Negotiating from the Seller Side: What You Can Actually Control in Boston

ADAM UMINA
LICENSE BROKER #9569629Adam grew up in Newton MA, attending Newton South High School before earning a B.S...
LICENSE BROKER #9569629Adam grew up in Newton MA, attending Newton South High School before earning a B.S...
The moment offers start rolling in, the whole selling experience shifts dramatically.
Up until this point, you’ve been busy preparing. Cleaning, staging, photographing, and listing your home. There was a clear checklist to follow. But once those offers hit the table, things can suddenly feel fast-paced, chaotic, and out of your control.
Buyers are eager for answers. Agents are on the phone, trying to keep up. Deadlines start piling up. It’s easy to slip into a reactive mode where you find yourself saying yes too quickly, giving in to pressure, or second-guessing your decisions before you’ve had a chance to think them through.
But here’s something most sellers don’t hear enough: you still have control.
Not over everything, of course. There will always be unpredictable variables. However, at this stage, when negotiations kick off, you have more influence than you might realize. Understanding where your control lies can help alleviate some of the emotion and uncertainty that often accompany this process.
Let’s take a closer look at the parts of the negotiation that you can actually influence, and how to approach them with clarity, calm, and confidence.
You have more say in the timeline than you might think
One of the most common stress points for sellers in Boston is the closing date. Buyers often include their preferred timeline in the offer, but that doesn’t mean you have to accept it as-is.
If you’re also buying your next home, need extra time to coordinate your move, or just want a little breathing room, that’s all part of the conversation. You can ask for a later closing date, request flexibility, or even arrange for a post-closing possession (also known as a rent-back) if you need to stay in your home briefly after it sells.
What’s important is securing a closing date that aligns with your plans, whether that means buying your next place, scheduling movers, or wrapping things up at a pace that feels manageable. Most buyers are open to adjusting timelines; they just need clear communication upfront.
Inspection is a conversation, not a demand list
Once the home inspection takes place, things can get tense quickly. It’s common for buyers to return with a list of requested repairs, credits, or changes. Some of these requests are entirely reasonable, and some may be required based on Massachusetts regulations or the buyer’s lender requirements. But don’t worry; your agent can help you navigate all of these requirements.
Here’s what really matters: this is not a take-it-or-leave-it moment.
You’re allowed to counter. You can say no. You can offer a credit instead of completing the repair. You can ask for more information before agreeing to anything.
The key is to avoid feeling blindsided. If your agent recommends it, getting a pre-listing inspection or even just a walk-through with a contractor can help surface potential issues before the buyer finds them. That way, you can either address them proactively or prepare yourself for the conversation when it arises.
Contingencies are negotiable
Contingencies are conditions that need to be met for the deal to move forward. These can include financing, appraisals, or the buyer needing to sell their own home.
These are not set in stone. You’re not obligated to accept every contingency that appears in an offer.
Sometimes you might be looking at a higher offer with more risk, or a lower offer with stronger terms. That’s when it’s crucial to have guidance from your agent, someone who knows how to break it all down with you. Together, you can decide what you’re willing to accept and where to draw the line.
You can request shorter timelines, fewer conditions, or even choose a different offer altogether. It’s your decision.
Even the price can be revisited
Most sellers assume that once a price is agreed upon, it’s locked in. But sometimes, after an appraisal or inspection, the buyer will attempt to renegotiate.
This can feel frustrating and unfair. But you’re not stuck.
You can challenge a low appraisal, especially if the comps support a higher value. You can ask for documentation to support the buyer’s request. You can push back and let them decide whether they’re still committed.
There are times when adjusting the price makes sense to keep things on track. But you shouldn’t feel pressured into it without fully understanding your options.
You can’t control everything, but you can be ready for anything
No matter how solid the offer or how smooth the transaction seems at first, there will always be factors outside your control. A financing hiccup. A delay at the title company. A repair that takes longer than expected.
What you can do is prepare.
Work with your agent who knows how to set expectations early and keep everyone aligned. Be transparent about known issues with the home. Make sure you’re vetting buyers up front. And stay responsive when decisions need to be made.
When you’re grounded in what you can control, the surprises don’t throw you off course.
Negotiation doesn't have to feel like a battle
For most sellers, this is the part of the process where emotions can start to take over. There’s money on the line. Timing to consider. Expectations from everyone involved.
But negotiating doesn’t mean fighting. It means finding the terms that help you move forward with confidence.
You don’t have to figure all of this out on your own. Your agent will help you think through the details, communicate clearly, and stay steady when things start to speed up.
Because when you understand what’s fair to ask for and where you have real influence, the process becomes less reactive and a whole lot more manageable.
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