Escalation Clause: What Is It And How Does It Work?

Kim Porter began her career as a writer and an editor focusing on personal finance in 2010. Since then, her work has been published everywhere from Forbes Advisor to U.S. News & World Report, Fortune, NextAdvisor, Credit Karma, Bankrate, and more.

Kim Porter began her career as a writer and an editor focusing on personal finance in 2010. Since then, her work has been published everywhere from Forbes Advisor to U.S. News & World Report, Fortune, NextAdvisor, Credit Karma, Bankrate, and more.

Written By

Kim Porter began her career as a writer and an editor focusing on personal finance in 2010. Since then, her work has been published everywhere from Forbes Advisor to U.S. News & World Report, Fortune, NextAdvisor, Credit Karma, Bankrate, and more.

Kim Porter began her career as a writer and an editor focusing on personal finance in 2010. Since then, her work has been published everywhere from Forbes Advisor to U.S. News & World Report, Fortune, NextAdvisor, Credit Karma, Bankrate, and more.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

| Loans & Mortgages Editor

Updated: Jan 2, 2024, 9:30am

Editorial Note: We earn a commission from partner links on Forbes Advisor. Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations.

Escalation Clause: What Is It And How Does It Work?

Getty

Creating a strong purchase offer is critical when you’ve found a home you want to buy. Essentially, you want to tell the seller you’re both qualified and serious about buying the home. In some cases, you may even write an escalation clause into your offer.

What Is an Escalation Clause?

An escalation clause is a special provision you can add to a purchase offer. The clause automatically increases your purchase price by a certain amount above other offers until it reaches the maximum price you’re willing to pay for the home.

The escalation clause, sometimes known as an escalator, only goes into effect when the seller receives more than one offer. It may include the following parts:

How Does an Escalation Clause Work?

In a standard transaction with no escalation clause, you can make an offer on a home—but you lose the opportunity to buy if someone else offers a higher price. An escalation clause gives you the chance to compete for the home. It activates when the seller receives at least one offer that matches or exceeds your bid. Your offer amount then increases by the escalation amount you set until you reach your price cap.

If a competing buyer also includes an escalation clause in their offer, the offer price on the home continues to increase until one of the buyers’ price caps has been reached.

Escalation Clause Example

Let’s say you’re trying to buy a home in a seller’s market, so you include an escalation clause in your purchase offer. Your initial offer is $400,000, the escalation amount is $5,000 and the maximum price you’re willing to pay is $415,000. Another buyer submits an offer for $403,000. This triggers the escalation clause, automatically increasing your offer to $408,000.

One of two scenarios can then take place:

How and When To Use an Escalation Clause

Your real estate agent can help you include the escalation clause in your purchase offer. You’ll need to tell your agent how much you’re willing to spend overall and the amount you want to raise the price with each escalation.

Working with an experienced real estate agent helps because they’ll know local laws surrounding escalation clauses and can guide you through the process. A real estate attorney may also be able to help you review the language in the clause.

An escalator can be a good option in a market where inventory is tight and a home might receive multiple offers. Your agent might not know the highest offer, but they don’t want you to overpay. The escalation clause allows you to raise your offer in small increments.

Knowing your limits up front is a good idea—your price cap generally shouldn’t exceed the amount you can afford. A mortgage preapproval letter can help you define this limit.

Pros and Cons of Escalation Clauses

An escalation clause may help you secure the home you want to buy, but it also comes with some downsides to consider.

Pros

Cons

Who Should Use an Escalation Clause?

In some situations, an escalation clause can help your offer get accepted. Here’s who should use this option:

However, you may want to avoid an escalation clause in some cases. Using one may not be a good idea if you can’t afford the maximum price limit, and some sellers may reject an escalation clause altogether. Also, it typically doesn’t make sense to use one if you’re in a buyer’s market because escalation clauses only trigger when competing offers exist.

Faster, easier mortgage lending

Check your rates today with Better Mortgage.