Understanding the Arizona Residential Resale Real Estate Purchase Contract

list of contents

Introduction: Why This Document Will Become the Most Important Paper You’ll Ever Sign

Picture this: You’ve spent months searching for the perfect home. You’ve scrolled through hundreds of listings online, spent weekends touring properties, and finally found “the one.” Your heart races as you imagine your furniture in the living room, your family gathering in the kitchen, and lazy Sunday mornings on the patio. But between you and those house keys stands one crucial document: the Arizona Residential Resale Real Estate Purchase Contract.

If you’re like most first-time buyers, the thought of signing a legally binding contract might feel overwhelming. You might wonder:

  • What am I actually agreeing to?
  • What if I miss something important?
  • How do I protect myself while still getting the home I want?

At West USA Realty, we understand these concerns because we’ve guided thousands of Arizona buyers—many of them first-timers just like you—through this exact process. We believe that understanding your purchase contract isn’t just important; it’s empowering. When you know what each section means and why it matters, you transform from an anxious buyer into a confident homeowner.

This guide will walk you through every section of the Arizona purchase contract in plain English. We’ll explain not just what each part says, but why it exists, how it protects you, and what could happen if you overlook it. By the end, you’ll understand this document better than many buyers who’ve purchased multiple homes.

What Exactly Is a Purchase Contract?

Before we dive into the specific sections, let’s start with the basics. A real estate purchase contract is a legally binding agreement between you (the buyer) and the seller that spells out every detail of your home purchase. Think of it as a detailed instruction manual for your transaction—it tells everyone involved exactly what needs to happen, when it needs to happen, and what happens if something goes wrong.

In Arizona, we use a standardized form created by the Arizona Association of REALTORS® (AAR). This isn’t some document thrown together by your agent—it’s been refined over decades, tested in countless transactions, and regularly updated to reflect changes in law and market practices. The current version (August 2024) is 10 pages long, but don’t let that intimidate you. Every word serves a purpose, and we’re going to explain them all.

Why Standardized Contracts Matter

You might wonder: Why can’t we just write our own agreement? While you technically could, using the AAR standard contract provides crucial protections. These forms have been:

  • Reviewed by attorneys
  • Tested in court
  • Refined based on thousands of real transactions
  • Updated to address situations you might never think to include

Questions these contracts answer:

  • What happens if the house burns down before closing?
  • Who pays if the air conditioner breaks during escrow?
  • What if you lose your job and can’t get a loan?

At West USA Realty, our agents are thoroughly trained on every nuance of this contract. We’ve seen how each clause plays out in real life, from smooth transactions to complicated situations. This experience means we can help you navigate the contract confidently, knowing you’re protected at every step.

Section 1: Parties and Property – Setting the Foundation

Let’s start at the beginning. When you open the Arizona purchase contract, the first section might seem simple—it just asks for names and addresses, right? But this foundation is more important than you might think. Every detail here has legal significance that will follow you through the entire transaction and beyond.

Understanding the “Parties” (That’s You and the Seller)

In legal terms, you’re about to become a “party” to a contract. This means you’re one of the people making legally binding promises. The contract needs to identify exactly who is making these promises, which is why accuracy here is crucial.

How You Sign Your Name Matters

How you write your name on this contract determines how you’ll appear on the deed to your new home:

  • If you’re John Smith but you sign as Johnny Smith, you might face complications later
  • If you’re recently married and changed your name but haven’t updated all your identification, this could create delays

Our West USA Realty agents always verify:

  • How exactly do you want to hold title?
  • Is your name consistent across all your loan documents?

Real-world example: We recently had a client who went by his middle name his entire life. He almost signed the contract with that name, but our agent caught it. His driver’s license and loan application used his first name. This small detail could have delayed closing by weeks while legal documents were corrected. Instead, we caught it on day one.

Buying with Someone Else

Buying with someone else? Whether it’s your spouse, partner, parent, or friend, everyone who will own the home must be listed as a buyer. This isn’t just a formality—it legally obligates all buyers to fulfill the contract terms. If one person backs out, the others are still bound by the agreement.

We often see unmarried couples buying together without understanding the implications. Unlike married couples who have legal frameworks for property division, unmarried co-buyers need to think carefully about what happens if the relationship ends. Our agents can connect you with attorneys who specialize in co-ownership agreements—a document separate from the purchase contract but equally important for protecting everyone’s interests.

The Property: More Than Just an Address

When identifying the property you’re buying, the contract requires several pieces of information. You’ll see the street address, but that’s just the beginning. The legal description—that paragraph of seemingly incomprehensible numbers and abbreviations—is actually the official way your property is identified in county records.

Why Legal Descriptions Matter

Street addresses can change:

  • The city might rename a street
  • The post office might adjust delivery routes

But the legal description—something like “Lot 47, Block 3, Happy Acres Subdivision”—is permanent. This description ties back to official maps filed with the county, showing exactly where your property begins and ends.

Our West USA Realty agents always verify that the legal description matches what you think you’re buying. We’ve seen cases where:

  • Sellers thought they owned a piece of land that actually belonged to their neighbor
  • Buyers assumed the beautiful corner garden was included only to discover it was city property

These discoveries are much better made before you sign the contract than after you move in.

Earnest Money: Your “Skin in the Game”

Now we come to one of the most misunderstood parts of buying a home: earnest money. Many first-time buyers confuse this with a down payment, but they’re completely different things.

What Earnest Money Really Is

Your earnest money is essentially a deposit that shows the seller you’re serious about buying their home. It’s like putting down a deposit to hold a wedding venue—it shows you’re committed and gives the other party some protection if you change your mind.

In Arizona:

  • Earnest money typically ranges from 1% to 3% of the purchase price
  • On a $400,000 home, that’s $4,000 to $12,000
  • This isn’t a fixed rule—it’s a negotiation point that can strengthen or weaken your offer

The Seller’s Perspective

Think about it from the seller’s perspective. They’re about to:

  • Take their home off the market
  • Possibly turn away other buyers
  • Start making their own moving plans based on your promise to buy

The earnest money compensates them if you simply change your mind (though as we’ll see, there are many legitimate ways to get your earnest money back).

Using Earnest Money Strategically

In competitive situations—multiple offer scenarios that we see frequently in desirable Arizona neighborhoods—earnest money becomes a powerful tool.

Real example: We recently helped a young couple win a bidding war in Tempe not by offering the highest price, but by offering stronger earnest money terms. They offered $15,000 in earnest money on a $425,000 home, with $5,000 going “non-refundable” after the inspection period. This showed the sellers they were committed buyers, not just window shopping.

Where Your Earnest Money Goes

Your earnest money doesn’t go directly to the seller—that would be risky for you. Instead, it’s held by a neutral third party, usually either:

  • An escrow company (a neutral company that specializes in handling real estate transactions)
  • The broker’s trust account (a special account managed by the real estate brokerage)

This neutral party holds your earnest money until one of three things happens:

  1. The sale successfully closes (your earnest money becomes part of your down payment)
  2. You legitimately cancel the contract using one of your contingencies (you get it back)
  3. You breach the contract (the seller may be entitled to keep it)

How Contingencies Protect Your Earnest Money

Here’s where having an experienced West USA Realty agent becomes invaluable. The contract includes several “contingencies”—think of them as escape clauses that let you cancel the contract and get your earnest money back if certain conditions aren’t met. Our agents ensure you understand exactly when and how these contingencies protect you.

Common contingencies that protect your earnest money:

  • Inspection contingency: You can cancel if you don’t like what the inspection reveals
  • Financing contingency: You can cancel if you can’t get a loan
  • Appraisal contingency: You can cancel if the home doesn’t appraise for the purchase price

But here’s the crucial part: These contingencies have deadlines. Miss a deadline, and you might lose that protection. Our agents use detailed timeline management systems to ensure you never miss a critical date.

Close of Escrow: When You Actually Become the Owner

The Close of Escrow (COE) date is when ownership officially transfers from the seller to you. It’s the day you get your keys and the home becomes yours. But choosing this date involves more strategy than you might think.

Timeline Considerations

Loan Processing:

  • Most loans take 30-45 days to process
  • Some can close in as little as 21 days
  • Your lender will give you an estimate, but our experience shows it’s wise to add a buffer
  • We’ve seen too many buyers stressed because they scheduled movers for a closing date that ended up delayed

Seller’s Situation:

  • Maybe the seller is buying another home and needs to coordinate both transactions
  • Perhaps they’re relocating for work and have a specific move-out date
  • Understanding the seller’s situation can help in negotiations

Real example: We once helped a buyer get $5,000 in closing cost credits simply by being flexible with the closing date to accommodate the seller’s job relocation schedule.

End-of-Month Considerations

Pros:

  • Closing at the end of the month means less prepaid interest at closing (you only pay interest from your closing date through month-end)

Cons:

  • End-of-month is when lenders, escrow companies, and movers are busiest

Our agents help you weigh these factors.

Family Considerations

For families with children, timing the move around school schedules is crucial. Arizona’s year-round school schedules can complicate this further. We maintain relationships with school district enrollment offices and can help you understand transfer policies and enrollment deadlines.

Possession: When You Get the Keys

Usually, you get possession at close of escrow—the moment you legally own the home. But sometimes, buyers and sellers need different arrangements. The contract addresses three scenarios:

Option 1: Possession at COE (Most Common)

Possession at COE is the cleanest option. The moment escrow closes:

  • The home is yours
  • The seller should be completely moved out
  • The property should be clean (the contract requires “broom clean” condition)
  • You should receive all keys, garage door openers, and access codes

Option 2: Pre-Possession (Buyer Moves In Early)

Sometimes buyers need to move in before closing:

  • Maybe your apartment lease ends before your loan is ready
  • You’re relocating from out of state and need somewhere to stay

While possible, pre-possession is risky for both parties. From our experience, pre-possession arrangements require careful documentation addressing:

  • Daily rental rates
  • Security deposits
  • Insurance obligations
  • Utility responsibilities
  • Maintenance obligations
  • What happens if the sale doesn’t close

Option 3: Post-Possession (Seller Stays After Closing)

Sometimes sellers need to stay after closing:

  • They might be waiting for their new home to be ready
  • They need time to relocate

While this can be accommodated, it essentially makes you a landlord, even if just for a few days. The risks here flip—now you own the home, but someone else is living in it.

Our agents ensure proper agreements are in place, including:

  • Clear move-out deadlines
  • Substantial security deposits
  • Daily charges for overstaying
  • Property condition documentation
  • Insurance requirements

Section 2: Fixtures and Personal Property – What Actually Comes with the House?

Imagine walking through your new home on closing day, keys in hand, only to discover that the beautiful chandelier in the dining room is gone, replaced with a basic fixture from the hardware store. Or finding that the refrigerator you assumed was included is nowhere to be found. These scenarios happen more often than you’d think when buyers don’t understand what they’re actually purchasing.

Understanding Fixtures vs. Personal Property

In real estate, everything in a home falls into one of two categories:

  • Fixtures: Real property that stays
  • Personal Property: Items that go with the seller

The distinction isn’t always obvious, and assumptions can lead to closing day disappointments.

The Three Legal Tests

Arizona law uses three tests to determine if something is a fixture:

1. Method of Attachment Test: Is the item permanently attached to the property?

  • Built-in bookcases are attached; freestanding bookcases aren’t
  • But “attachment” isn’t always obvious
  • What about a mounted TV? The mounting bracket is attached to the wall (fixture), but the TV itself is simply hanging on the bracket (personal property)

2. Adaptation Test: Is the item specifically adapted to the property?

  • Custom-cut blinds that fit specific windows are adapted to the home
  • Store-bought curtains that happen to fit are not
  • A built-in refrigerator designed for a specific space is adapted
  • A standard refrigerator that slides into an opening is not

3. Intention Test: Did the owner intend for the item to be permanent?

  • This is the trickiest test because it involves guessing someone’s intent
  • That’s why our West USA Realty agents document everything explicitly in the contract rather than relying on assumptions about intent

The Gray Areas That Cause Problems

Through thousands of transactions, we’ve identified the items that most commonly cause disputes.

Refrigerators and Appliances

Unlike many states where refrigerators are assumed to be included, Arizona treats them as personal property unless specifically included in the contract. This surprises many out-of-state buyers who assume that kitchen appliance stays.

Our agents always clarify:

  • Is the refrigerator included?
  • What about the wine fridge in the butler’s pantry?
  • The mini-fridge in the garage?

Window Coverings

  • Blinds and plantation shutters (attached to the window frame) are typically fixtures
  • But what about those expensive motorized shades?
  • The motors and mounting hardware are fixtures, but sellers sometimes argue the fabric shades themselves are personal property

Real example: We’ve seen sellers remove $10,000 worth of custom shades because the contract wasn’t specific.

Outdoor Items

Above-ground spas, playground sets, and storage sheds occupy a gray area. Are they permanently installed or just sitting there?

  • That expensive playground set might be anchored with concrete (fixture) or simply placed on the ground (personal property)
  • Our agents inspect and document these items during the offer phase

Smart Home Technology

With the rise of smart homes, this category has become increasingly contentious:

  • The smart doorbell attached to the house? Likely a fixture
  • But what about the smart hub that controls everything?
  • The wireless cameras?
  • The smart speakers?

Without clear documentation, you might find your “smart home” has become quite dumb by closing day.

How West USA Realty Protects Your Interests

Thorough “Inclusion Audits”

Our agents don’t just check boxes on a form—we conduct thorough “inclusion audits” during showings and negotiations.

We encourage our buyers to video record their final showing, narrating what they believe is included. This creates a timestamp record of the property’s condition and contents during negotiations.

Real example: One client avoided a $3,000 dispute over custom closet organizers because our agent had video proof they were present during the showing when the seller claimed they were “always planning to take them.”

Specific, Not Generic

Rather than relying on general categories, we list specific items:

  • Not just “window coverings”
  • But “all window blinds, including motorized shades in master bedroom, custom plantation shutters in living room, and blackout shades in children’s rooms”

Document Exclusions

If sellers want to take something unusual, we document it clearly.

Real example: We had a seller who wanted to take their backyard lemon trees (potted, but very large). By specifically excluding them in the contract, we avoided closing day drama when the buyer saw workers digging them up.

Negotiate Personal Property

Beyond fixtures, you might want to negotiate for personal property items. Common requests include:

  • Washers and dryers
  • Refrigerators
  • Freezers
  • Patio furniture
  • Fire pits
  • Pool cleaning equipment
  • Riding lawnmowers for large properties

Our agents know how to structure these requests strategically:

  • In a competitive offer situation, asking for too many personal property items can weaken your position
  • But in a buyer’s market, or when a property has been sitting unsold, these items become valuable negotiation points

Section 3: The Financing Section – Your Money and How You’re Protected

For most buyers, purchasing a home requires a mortgage loan. Unless you’re paying cash (and even then, this section matters), the financing section creates a crucial safety net that protects your earnest money if you can’t secure a loan despite your best efforts.

Understanding the Loan Contingency

A contingency is like an escape clause—it says, “I promise to buy your house, BUT only if this specific thing happens.” The financing contingency essentially says, “I’ll buy your house, but only if I can get a loan.”

This might seem obvious, but the details of how this works can make the difference between getting your earnest money back or losing it.

Why This Matters

Even if you’re pre-approved for a loan, things can go wrong. Pre-approval is based on the information available at that moment—your credit score, income, debts, and assets. But between pre-approval and closing, situations change:

  • You might lose your job or have your hours reduced
  • The lender might find something in your financial history they don’t like
  • The house might have issues that prevent loan approval
  • Interest rates might spike, affecting your qualification
  • The lender might simply make a mistake

The financing contingency protects you in these scenarios—but only if you follow the rules.

The Three Critical Deadlines

Missing any of these deadlines could cost you your earnest money. Our West USA Realty agents use digital calendaring systems and personal reminders to ensure you never miss these crucial dates.

Deadline 1: Loan Application (Day 3)

You must submit a complete loan application within three days of contract acceptance.

“Complete” means:

  • All information the lender requests
  • Tax returns
  • Bank statements
  • Employment verification
  • Everything

This deadline is serious. We’ve seen buyers lose earnest money because they thought “I’m pre-approved” meant they didn’t need to formally apply. Pre-approval is not an application.

Our approach: When our clients execute a contract on Saturday, we schedule their loan application for Monday, giving them a day buffer before the Wednesday deadline.

Deadline 2: Loan Status Update (Day 10)

Within ten days, you must provide the seller with a Loan Status Update (LSU). This document, from your lender, confirms you’ve applied and shows the loan’s progress. It’s not a commitment to lend—it’s proof you’re actively pursuing financing.

The LSU is where problems often first appear:

  • The lender might note “additional documentation needed”
  • Or “pending review of explanations”

Our agents know how to read between the lines. If we see red flags in the LSU, we immediately strategize:

  • Should we request an extension?
  • Start looking for backup lenders?
  • Renegotiate terms?

Deadline 3: Loan Denial Notice (Immediate)

If your loan is denied, you must immediately notify the seller and provide proof of denial.

This is your key to getting your earnest money back—but only if you’ve done everything right:

  • Applied on time
  • Provided all requested documentation
  • Didn’t do anything to sabotage your loan (like buying a car or opening credit cards)
  • Promptly notified the seller of denial

The Hidden Trap: “Inability to Obtain Loan Approval”

The contract says you can cancel if you’re “unable to obtain loan approval.” But what does “unable” mean?

Courts have interpreted this strictly. If you could have gotten approved but chose not to (maybe the interest rate was higher than you wanted), you weren’t “unable”—you were “unwilling.” That distinction could cost you your earnest money.

Real example: A client was approved but at 7.5% interest instead of the 6.5% they expected. They wanted to cancel, thinking they were “unable” to get approval at acceptable terms. Our agent recognized the danger and instead negotiated with the seller for a credit to buy down the interest rate. The client kept their earnest money and got the house at a payment they could afford.

Types of Loans and How They Affect Your Contract

Conventional Loans

Characteristics:

  • Most flexible and typically fastest to process
  • Not government-backed, so lenders have more flexibility in their requirements
  • Typically require higher credit scores and down payments

Impact on your offer:

  • More attractive to sellers
  • Fewer property requirements
  • Typically close faster

FHA Loans

Characteristics:

  • Allow lower down payments and credit scores
  • Popular with first-time buyers
  • Require property inspections that can’t be waived
  • The home must meet FHA’s “minimum property standards”—no peeling paint, must have handrails on stairs, etc.

Our approach: When our clients use FHA loans, we counsel sellers about these requirements upfront. An FHA buyer isn’t being picky when they request repairs—these are loan requirements.

VA Loans

Characteristics:

  • Offer incredible benefits—no down payment, no mortgage insurance
  • Come with their own requirements
  • The VA appraisal is more thorough than conventional appraisals
  • Certain property issues must be resolved

Our agents have extensive experience with VA loans and maintain relationships with VA-savvy lenders.

USDA Rural Development Loans

Characteristics:

  • Offer 100% financing in eligible rural areas (which includes some surprising Phoenix suburbs)
  • Have income limits and property location requirements
  • The property must be your primary residence—no rental properties or second homes

The Appraisal: Your Loan’s Make-or-Break Moment

Even if you qualify for the loan, the property must also qualify. The lender will order an appraisal to confirm the home’s value supports the loan amount.

If the appraised value comes in below the purchase price, you have a problem—but also options.

The Appraisal Gap Scenario

Example situation:

  • You’re buying a home for $450,000 with a 10% down payment
  • You’re borrowing $405,000
  • But the appraisal comes in at $440,000
  • The lender will only loan based on the appraised value, so now they’ll only lend $396,000 (90% of $440,000)
  • You’re $9,000 short

Your Five Options

The contract gives you five days to decide:

  1. Cancel the contract using the appraisal contingency and get your earnest money back
  2. Ask the seller to reduce the price to the appraised value
  3. Negotiate a compromise—maybe the seller drops to $445,000, and you bring an extra $5,000 to closing
  4. Bring the full $9,000 extra to closing if you have the funds and really want the house
  5. Challenge the appraisal by providing additional comparable sales or pointing out errors

Cash Purchases: Simpler but Not Simple

If you’re paying cash, you might think this section doesn’t apply. But even cash buyers benefit from strategic use of this section.

Proof of Funds

Cash buyers must provide proof they have the funds available. This typically means:

  • Bank statements
  • Investment account statements
  • A letter from your financial institution

Our agents help you provide enough proof to satisfy sellers while maintaining your financial privacy.

Strategic “Cash-Then-Finance”

Some buyers make cash offers even though they plan to get a loan. This makes their offer more attractive (cash offers are seen as stronger) while preserving their ability to get financing.

This strategy requires careful contract drafting—something our experienced agents handle expertly.

When you buy a home, you’re not just buying the physical structure—you’re buying the legal right to own it. The title and escrow section ensures you’re getting “clear title,” meaning no one else can claim ownership of your new home.

What Is Title, Really?

Think of title as the legal proof of ownership. It’s not a document you can hold (that’s the deed)—it’s the concept of having the right to own, use, and sell the property. When you “take title,” you’re receiving all the ownership rights from the seller.

But here’s where it gets interesting: the seller can only give you what they actually own. If there are problems with their ownership—maybe an ex-spouse who still has rights, or an old loan that wasn’t properly paid off—those problems could become yours.

That’s why we have title insurance.

Title Insurance: Your Hidden Protection

Title insurance is unlike any other insurance you buy:

  • Your car insurance protects against future accidents
  • Your health insurance covers future medical bills
  • But title insurance protects against past events—things that already happened but haven’t been discovered yet

Real-World Title Issues

Our West USA Realty agents have seen title issues that sound like movie plots.

The Forged Deed: A few years ago, one of our clients was buying a beautiful home in Paradise Valley. The title search revealed that ten years earlier, someone had forged the actual owner’s signature and “sold” the house while the owner was overseas. The forger had since disappeared, but the mess remained. Title insurance covered the legal costs to clear this up.

The Disputed Inheritance: A seller inherited a house from their aunt. They had proper probate documents, everything seemed fine. But after closing, a cousin appeared claiming they were also an heir and the will was invalid. Without title insurance, our buyer would have faced massive legal bills. Instead, the title company handled everything.

The Unpaid Contractor: Previous owners had remodeled the kitchen but never paid the contractor in full. The contractor filed a lien that somehow wasn’t discovered until after our client bought the house. The contractor wanted $15,000. Title insurance paid it.

How Title Searches Work

Before you close, a title company will search public records going back decades (sometimes to the original land grant) to trace the ownership history. They’re looking for:

  • Previous sales and transfers
  • Mortgages and liens
  • Easements (rights others have to use your property)
  • CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions)
  • Judgments against previous owners
  • Tax liens or assessments
  • Boundary disputes or encroachments

This search produces a “title commitment”—essentially a promise to insure your title subject to certain exceptions.

Reading Your Title Commitment

When you receive your title commitment (usually within a week or two of going under contract), you have five days to review and object to anything you find unacceptable.

Our West USA Realty agents don’t just forward this document—we review it with you, explaining what matters and what’s standard.

Schedule A: The Basics

Schedule A confirms:

  • The purchase price
  • Your name
  • The property address
  • The type of policy you’re getting

We verify everything matches your contract.

Schedule B: The Exceptions

Schedule B lists everything NOT covered by insurance—and this is where attention to detail matters.

Standard exceptions might include:

  • Current property taxes (you’ll pay these going forward)
  • HOA CC&Rs (rules you must follow)
  • Utility easements (power company’s right to access their lines)

But sometimes we find surprises like:

  • An easement giving neighbors the right to use your driveway
  • Mineral rights owned by someone else
  • Restrictions on building or land use
  • Private road maintenance agreements

Real example: We had clients buying what they thought was a 2-acre property. The title commitment revealed an easement giving the back half-acre to the neighboring golf course for “overflow parking during tournaments.” This was unacceptable, and our clients successfully negotiated a $50,000 price reduction.

How You Take Title: More Important Than You Think

The contract requires you to specify how you’ll take title. This isn’t just paperwork—it has significant legal, tax, and estate planning implications.

Sole and Separate Property

What it means:

  • You own it alone, with full control
  • Simple for single buyers

For married buyers:

  • Arizona is a community property state
  • If you’re married and taking title as sole and separate, your spouse will likely need to sign a disclaimer deed

Community Property

For married couples:

  • Both spouses own an undivided interest in the whole property
  • If one spouse dies, their half goes through their will or probate, not automatically to the surviving spouse

Community Property with Right of Survivorship

Characteristics:

  • Combines community property with automatic inheritance
  • When one spouse dies, the survivor automatically owns the entire property without probate
  • For most married couples, our agents find this is the preferred option

Joint Tenancy with Right of Survivorship

Characteristics:

  • Available to any co-owners (not just spouses)
  • Provides automatic inheritance to survivors
  • All owners have equal shares

Tenancy in Common

Characteristics:

  • Allows each owner to own different percentages
  • There’s no automatic inheritance—each owner’s share goes through their estate plan
  • This works for investment partners

Trust Ownership

Many buyers place their homes in revocable living trusts for estate planning purposes.

If you’re doing this:

  • Involve your estate planning attorney early
  • The lender needs to approve
  • Specific documents are required

The Escrow Process: Your Neutral Guardian

Escrow is a neutral third party that holds money and documents, ensuring everyone does what they promised before anyone gets paid.

What Escrow Does

The escrow company:

  • Holds your earnest money safely
  • Collects your down payment and loan funds
  • Ensures all documents are properly signed
  • Pays off the seller’s mortgage
  • Distributes funds to everyone owed money
  • Records the deed in your name
  • Only releases money when all conditions are met

The Escrow Timeline

Understanding what happens during escrow helps you prepare:

  1. Contract delivery: The contract is delivered to the escrow company
  2. File opening: They open a file and begin their process
  3. Title work: While title work happens, escrow prepares initial documents and coordinates with your lender
  4. Inspections: You conduct inspections while escrow continues preparing for closing
  5. Loan processing: Your lender processes the loan while escrow coordinates requirements
  6. Signing: You’ll sign loan documents and closing paperwork a few days before closing
  7. Funding and closing: The lender sends money to escrow, escrow confirms all conditions are met, and the deed is recorded with the county
  8. You own a home!

Common Title and Escrow Issues We Navigate

Solar Panels

Many Arizona homes have solar panels, but are they owned or leased?

If leased:

  • Creates a lien on the title that must be addressed
  • The lease must be transferred to you or the seller must pay it off
  • Our agents always investigate solar panel ownership early in the process

Multiple HOAs

Some properties are in multiple HOAs—a master association and a sub-association:

  • Each might have different rules, fees, and transfer requirements
  • We ensure you understand all HOA obligations before closing

Mobile Home Titles

In certain Arizona communities, the land and mobile home have separate titles:

  • Buying one doesn’t automatically include the other
  • Our agents verify both are included in your purchase

Section 5: Seller Disclosures – Knowledge Is Power

Arizona law requires sellers to disclose known material facts about their property. The Seller’s Property Disclosure Statement (SPDS) is your window into the home’s history, revealing everything from past floods to neighbor disputes.

The Philosophy Behind Disclosures

Arizona follows the principle of “caveat emptor” (buyer beware) with an important modification: sellers must disclose what they know. They’re not required to inspect or investigate, but they can’t hide known problems.

This creates an interesting dynamic—sellers have information you need, but they’re also trying to sell you something.

Our West USA Realty agents help you read disclosures critically, understanding what’s said, what’s not said, and what questions to ask. We’ve reviewed thousands of disclosure statements and know the patterns that suggest deeper investigation is needed.

The SPDS: Your Information Goldmine

The Seller’s Property Disclosure Statement is a detailed questionnaire covering virtually every aspect of the property.

Ownership History

The ownership section reveals:

  • How long sellers have owned the property
  • Whether they’ve actually lived there

What this tells you:

  • Long-term owner-occupants typically know the most about the property
  • Recent purchasers might not know the property’s full history
  • Investor owners who’ve never lived there often know very little
  • Inherited property situations mean the seller might have minimal knowledge

Real example: We recently had clients interested in a home where the SPDS revealed the sellers inherited it six months ago and never lived there. This explained why so many disclosure answers were “unknown.” We recommended extra-thorough inspections, which revealed foundation issues the sellers genuinely didn’t know about.

Property Characteristics

This can reveal important information:

  • If the seller reports a different year built than public records show, it might indicate unpermitted additions
  • Sellers might include unpermitted additions in their square footage claims, affecting value and causing appraisal problems
  • In Arizona, HVAC systems are crucial and expensive—a 15-year-old AC unit is near end-of-life

Critical Utilities Information for Arizona Properties

Important items:

  • Water source (wells require special attention)
  • Sewer systems (septic systems need regular maintenance)
  • Pool equipment age and condition
  • Solar panel ownership or lease terms

Environmental Information

Addresses hazards that could affect health or property value:

  • Even in the desert, flooding happens—sellers must disclose any knowledge of flooding, even if repaired
  • Older homes might have asbestos, lead paint, or mold
  • Termites are common in Arizona—past treatment doesn’t mean current absence

Reading Between the Lines

What sellers write—and don’t write—tells a story.

Common Hedging Phrases

  • “To the best of seller’s knowledge” is the seller’s hedge—they’re not guaranteeing, just reporting what they know
  • Blank or “Unknown” responses might be legitimate for some things but suspicious for others
  • “New roof (2023)” sounds great, but why was it replaced?
  • Vague language like “some water intrusion during heavy rains” could mean anything from minor seepage to major flooding

Beyond the SPDS

CLUE Reports

Beyond the SPDS, we recommend obtaining a CLUE (Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange) report. This reveals five years of insurance claims on the property.

Sellers might “forget” about that pipe burst three years ago, but insurance companies don’t.

Material Facts Beyond the SPDS

Some issues don’t fit neatly into SPDS categories but must still be disclosed:

  • Arizona doesn’t require disclosure of deaths on the property unless directly asked
  • Problematic neighbors, pending developments, or community disputes should be disclosed if they materially affect value
  • If the HOA is planning a special assessment or the city is planning road work with property owner costs, sellers must disclose if known

How West USA Realty Maximizes Disclosure Value

We don’t just read disclosures—we investigate them:

  1. Detailed review: We schedule dedicated time to review the SPDS line by line, explaining implications and identifying concerns
  2. Strategic questioning: Based on disclosures, we prepare specific questions for sellers
  3. Inspection strategy: Disclosures guide our inspection strategy
  4. Negotiation leverage: Disclosures provide negotiation leverage—that 18-year-old HVAC system is justification for a credit or price reduction

Section 6: Warranties – Understanding What You’re NOT Getting

This might be the most misunderstood section of the contract. Many buyers assume they’re getting some kind of warranty or guarantee about the home’s condition. In reality, this section primarily explains what warranties you’re NOT getting.

The Harsh Reality: “As-Is” Sales

Unless specifically negotiated otherwise, Arizona home sales are essentially “as-is.” The seller makes NO warranties about:

  • The condition of anything in the home
  • Whether everything works properly
  • If the home is suitable for your intended use
  • Whether there are hidden defects

This might sound scary, and it should. It’s why your inspection period is so critical—it’s your chance to discover issues before you’re stuck with them.

The Disclosure vs. Warranty Distinction

There’s a crucial legal distinction between:

  • Disclosure obligations: Sellers must tell you about known problems
  • Warranty obligations: Sellers are NOT promising to fix problems or guaranteeing condition

Example: A seller discloses that the guest bathroom toilet “runs sometimes.” They’ve met their disclosure obligation, but they’re not warranting it works properly or promising to fix it.

The Limited Warranties You Do Get

While sellers don’t warrant condition, they do make certain promises:

  • The seller promises they actually own the property and have the right to sell it
  • They promise there are no undisclosed liens except those disclosed in the title commitment
  • While not warranting condition, sellers do warrant that their disclosures are accurate to their knowledge

Home Warranties: The Optional Protection

Not to be confused with seller warranties, home warranty plans are service contracts that cover repair/replacement of major systems and appliances.

What They Typically Cover

  • HVAC systems
  • Water heaters
  • Electrical and plumbing systems
  • Kitchen appliances
  • (With additional coverage) Washers/dryers and pools/spas

What They Don’t Cover

  • Pre-existing conditions
  • Improper maintenance
  • Certain parts
  • Cosmetic issues
  • Structural components

Our Experience with Home Warranties

Our agents have seen home warranties save buyers thousands and frustrate others:

Pros:

  • In competitive markets, asking sellers to provide a home warranty is easier than asking for price reductions
  • For first-time buyers worried about surprise repairs, the psychological benefit might outweigh the cost

Cons:

  • Some warranty companies are excellent; others fight every claim
  • Home warranties don’t cover everything—thorough inspections remain crucial

Section 7: The Inspection Period – Your Due Diligence Window

If there’s one section that can save you from costly mistakes, it’s this one. The inspection period is your opportunity to thoroughly investigate the property before you’re committed to buying it.

What Is the Inspection Period?

The inspection period is a set number of days during which you can conduct any inspections, investigations, or research about the property. In Arizona, it’s typically 10 days, though this is negotiable.

What You Can Do

During this time, you can:

  • Hire professional inspectors
  • Review documents
  • Research the neighborhood
  • Verify insurability
  • Confirm your financing
  • Essentially investigate anything that matters to you

Most importantly: You can cancel the contract for ANY reason (or no reason at all) during this period and get your earnest money back.

The Critical Nature of This Period

Once the inspection period ends, you lose most of your ability to cancel without penalty. After this point, you can generally only cancel based on:

  • Specific contingencies
  • If the seller breaches the contract

That’s why our West USA Realty agents treat these 10 days as sacred.

The Inspection Strategy

1. Schedule the General Home Inspection Immediately

A qualified inspector will spend 2-4 hours examining:

  • Foundation and structure
  • Roof and attic
  • Electrical and plumbing systems
  • HVAC systems
  • Windows and doors
  • Appliances
  • Overall safety issues

Cost: Typically $400-600 but provides immeasurable value

2. Based on General Inspection Findings, Consider Specialized Inspections

Common specialized inspections:

  • Termite inspection: Essential in Arizona ($50-150)
  • Pool/spa inspection: For properties with pools ($150-250)
  • Sewer scope: For older homes or those with large trees ($200-300)
  • HVAC detailed inspection: Beyond the general inspection ($100-200)
  • Roof inspection: If concerns are noted ($200-400)
  • Mold testing: If there’s any history of water damage ($300-500)

The Inspection Report: Interpretation and Action

Inspection reports can be overwhelming—often 30-50 pages with photos of every minor issue. Our agents help you categorize findings into:

  1. Safety issues: Must be addressed
  2. Major concerns: Significantly affect value and livability
  3. Maintenance items: Normal wear and tear
  4. FYI items: Nice to know but not negotiation points

The Buyer’s Inspection Notice and Disputed Items (BINSR)

After inspections, you have three options:

Option 1: Accept the Property As-Is

No repairs requested, move forward with purchase.

Option 2: Request Repairs

Submit a Buyer’s Inspection Notice listing specific items for seller to address.

Option 3: Cancel the Contract

If inspections reveal deal-breakers (but only within the inspection period).

BINSR Negotiation Process

If you request repairs:

  1. The seller has five days to respond
  2. They can accept all requests, accept some requests, reject all requests, or counter with alternatives
  3. Then you have five more days to either accept their response and move forward or cancel the contract

Strategic Considerations

  • Repairs vs. credits: Often credits give you more control
  • Market conditions: Seller’s vs. buyer’s market affects negotiation power
  • Pick your battles: Focus on health, safety, and major expenses
  • Document everything clearly

Beyond Physical Inspections

The inspection period isn’t just about the house:

HOA Documents

Review:

  • Financial statements
  • Meeting minutes
  • CC&Rs
  • Pending assessments

Permits

Verify:

  • Additions were permitted
  • Check for open permits or code violations

Insurance

Verify:

  • You can get insurance
  • What it will cost

Neighborhood Research

  • Visit at different times
  • Talk to neighbors
  • Research future development

Common Inspection Period Mistakes

Avoid these pitfalls:

  • Waiting too long to schedule inspectors
  • Skipping inspections to save money
  • Having emotional reactions to reports instead of evaluating rationally
  • Missing the deadline to submit your BINSR
  • Using poor negotiation strategy

Section 8: Closing Costs and Procedures – The Final Steps

As you approach the finish line of your home purchase, understanding closing costs and procedures becomes crucial.

What Are Closing Costs?

Closing costs are all the fees and expenses you pay to finalize your home purchase, beyond the down payment.

In Arizona:

  • Buyers typically pay 2-5% of the purchase price in closing costs
  • On a $400,000 home, that’s $8,000-20,000 in addition to your down payment

Who Pays What? The Traditional Split

While everything is negotiable, Arizona has traditional customs.

Buyers Typically Pay

  • Loan origination fees
  • Appraisal fee
  • Credit report
  • Home inspection fees
  • Lender’s title insurance
  • Half the escrow fee
  • Recording fees
  • Prepaid interest
  • Property tax proration
  • First year’s homeowner’s insurance
  • HOA transfer fees

Sellers Typically Pay

  • Real estate commissions
  • Owner’s title insurance
  • Half the escrow fee
  • HOA disclosure fees
  • Agreed-upon repairs or credits
  • Their own loan payoff

The Closing Cost Breakdown

Lender Fees ($2,000-6,000)

  • Origination fee (0.5-1% of loan amount)
  • Optional discount points
  • Appraisal fee
  • Credit report
  • Underwriting fee

Title and Escrow Fees ($1,500-3,000)

  • Title insurance (one-time fee protecting against title defects)
  • Escrow fee (split between buyer and seller)
  • Recording fees for your deed and mortgage

Prepaid Expenses ($2,000-5,000)

These aren’t fees but expenses paid in advance:

  • Prepaid interest from closing to month end
  • Property taxes
  • Homeowner’s insurance
  • HOA fees if applicable

The Final Walk-Through: Your Last Chance to Verify

Within 5 days of closing (often the day before), you’ll do a final walk-through to verify:

  • The property is in the same condition
  • Agreed-upon repairs were completed
  • Nothing was removed that should stay
  • The seller has moved out

If you discover problems, don’t panic but don’t ignore them. Our agents know how to handle last-minute issues.

The Signing Appointment: What to Expect

About 3-5 days before closing, you’ll sign all loan documents and closing paperwork.

What to Bring

  • Photo ID
  • Cashier’s check or wire confirmation
  • Personal checkbook
  • Proof of homeowner’s insurance

Key Documents

  • Deed of Trust: Secures the loan with the property
  • Promissory Note: Your promise to repay the loan
  • Closing Disclosure: Final accounting of all costs
  • Settlement Statement: Shows money distribution
  • Various affidavits: Legal declarations

The Funding Process and Recording

After signing:

  1. Your lender reviews documents and releases funds to escrow
  2. The escrow company pays off the seller’s mortgage
  3. Pays all service providers
  4. Pays agreed credits
  5. Gives the seller their proceeds
  6. Records your deed with the county
  7. Once recorded, you officially own the home and get your keys!

Post-Closing Important Steps

Immediately

  • Change locks
  • Transfer utilities
  • Update your address
  • File for homestead exemption
  • Locate water shut-offs and electrical panel

Keep Important Documents

  • Closing disclosure
  • Deed
  • Title insurance policy
  • Home warranty information
  • Inspection reports
  • Improvement receipts

Section 9: Additional Terms and Conditions – The Fine Print That Matters

This section addresses unique situations and special agreements.

Common Additions

  • Sale of buyer’s property contingency
  • Rent-back agreements
  • Specific personal property inclusions
  • Special repair agreements

Unusual Situations We’ve Navigated

Our agents have experience with:

  • Business-at-home clauses
  • Multi-generational modifications
  • Solar lease transfers
  • Shared well agreements

Section 10: Agency Relationships – Who’s Really on Your Side?

This section clarifies who represents whom.

Understanding Representation

Your Buyer’s Agent

  • Exclusively represents your interests
  • Maintains confidentiality
  • Negotiates on your behalf

The Seller’s Agent

  • Represents only the seller

Dual Agency

  • One agent for both parties
  • Creates inherent conflicts

Why Agency Matters

  • Confidentiality: What you tell your agent stays private
  • Negotiation strategy: Your agent works only for you
  • Information flow: Your agent filters information through your interests

Our agents commit to exclusive buyer representation, ensuring:

  • Undivided loyalty
  • Fierce advocacy

Critical Timelines and Deadlines: Your Transaction Calendar

Missing a deadline can cost you thousands or even the house itself.

The Critical Timeline

  • Day 0: Contract acceptance
  • Day 3: Loan application due
  • Day 5: Earnest money must be deposited
  • Day 10: Inspection period ends, loan status update due
  • Days 10-15: BINSR response period
  • Days 15-20: Your BINSR decision
  • Days 15-30: Appraisal period
  • Days 20-35: Loan underwriting
  • Final Week: Final walk-through, signing appointment, funding
  • Closing Day: You become the owner!

How We Protect You

Our agents use:

  • Digital calendar integration
  • Weekly status calls
  • Deadline warning systems
  • Team backup to ensure nothing is missed

Working with West USA Realty: Your Partners in Success

Why Experience Matters

Every real estate transaction is unique, but patterns emerge over thousands of deals. Our agents have seen it all and know how to anticipate and solve problems.

Our Contract Success System

Before Any Offer

We discuss:

  • Your priorities
  • Comfort zone
  • Timeline
  • Negotiation strategies

We Craft Strategic Offers

Considering all factors to maximize your success.

Once Under Contract

We actively manage:

  • Timelines
  • Coordinate all parties
  • Attend inspections
  • Review documents
  • Negotiate repairs
  • Monitor progress
  • Ensure smooth closing

Our Relationship Continues Post-Closing

With:

  • Ongoing support
  • Consultation

The Technology Advantage

West USA Realty combines experienced agents with:

  • Digital transaction management
  • E-signature capability
  • Real-time communication
  • Market analysis tools

Our Network Is Your Network

Through years of successful transactions, we’ve built relationships with:

  • Preferred lenders
  • Trusted inspectors
  • Reliable service providers

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Mistakes That Cost Buyers

  1. Not reading the contract
  2. Waiving inspections
  3. Making large purchases during escrow
  4. Assuming verbal agreements count
  5. Missing deadlines
  6. Choosing the wrong title method
  7. Underestimating closing costs
  8. Skipping the final walk-through

Our systematic approach and expertise help you avoid all these pitfalls.

Your Path Forward: From Contract to Keys

Understanding the Arizona Residential Resale Real Estate Purchase Contract transforms you from an anxious buyer into an empowered decision-maker.

This Document Is Your Roadmap

This document is your roadmap to successful homeownership. Every section serves a purpose:

  • Protecting your interests
  • Clarifying expectations
  • Providing escape routes when needed
  • Ensuring fair dealing
  • Creating a framework for resolving disputes

But knowledge alone isn’t enough. You need an experienced guide who’s navigated these waters countless times. Someone who knows not just what the contract says, but how it plays out in real-world transactions.

The West USA Realty Promise

When you work with West USA Realty, you’re getting a partner committed to your success.

We Promise

  • Education not pressure
  • Proactive protection
  • Fierce advocacy
  • Transparent communication
  • A lifetime relationship

Your Next Steps

  • Get pre-approved
  • Define your priorities
  • Learn the market
  • View properties strategically

If You’ve Found a Home You Love

We’ll help with:

  • Strategic offer development
  • Contract execution
  • Transaction management
  • Closing

Why West USA Realty?

We offer:

  • Local expertise
  • Proven track record
  • Full-service support
  • Technology-enabled service
  • Relationship-focused approach

Contact West USA Realty Today

Ready to put this knowledge into action? Whether you’re months away from buying or ready to make an offer today, we’re here to help.

Our experienced agents are standing by to:

  • Answer questions
  • Provide guidance
  • Ensure your home buying journey is successful

Don’t navigate the complexities of the Arizona real estate market alone. Partner with West USA Realty and experience the difference that expertise, dedication, and genuine care make in your home buying journey.

Remember

In real estate, what you don’t know CAN hurt you. But with the right knowledge and the right partner, you’re empowered to make one of life’s most important decisions with confidence.

  • Your dream home is waiting
  • Your perfect transaction is possible
  • Your successful future as an Arizona homeowner starts with understanding your purchase contract and choosing the right team to guide you

Welcome to your journey toward homeownership. Welcome to West USA Realty.


Disclaimer: This guide is provided for educational purposes to help buyers understand the Arizona Residential Resale Real Estate Purchase Contract. While comprehensive, it doesn’t replace professional advice. Every transaction is unique, and specific situations require consultation with qualified real estate professionals and, when appropriate, legal counsel. West USA Realty agents are trained to help you understand and navigate your purchase contract, ensuring your interests are protected throughout your transaction.