
Nail xinh :
@Tú Nail:ttql❤️chéo fl ❤️
2026-06-12 00:03:49
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Replying to @iemichaels “What happens when you use the buyer’s contractor and then the buyer backs out?” Honestly, that’s a really fair question. And I think the answer is that it’s very situation-specific. It depends on the repair. It depends on the contractor. And it depends on the buyer. If I’m working with experienced buyers and contractors I know and trust, I’m much more comfortable with it. If a buyer insists on using someone that neither I nor the seller feels comfortable with, then we have another option. We simply agree that the repair will happen after closing. The seller still pays for it. The buyer still gets the repair completed by the company they wanted. But it happens after they own the house. That solves a lot of problems. Another thing I do? I don’t rush to complete major repairs when we’re still weeks away from closing. If closing is two or three weeks out, I usually wait until we’re much closer. Because let’s be honest. A deal isn’t done until everyone is sitting at the closing table signing papers and the seller has their money. And occasionally, things happen. Buyers lose jobs. Financing changes. Unexpected issues pop up. Sometimes the seller has no idea anything is wrong until the transaction falls apart. That’s real estate. Now, here’s the tough part. If you’ve already completed the repair and the deal dies, you probably needed to make that repair anyway. The next buyer is likely going to ask for it too. So while it can feel frustrating, it isn’t always wasted money. Most of the time, it helps the next transaction go more smoothly. At the end of the day, every situation is different. There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. That’s where experience comes in. Knowing when to repair now, when to wait, and when to simply credit the buyer after closing. I’m curious. When you sold your house and negotiated repairs, whose contractor did you use? Yours? The buyer’s? Or did you wait until the very end? #alishacollins #realestatebestie #casperwyoming #inspectionrepairs #homesellingtips
Replying to @iemichaels “What happens when you use the buyer’s contractor and then the buyer backs out?” Honestly, that’s a really fair question. And I think the answer is that it’s very situation-specific. It depends on the repair. It depends on the contractor. And it depends on the buyer. If I’m working with experienced buyers and contractors I know and trust, I’m much more comfortable with it. If a buyer insists on using someone that neither I nor the seller feels comfortable with, then we have another option. We simply agree that the repair will happen after closing. The seller still pays for it. The buyer still gets the repair completed by the company they wanted. But it happens after they own the house. That solves a lot of problems. Another thing I do? I don’t rush to complete major repairs when we’re still weeks away from closing. If closing is two or three weeks out, I usually wait until we’re much closer. Because let’s be honest. A deal isn’t done until everyone is sitting at the closing table signing papers and the seller has their money. And occasionally, things happen. Buyers lose jobs. Financing changes. Unexpected issues pop up. Sometimes the seller has no idea anything is wrong until the transaction falls apart. That’s real estate. Now, here’s the tough part. If you’ve already completed the repair and the deal dies, you probably needed to make that repair anyway. The next buyer is likely going to ask for it too. So while it can feel frustrating, it isn’t always wasted money. Most of the time, it helps the next transaction go more smoothly. At the end of the day, every situation is different. There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. That’s where experience comes in. Knowing when to repair now, when to wait, and when to simply credit the buyer after closing. I’m curious. When you sold your house and negotiated repairs, whose contractor did you use? Yours? The buyer’s? Or did you wait until the very end? #alishacollins #realestatebestie #casperwyoming #inspectionrepairs #homesellingtips

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