The Contingency Checklist: Inspection, Appraisal, Financing, HOA Docs, Home Sale

Written by Chad Cabalka → Meet the Expert

Written by Reneé Burke → Meet the Expert

Written by Hilary Marshall → Meet the Expert

Transactional Fears [Transactional Fears] & For more info on other fears Phoenix Real Estate  [Phoenix Real Estate Fears Guide]

Written by: Renee Burke

You’re under contract on your Phoenix home, and those contingency deadlines are ticking—inspection notices due, financing updates pending, HOA packets landing. I’ve steadied countless Valley sellers through this phase, from anxious families in Chandler watching appraisal reports to Gilbert folks parsing HOA rules for the first time. Contingencies protect buyers while giving you clear timelines to manage expectations, but missing one can ripple into delays or disputes. With a simple checklist, you stay ahead, keeping your escrow smooth and your move on track.

In Arizona’s AAR Residential Resale Purchase Contract, these built-in periods let buyers verify the home without locking you in prematurely. Let’s break them down one by one—deadlines, red flags, and your seller steps—so you navigate with the calm confidence our market rewards.


Inspection Contingency: The First Big Hurdle

This 7–10 day window (negotiable) lets buyers inspect everything—general home, roof, pool, HVAC, pests—and decide: proceed, request repairs/credits, or cancel with earnest money back.

Phoenix watch-outs: Desert wear like stucco cracks or AC strain shows up here. Buyers might add sewer scopes or termite checks in older Tempe areas.

Your Checklist:

  • Day 1: Welcome inspector; leave utilities on, access easy.
  • Provide maintenance logs/receipts upfront—proactive transparency shines.
  • By deadline: Respond to Buyer Inspection Notice (BINSR) within 5 days—accept, counter, or hold firm.
  • Tip: Pre-inspect your Ahwatukee pool or Cave Creek well to head off surprises.

Clear this, and momentum builds.


Appraisal Contingency: Value Must Match Price

Lender-ordered, typically 7–21 days post-contract. Buyer can cancel or renegotiate if it appraises low (below purchase price), with 5 days post-notice to act.

Valley variance: Unique Scottsdale solar or Queen Creek horse setups comp tricky. Hot tracts like Gilbert appraise smoothly.

Your Checklist:

  • Supply 3–6 recent comps to buyer’s appraiser—your agent handles.
  • Include appraisal gap coverage in strong offers (buyer covers shortfall).
  • If low: Offer data, not defensiveness; credits rare unless egregious.
  • Monitor: No response by deadline waives it.

Solid pricing prevents 90% of these.


Financing Contingency: Loan Approval Without Surprises

21–30 days for full approval sans “PTD” (prior-to-document) conditions. Buyer must notify 3 days pre-close: approved, sign docs, or cancel.

Phoenix reality: FHA/VA common for first-timers; underwriting digs late.

Your Checklist:

  • Pre-offer: Vet lender strength, underwriting progress.
  • Track buyer’s doc submissions—agent pings weekly.
  • Deadline looms? Request status; no notice forfeits earnest.
  • Backup: Strong pre-approvals minimize risk.

HOA Documents: Rules That Bind the Community

5–10 days to review estoppel, CC&Rs, budgets, minutes, litigation. Buyer objects to violations, assessments, rental caps?

Master-planned like Power Ranch or Eastmark? Packets take time—order early.

Your Checklist:

  • Listing: Pull estoppel Day 1 ($250–$400).
  • Disclose dues, specials, restrictions upfront.
  • Objections? Provide proof paid; negotiate fines from proceeds.
  • No HOA? Note it—simpler sails.

Home Sale Contingency: Buyer’s Old Home Must Sell

Rare in competitive Phoenix—relos or upsizers mostly. Buyer sells theirs by deadline or contract voids.

Your Checklist:

  • Scrutinize: Proof under contract? Escrow #?
  • Prefer without; backups protect you.
  • If included: Short fuse (30 days), release clause.

Your Master Seller Contingency Timeline

ContingencyTypical DaysSeller ActionRed Flag
Inspection7–10Provide access/docs; BINSR responseNo notice by end
Appraisal7–21Comps ready; gap languageSilence post-report
Financing21–30Lender check-insVague updates
HOA5–10Estoppel firstPending litigation
Home Sale30–45Backup offersNo sale progress

Calendar these—your agent syncs.


Phoenix Flow: A 35-Day Example

Day 0: Acceptance, earnest in.
Days 1–10: Inspections, HOA review.
Days 10–21: Repairs resolved, appraisal.
Days 21–30: Financing locked.
Day 35: Walk-through, close.

Adjust per offer—cash skips most.


A Mesa Mastery Story

Gilbert seller: 10-day inspection yields pool requests. Receipts provided, $2k credit agreed. HOA clean, financing solid despite low app—gap covered. Closed Day 32. Weak prep? Extension city. Checklists win.


Checklist Mastery, Valley Style

Master these, and contingencies become checkpoints, not chokepoints. You protect your timeline while buyers feel heard—true partnership.

If deadlines blur or an objection lands unexpectedly, you don’t have to track it solo. I’m here in the Phoenix metro, calendars synced to your contract, ready to quarterback notices, supply docs, and steer you to a steady close. Reach out—let’s check off your contingencies together.

Get the full Phoenix Market Insights  [Market Insights]

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