Picture this: You’re selling a $410,000 property.
- Offer #1: Full price. Financed. 30-day close.
- Offer #2: 9% lower. All cash. Close in 10 days.
In today’s market, sellers are increasingly choosing Offer #2.
Not because it’s better, but because it’s safer.
According to recent Cotality data, sellers accepted an average 9% discount for cash purchases in 2025. That gap has widened every year since 2021.
Why the shift?
Financed deals are failing more often. Fallout rates have doubled from roughly 2–3% in the low-rate years to 5–6% today. Higher rates, tighter underwriting, and insurance friction—particularly in states like California and Florida—have made transactions more fragile.
Certainty now commands a premium. But here’s the tension.
A 6% failure rate does not mathematically justify a 9% discount. Even accounting for inconvenience and delay, sellers appear to be paying more for reassurance than the raw probability suggests.
That tells us something important: Confidence is thin, and liquidity carries leverage.
Investors—who represent roughly 36% of cash purchases—are positioned to benefit. First-time buyers, meanwhile, have fallen to just 21% of the market.
For builders, the implication is clear: in uncertain markets, reliability influences pricing power. The question isn’t just what capital costs. It’s whether it closes.


