Earnest Money: What It Is, How Much to Pay & How It Works
If you're buying real estate — whether a first home or your twentieth investment property — you'll need to put up earnest money with your offer. Also called an earnest money deposit (EMD) or good faith deposit, this payment signals to the seller that you're serious about purchasing their property.
But how much should you put down? What happens to it at closing? When can you lose it? And how is it different from a down payment? This guide answers every question about earnest money so you can navigate the process with confidence.
💡 Bottom line: Earnest money is typically 1-3% of the purchase price, held in escrow by a third party, and applied toward your down payment at closing. You can get it back if you cancel due to a valid contingency — but you'll forfeit it if you back out without cause.
What Is Earnest Money?
Earnest money is a deposit that a buyer submits along with their purchase offer to demonstrate genuine intent to buy a property. Think of it as putting your money where your mouth is — it tells the seller "I'm serious about this, and here's proof."
The deposit is held in an escrow account managed by a neutral third party (usually a title company, escrow company, or the listing broker's trust account) until the transaction closes or falls apart. The money doesn't go directly to the seller — it's protected by escrow until the terms of the contract are fulfilled.
At closing, earnest money is credited toward your down payment or closing costs. So it's not an additional expense — it's an advance portion of the money you're already planning to pay.
Why Does Earnest Money Exist?
Earnest money exists to protect the seller. When a seller accepts an offer, they take their home off the market and stop entertaining other offers. If the buyer could walk away at any time with zero consequences, sellers would face enormous risk. Earnest money creates a financial commitment that discourages frivolous offers and compensates the seller if the buyer defaults.
How Much Earnest Money Should You Pay?
There's no universal rule for how much earnest money to offer, but here are general guidelines:
| Market Condition | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer's market (low demand) | 1% or flat $1,000-$5,000 | Less risk, sellers happy to receive any offer |
| Balanced market | 1-2% of purchase price | Standard in most areas |
| Seller's market (high demand) | 2-5% of purchase price | Higher deposits make offers more competitive |
| Ultra-competitive market | 5-10% or more | Some buyers offer larger deposits with waived contingencies |
| New construction | 5-10% | Builders often require larger deposits |
For a $300,000 home, typical earnest money ranges from $3,000 (1%) to $9,000 (3%). In a hot market, you might go to $15,000 (5%) or more to compete with other offers.
Factors That Influence the Amount
- Local customs: Earnest money norms vary significantly by region. Some markets default to flat amounts; others use percentages.
- Competition level: More competing offers = more pressure to put up a larger deposit.
- Property price: Higher-priced properties often warrant larger deposits in absolute dollars but may be a smaller percentage.
- Your financial position: Only put up what you can afford to have tied up for 30-60+ days. Remember, this money is in escrow — you can't use it elsewhere until the deal closes or falls through.
- Investment vs. primary residence: Investors sometimes use larger earnest money deposits to compensate for other offer weaknesses (e.g., lower price, more contingencies).
How Earnest Money Works: Step by Step
1. You Submit an Offer
Your purchase offer includes the earnest money amount, how it will be delivered (check, wire transfer), and the deadline for submission (typically within 3-5 business days of offer acceptance).
2. Offer Is Accepted
Once the seller accepts your offer, the clock starts. You need to deliver the earnest money to the designated escrow holder within the timeframe specified in the contract. Missing this deadline can void the contract.
3. Money Goes Into Escrow
The escrow holder deposits your funds into a trust account. In many states, this account earns interest — clarify in your contract who gets the interest (usually the buyer, but it's negotiable).
4. Contingency Periods Begin
Most purchase contracts include contingency periods during which you can back out and recover your earnest money. Common contingencies include:
- Inspection contingency (typically 7-14 days)
- Financing contingency (typically 21-30 days)
- Appraisal contingency (tied to financing timeline)
- Title contingency (typically 14-30 days)
5. Contingencies Are Removed
As each contingency period expires, you either exercise the contingency (back out and get your money back) or remove it (waive your right to cancel for that reason). Once all contingencies are removed, your earnest money is at risk if you cancel.
6. Closing
At closing, your earnest money is credited toward your down payment and/or closing costs. If your earnest money was $9,000 and your down payment is $60,000, you only need to bring $51,000 to closing (plus closing costs, minus any earnest money applied there).
When Can You Lose Your Earnest Money?
Understanding when your earnest money is at risk is critical. Here are the most common scenarios where buyers forfeit their deposit:
Scenarios Where You Lose It
- Cold feet after contingencies expire: If you simply decide you don't want the property after all contingencies have been removed, the seller keeps your deposit.
- Missing contract deadlines: Failing to submit documents, secure financing, or close by the agreed date can put you in default.
- Waived contingencies backfiring: If you waived the inspection contingency to compete, then discover major issues — you can't use that as an exit.
- Failure to perform: Not completing required steps (e.g., not depositing the earnest money on time, not completing a required buyer walk-through).
Scenarios Where You Get It Back
- Inspection reveals major issues: You cancel within the inspection contingency period due to material defects discovered during the home inspection.
- Appraisal comes in low: The property doesn't appraise at the contract price, and you exercise your appraisal contingency.
- Financing falls through: Your loan is denied despite good-faith effort, and your financing contingency is still active.
- Title issues: The title search reveals liens, encumbrances, or other problems that can't be resolved.
- Seller default: The seller fails to meet their contractual obligations (e.g., refuses to make agreed repairs, can't deliver clear title).
⚠️ Important: The exact contingency terms in YOUR contract determine your rights. Generic advice doesn't override your specific contract language. Always read your purchase agreement carefully and consult your real estate attorney if you're unsure.
Earnest Money vs. Down Payment
These are frequently confused, but they're distinct concepts:
| Feature | Earnest Money | Down Payment |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Shows good faith intent to buy | Equity contribution required by lender |
| Typical amount | 1-3% of purchase price | 3.5-20% of purchase price |
| When paid | Within days of offer acceptance | At closing |
| Held by | Escrow/title company | Applied at closing |
| Refundable? | Yes, with valid contingency | No (it becomes equity) |
| Required? | Not legally, but practically yes | Yes, by most lenders |
| At closing | Applied toward down payment | Paid to seller via lender |
Think of earnest money as a subset of the down payment. Your earnest money deposit is credited toward the larger down payment at closing, so you don't pay it twice.
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Download Free ChecklistContingencies That Protect Your Earnest Money
Contingencies are your safety net. Here's a deeper look at the most important ones:
Inspection Contingency
Allows you to cancel or renegotiate based on findings from a professional home inspection. This is the most commonly exercised contingency. Typical duration: 7-14 days from contract execution. During this period, get a thorough inspection and use the findings to negotiate repairs, credits, or a price reduction.
Financing Contingency
Protects you if your mortgage application is denied. Even with a pre-approval letter, final underwriting can uncover issues (changed employment, new debts, property-specific problems) that prevent loan approval. This contingency ensures you get your earnest money back if the loan falls through despite good-faith effort.
Appraisal Contingency
Protects you if the property appraises for less than the contract price. If the appraisal comes in at $280,000 but you offered $300,000, you can cancel the contract or renegotiate the price. Without this contingency, you'd need to bring the $20,000 difference to closing in cash. Understanding property valuation is key — read our comparative market analysis guide for more on how properties are valued.
Title Contingency
Protects you if the title search reveals problems — outstanding liens, boundary disputes, easement issues, or other clouds on the title. The seller typically has a period to resolve title issues, but if they can't, you can cancel with a full refund.
Home Sale Contingency
If you need to sell your current home to fund the new purchase, this contingency gives you time to do so. Sellers often dislike this contingency because it adds uncertainty. It's less common in competitive markets.
Earnest Money Tips for Property Investors
If you're investing in rental properties or building a portfolio, here are specific strategies for managing earnest money:
- Keep earnest money in a liquid account: You may need it quickly. Don't tie it up in investments that take days to liquidate.
- Negotiate longer contingency periods: Investors often need more time for due diligence, especially for short sale properties or multi-unit buildings.
- Use a standard amount across offers: If you're submitting multiple offers, a consistent earnest money amount (e.g., $5,000) simplifies tracking and cash management.
- Never waive contingencies on properties you haven't inspected: The discount you get from a competitive offer is rarely worth the risk of buying a money pit. Always protect yourself with at minimum an inspection contingency.
- Understand 1031 exchange implications: If you're buying through a 1031 exchange, earnest money handling needs to comply with exchange rules. Consult your qualified intermediary.
- Keep records: Track earnest money deposits, escrow holder information, and refund dates for tax and accounting purposes.
What Happens to Earnest Money When a Deal Falls Through?
If the transaction doesn't close, the earnest money disposition depends on the circumstances:
Buyer Cancels with Valid Contingency
The escrow holder releases the full deposit back to the buyer. This is usually straightforward, though it can take 5-15 business days for the check or wire to be processed. Both parties typically need to sign a cancellation agreement.
Buyer Cancels Without Valid Contingency
The seller is entitled to the earnest money as liquidated damages. However, the escrow holder won't release funds unless both parties agree or a court orders it. This can lead to disputes — if the buyer and seller disagree about who's entitled to the deposit, the escrow company may hold the funds until they receive mutual instructions or a court order.
Disputed Earnest Money
When both parties claim the deposit, resolution options include:
- Negotiation: Split the deposit to avoid legal costs
- Mediation: A neutral mediator helps reach agreement (many contracts require this before litigation)
- Arbitration: A binding decision by a neutral arbitrator
- Litigation: Court action (expensive and time-consuming — usually a last resort)
Most disputes settle via negotiation because the legal costs of fighting over a few thousand dollars exceed the deposit amount.
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What is earnest money?
Earnest money is a deposit made by a buyer to demonstrate serious intent to purchase a property. It's submitted with the purchase offer and held in escrow by a third party (typically a title company, escrow company, or real estate brokerage) until closing. At closing, earnest money is applied toward the down payment or closing costs.
How much earnest money should I put down?
Typical earnest money amounts range from 1-3% of the purchase price, though this varies by market. In competitive markets, buyers may offer 3-5% or more to strengthen their offer. In slower markets, 1% or even a flat amount ($1,000-$5,000) may be standard. The amount should be enough to show good faith without overexposing your capital.
Can you lose your earnest money?
Yes. You can lose earnest money if you back out of the purchase without a valid contingency. Common reasons for forfeiture include: getting cold feet after contingency periods expire, missing contract deadlines, failing to secure financing after waiving the financing contingency, or simply deciding not to buy after removing all contingencies.
What is the difference between earnest money and a down payment?
Earnest money is a deposit showing intent to buy, submitted with your offer and held in escrow. A down payment is the portion of the purchase price you pay at closing (minus any financing). Earnest money is typically 1-3% and is applied toward the down payment at closing. The down payment is usually 3.5-20% of the purchase price depending on loan type.
Is earnest money refundable?
Earnest money is refundable if you back out due to a valid contingency in your purchase contract — such as a failed inspection, appraisal shortfall, or inability to secure financing. If you back out for reasons not covered by a contingency after all contingencies have been removed, you'll likely forfeit the deposit to the seller.
Who holds the earnest money deposit?
Earnest money is held in escrow by a neutral third party — typically a title company, escrow company, or the listing agent's brokerage. The money should never go directly to the seller. Escrow agents are legally required to follow the terms of the purchase agreement when releasing funds.