Seller Guide

Sell Your Home in Austin: What Really Happens After You Go Under Contract

Austin couple celebrating an accepted offer on their home
The moment it becomes real — the offer is accepted

When you sell your home in Austin, the hardest part isn't the listing, the staging, or even the showings. It's the 30-to-45-day stretch between accepting an offer and handing over the keys. The phone finally stops buzzing — and a different feeling sets in. Relief, yes. But also a quiet unease. Because being under contract in Texas isn't the finish line. It's a waiting room with a gold-trimmed door at the end, and your job is to keep your composure until it opens.

If you just accepted an offer to sell your home in Austin, take a breath. You've earned it. The 6 a.m. "can we see it at 7?" texts — that chapter is closing. But before you start mentally spending the proceeds or packing the last box in the garage, there's a road map you need to understand. Not just the contract milestones, but the emotional ones too. Because nobody warns you that going under contract is when the roller coaster actually starts.

The First 72 Hours After You Sell Your Home in Austin: Euphoria, Then the Wait

The first day or two after you accept an offer feels incredible. You tell your family. You post a subtle something to Instagram. You start pricing moving companies and daydreaming about what's next. Then, almost on schedule, the doubt creeps in.

What if the buyer backs out? What if the inspection is ugly? What if the appraisal comes in low?

This is normal. Every Austin seller feels it. The transition from "my house is for sale" to "my house is sold, sort of" is genuinely strange. Legally, you're committed. Practically, the buyer still has several ways to walk. And the contract you just signed is about to start ticking through a series of checkpoints — each one a small moment of held breath.

Going under contract isn't closure. It's a waiting room with a gold-trimmed door at the end — and your job is to keep your composure until it opens.

The Texas Option Period: The Buyer's Window, Your Anxious Week

In Texas, nearly every residential contract includes an option period — a negotiated window, typically 5 to 10 days, during which the buyer pays a small option fee for the unrestricted right to terminate the contract for any reason. No justification required.

This is the single most important concept to understand when you sell your home in Austin. During the option period, the buyer holds most of the cards. They will typically:

  • Schedule the home inspection (usually within the first 3 to 5 days)
  • Potentially order additional specialty inspections — foundation, HVAC, pool, septic, sewer scope, termite
  • Review the inspection report with their agent
  • Decide whether to accept the home as-is, request repairs or credits, or terminate

As the seller, you wait. You keep the house showing-ready for a few more days in case inspectors need re-entry. You resist the urge to text your agent every four hours asking if they've heard anything. And when the amendment comes through with repair requests, you try not to take it personally — even though every line item feels like a critique of the home you've lived in and loved.

The Inspection Report: What Austin Buyers Are Actually Looking At

Here's something we tell every buyer we represent, and Austin sellers benefit from understanding it too: an inspection isn't about finding a perfect home. It's about being prepared and making informed decisions. A thoughtful buyer writes their offer with your home's age and condition in mind. A 25-year-old Austin home with dated finishes and an original roof will have findings — that's expected. The question isn't whether the report has findings. The question is whether any of those findings represent undisclosed, material issues that affect the safety or function of the home.

That framing matters enormously for sellers, because it helps you separate the repair requests that carry weight from the ones that don't.

What's Typically Negotiable vs. What's Not

Buyers can reasonably ask for: replacement of major systems near end of life (HVAC, water heater), repairs for active leaks or drainage problems, safety issues like exposed wiring or gas leaks, clear structural concerns, and problems not disclosed in your Seller's Disclosure Notice.

Items typically not worth renegotiating: cosmetic issues (paint, aging finishes, flooring wear), minor code changes that occurred after the home was built, items already disclosed in your Seller's Disclosure, and visible issues the buyer saw during the showing. If the buyer saw a sloped driveway or peeling paint before making an offer, that's considered factored into the price.

Your Seller's Disclosure Notice is your strongest defense here. Anything you transparently disclosed — a patched roof, an original HVAC, past foundation work — is generally not a legitimate renegotiation lever. If the inspection report simply confirms what you already told the buyer, a thoughtful buyer will recognize it was factored into their offer. For a deeper look at how buyers and their agents evaluate inspection reports, see our guide on what to expect, negotiate, and accept during an inspection.

Negotiating Repairs Without Losing the Deal

This is where deals quietly die when you sell your home in Austin — and where experienced representation earns its keep. The buyer submits an amendment requesting repairs or a price reduction. You have three basic paths: agree, counter, or decline. Each has consequences.

Austin couple reviewing home sale documents together
Every decision in the middle innings feels heavier than the last

Agree to everything and you may feel resentful at closing. Decline everything and the buyer may terminate during the option period and walk with only their option fee. The sweet spot is usually somewhere in the middle: address legitimate safety and functional issues, offer credits for smaller items so you don't have to coordinate tradespeople, and hold firm on cosmetic or subjective requests.

Texas sellers should also know that you generally choose your own licensed contractors for any agreed-upon repairs, and receipts are typically required at closing. Don't hire your brother-in-law with a truck. Use licensed, insured pros — it protects you post-closing.

Prepare Before You List, Not During the Option Period

The best repair negotiation is one you never have to have. Austin sellers who prepare their home before going under contract consistently have smoother option periods. A simple pre-listing checklist: test all smoke and CO detectors, replace burnt-out bulbs, fix dripping faucets and running toilets, clean or replace HVAC filters, clear access to the attic and electrical panel, address visible water stains, and clean the gutters. None of these are glamorous. All of them reduce the volume of line items a buyer's inspector will flag. Our full guide is available in our seller inspection infographic.


After the Option Period: The Middle Innings

Once the option period expires and any repair amendment is signed, the emotional temperature changes. The buyer's earnest money is now genuinely at risk if they walk without cause. The deal feels more real. But two big hurdles remain — and they're often confused with each other.

Inspection vs. Appraisal — A Quick Clarification

These happen close together in the timeline, but they answer completely different questions. The inspection evaluates the home's physical condition — the roof, HVAC, foundation, plumbing. The appraisal evaluates the home's market value and is typically required by the buyer's lender to confirm the purchase price is supportable by comparable sales.

One is about condition. The other is about value. A home can pass inspection beautifully and still have an appraisal issue — or vice versa. Our full breakdown is here: Inspection vs. Appraisal.

The Appraisal (When There Is One)

If the buyer is financing the purchase, the lender will typically order an appraisal. A licensed appraiser — not a real estate agent — conducts a formal valuation following USPAP standards. The lender uses that number to confirm the loan amount is supportable by the property's market value.

In most Austin-area transactions, appraisals come in at or near contract price. Not always. A low appraisal can trigger a renegotiation: you may agree to reduce the price to the appraised value, split the difference, ask the buyer to bring extra cash to cover the gap, or — if no agreement is reached — face termination under the appraisal contingency.

When a Lender Waives the Appraisal Entirely

One wrinkle worth knowing: not every Austin home sale involves an appraisal. Depending on the buyer's loan program, the neighborhood, the home's characteristics, and the lender's own underwriting models, a lender may issue an appraisal waiver — sometimes called a PIW or value acceptance — allowing the loan to proceed without a traditional appraisal.

Waivers are more common when the buyer is well-qualified, the down payment is substantial, the home is in a neighborhood with strong, recent comparable sales, and Fannie Mae's or Freddie Mac's automated valuation models already support the contract price. They're less common for unique properties, acreage, new construction, or homes with limited comparable data.

For sellers, an appraisal waiver removes one of the biggest variables in the middle innings — there's no appraiser showing up, no valuation report to wait on, and no risk of a low number forcing a renegotiation. Your agent will know early in the transaction whether the buyer's lender has waived the appraisal, and that changes how the final two weeks unfold.

14–21 days Typical window between going under contract and receiving the appraisal report in the Austin metro (when an appraisal is required)

A few things worth knowing when you're bracing for an appraisal. Appraiser management companies assign appraisers based on availability, which means the appraiser who shows up may not be deeply familiar with your specific Austin neighborhood. This matters in Austin more than in most markets — the premium for being on one side of MoPac versus the other, or inside versus outside a specific school boundary, can be real and can be missed by someone who works primarily in a different county. Your agent can meet the appraiser at the property, share recent comparable sales, and provide context that helps. If the number comes in low, you have options: request a Reconsideration of Value (ROV) through the lender with additional comps, dispute documented errors, or negotiate to keep the deal alive. For the deeper dive, see Understanding Home Appraisals.

Lender-Required Repairs: A Different Conversation Entirely

This is the one that catches Austin sellers off guard. Occasionally — especially with FHA and VA loans, but sometimes on conventional financing too — the appraiser or underwriter flags conditions that must be repaired before the loan will fund. Exposed wiring. Active leaks. Peeling paint on pre-1978 homes. Missing handrails. Roof conditions below the lender's minimum standard.

These are fundamentally different from option-period negotiations. Option-period repair requests are optional — you can agree, counter, or decline. Lender-required repairs are conditions, not requests. The loan will not fund until they are resolved. No one in the transaction chose this. The lender made the determination, and it stands.

Option period repair negotiations are a conversation. Lender-required repairs are a contractual obligation with defined rules, defined timelines, and defined consequences.

The good news: Texas gives both parties a clear framework. Neither buyer nor seller is automatically obligated to pay for the repairs — the TREC Amendment (Form 39-10) lets you itemize the scope and specify who covers what. The seller can pay. The buyer can pay. You can split it. You can adjust the sales price to reflect the cost. What you can't do is ignore the requirement and hope the lender changes their mind. Our full explanation — including what happens if the parties can't agree — is in Lender Required Repairs: Why These Are Different.

A practical reality sellers sometimes miss: if this deal falls apart over lender-required repairs, the next financed buyer will face the exact same requirements. You'd return to market with a disclosed, known condition and have the same conversation with the next buyer in line. Sellers who treat lender-required repairs as a solvable problem almost always find a path forward.

Financing Contingency and Final Underwriting

Even with a strong pre-approval, the buyer's loan isn't actually approved until underwriting clears. Lenders will verify employment, re-pull credit, request updated bank statements, and scrutinize any large deposits or new debt. Most Texas contracts include a financing contingency with a specific deadline — if the buyer can't secure final loan approval by that date, they can terminate and recover their earnest money.

This is the stretch where sellers tend to go quiet and anxious. There's nothing to do. You're waiting on an underwriter you'll never meet to approve a buyer you've barely spoken to. Trust the process. Your agent is monitoring milestones behind the scenes.

The Final Two Weeks Before You Close on Your Austin Home Sale

As you close in on the closing date, the emotional roller coaster gives way to a logistical one. Here's what typically fills the final stretch:

  • Title work and survey review — the title company searches for liens, easements, and ownership issues; you may be asked to provide an existing survey or pay for a new one
  • HOA resale certificate — if your Austin home is in an HOA, this document is ordered and delivered to the buyer (Texas requires it)
  • Utility transfers — schedule disconnection or transfer with Austin Energy, Austin Water, or your provider for the day after closing, not the day of
  • Moving logistics — book movers early, especially in spring and summer Austin-area peak season
  • Final walk-through — typically 24 to 48 hours before closing, the buyer verifies condition and that agreed repairs were completed
  • Closing disclosure review — you'll receive a settlement statement showing your net proceeds; review it carefully with your agent

The Emotional Side Nobody Warns You About When You Sell Your Home in Austin

Austin couple contemplating their home sale decision
The quiet weight of letting a home go

Somewhere in the final week, almost every Austin seller hits a wall. It usually happens while packing — you find a pencil mark on the door frame from when your kid was four, or you stand in the empty primary bedroom at dusk and realize this is the last time the light will hit the wall that way for you.

Selling a home is a financial transaction on paper and a grief transaction in practice. The house where you brought a baby home. The kitchen where you learned to cook. The backyard where the dog is buried under the live oak. The porch where you watched a thousand Austin sunsets. You're allowed to feel it. In fact, feeling it is the only honest way through.

The contract closes a deal. It doesn't close a chapter. That part is yours to do, on your own timeline, in your own way.

At the same time, there's genuine excitement waiting on the other side — a new home, a new city, a new season of life, a financial position you've worked years to reach. Both things are true at once. The highs and lows aren't a sign something is wrong. They're a sign you're paying attention.

Closing Day in Austin: What Actually Happens

Texas is a title company state, meaning closings happen at a title or escrow office rather than with an attorney. On closing day:

  • You'll sign the deed, settlement statement, and a handful of affidavits — usually 20 to 40 minutes of signatures
  • You'll bring a government-issued ID and any keys, garage remotes, gate fobs, pool keys, and appliance manuals
  • Funding typically happens the same day or the following business day; wire transfer is the standard for proceeds
  • Possession is usually delivered at funding, unless you've negotiated a leaseback or post-closing occupancy

Then you walk out. The house belongs to someone else. And the strangest, quietest moment of the entire process is the drive away from the title office — proceeds pending, keys handed over, the next chapter waiting.

Frequently Asked Questions About Selling Your Home in Austin

How long does it take to sell your home in Austin after going under contract?

Most Austin-area transactions close 30 to 45 days after going under contract. Cash deals can close in as little as 7 to 14 days. Financed deals are paced by the lender's underwriting timeline and, when applicable, the appraisal.

Can a buyer back out after the option period in Texas?

Yes, but with more consequence. After the option period expires, the buyer can still terminate under specific contract contingencies — most commonly financing, appraisal, or title issues — and recover their earnest money. If they walk for a reason not covered by a contingency, the earnest money is typically forfeited to the seller.

Do I have to make every repair the buyer requests when I sell my home in Austin?

No — repair requests from the option period are negotiable. You can agree, counter with a subset of repairs or a credit, or decline entirely. Lender-required repairs are different: those are contractual conditions the lender imposes before funding the loan, and they must be resolved for the transaction to close, though how the cost is split between buyer and seller is negotiable.

What's the difference between the inspection and the appraisal?

The inspection evaluates the home's condition — the buyer typically orders it during the option period to understand what they're buying. The appraisal evaluates the home's market value and is typically required by the lender to confirm the loan amount is supportable. Condition versus value. They answer different questions.

Does every Austin home sale require an appraisal?

No. While most financed purchases involve an appraisal, some lenders waive the appraisal depending on the buyer's loan program, the neighborhood, the home's characteristics, and the strength of automated valuation data. Appraisal waivers — sometimes called PIWs or value acceptance — are more common when the buyer is well-qualified, the down payment is substantial, and the home sits in an area with strong comparable sales. Cash buyers don't require an appraisal at all, though they may choose to order one for their own confidence.

What happens if the appraisal comes in low?

You and the buyer typically renegotiate. Common outcomes include reducing the sale price to the appraised value, splitting the difference, the buyer bringing additional cash to cover the gap, requesting a Reconsideration of Value through the lender with additional comparable sales, or terminating under the appraisal contingency.

What are lender-required repairs, and am I obligated to pay for them?

Lender-required repairs are conditions the lender imposes — often triggered by the appraiser or underwriter — that must be completed before the loan will fund. Under the Texas contract, neither buyer nor seller is automatically obligated to cover the cost; the TREC Amendment (Form 39-10) lets the parties negotiate who pays. What isn't negotiable is whether the repairs happen. If the lender requires them, they're required.

When do I actually get my money after selling my home in Austin?

In Texas, you receive your net proceeds at funding, which is typically the same day as closing (for morning closings) or the next business day. Proceeds are delivered by wire transfer to the account you specify in advance.

Ready to Sell Your Home in Austin?

The period between accepting an offer and handing over the keys is where experienced representation matters most. We guide Austin sellers through every milestone — option period strategy, repair negotiations, appraisal challenges, and the quiet emotional work of letting go.

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