When a Closing Delay Is Normal vs When It’s a Red Flag

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Written by Reneé Burke → Meet the Expert

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Written by: Renee Burke

Most financed purchases in Phoenix close in roughly 30–45 days from the moment you go under contract, with cash deals often wrapping up sooner, sometimes in as little as 7–21 days depending on the title company and how quickly everyone signs and funds. Within that window, it’s very common for dates to shift by a day or two as inspections wrap up, appraisals come in, and final loan numbers get dialed in.

So before you panic, remember: a contract that closes a few days later than originally projected is often still perfectly healthy.


When a delay is usually normal

These are the kinds of slow-downs I see all the time around the Valley that, while inconvenient, are generally manageable and not a sign your deal is falling apart.

  • Title and recording timing.
    In Arizona, you don’t truly close until the deed is recorded with the county, and in busy seasons, recording can lag funding by several hours or even up to a day. It can feel agonizing when you’re waiting on keys, but this is typically just procedural, not problematic.
  • Final loan numbers and disclosures.
    Lenders are required to issue a Closing Disclosure at least three business days before closing, but small adjustments to taxes, HOA proration, or prepaid interest can cause a minor shift in timing. A one-day bump so the lender can re-balance numbers is annoying, but common.
  • Appraisal scheduling.
    In some Phoenix submarkets—especially busy areas or when appraisers are backed up—a slightly late appraisal can push closing back a few days. Typical appraisal timelines are often around a week or more, and a small delay there doesn’t automatically spell trouble.
  • Minor inspection or repair delays.
    If a repair takes an extra couple of days, or a contractor can’t get out until after the weekend, it’s normal for closing to be nudged slightly so both sides feel good about condition and completion.
  • Logistical issues with signing.
    In our area, it’s standard for buyers and sellers to sign on different days, and for closings to depend on work schedules, travel, or mobile notaries. If everyone is communicating and the lender and title company agree the file is ready, a small scheduling delay is more of a life-happens issue than a warning sign.

In all of these “normal delay” scenarios, the key is that the professionals involved—lender, title, and agents—are responsive, transparent, and able to give clear next steps and timing.


When a delay is a yellow flag (watch closely)

Sometimes a delay doesn’t yet mean the deal is in danger, but it does mean you and your agent should lean in and ask more questions.

  • The appraisal came in low and there’s no clear plan.
    It’s not unusual for a low appraisal to slow things down while everyone discusses price adjustments or appraisal gap coverage. It becomes a yellow flag if days go by with vague responses from the buyer’s side and no specific solution on the table.
  • Buyer’s documentation isn’t complete.
    If you hear things like “we’re still waiting for one more bank statement” or “underwriting needs a few more items,” that can be fixable—but it’s a sign the buyer wasn’t as far along as you might have thought. One short extension may be fine; repeated “just a few more days” requests are reason to get firmer clarity.
  • Last-minute changes to loan program.
    Occasionally buyers switch from one loan type to another if their lender advises it—say, from conventional to FHA. That can add some time and extra paperwork. As long as the lender is confident and the new financing still fits your property and timeline, it’s a watch-and-verify situation, not instant disaster.

In these yellow-flag moments, communication is everything. A solid lender and a prepared buyer can often resolve issues within a short extension. Your job is to rely on your agent to ask pointed questions and confirm whether the file is truly on track.


When a delay is a clear red flag

There are also times when a “simple delay” is really a symptom of deeper problems. These are the patterns that should make you pause and consider whether it’s safer to renegotiate—or walk away.

  • Repeated, vague extensions with no specifics.
    If you keep hearing “we just need a bit more time” without concrete tasks, dates, or milestones (“underwriter has the file, we’ll know by X date”), that’s a strong red flag. Healthy files come with clear explanations; troubled ones come with fog.
  • Financing issues that keep evolving.
    Signs like big changes in the buyer’s down payment, newly discovered debt, income questions, or multiple loan denials can indicate the buyer’s financial picture doesn’t match the original pre-qualification. When the story keeps changing, the risk of a cancellation climbs.
  • Failure to meet contractual deadlines—without real justification.
    It’s one thing to miss closing by a day because recording was backed up. It’s another to blow through inspection, appraisal, or loan-approval deadlines with little progress or documentation. That often points to disorganization at best, or an unqualified buyer at worst.
  • A silent or evasive lender.
    If your agent can’t get a straight answer from the lender—or calls and emails go unanswered—that’s a major problem. A lender who won’t communicate before closing is unlikely to pull off a smooth, timely funding.
  • Buyer suddenly can’t bring the funds to close.
    If “cash to close” keeps shifting dramatically, or the buyer is scrambling for gift funds or last-minute liquidations, you may be headed toward a failed closing. Sometimes a short delay can fix it, but if the buyer’s story doesn’t add up, protecting your position becomes the priority.

When multiple red flags start stacking up, it’s often better to cut your losses than to hold your home off the market for a deal that never closes.


How to protect yourself when delays pop up

You can’t control every timeline, but you can set yourself up so that normal delays stay manageable and red-flag delays don’t blindside you.

  • Start with strong buyer vetting.
    Before you ever accept an offer, have your agent scrutinize the pre-qualification, talk with the lender, and understand how far along underwriting really is. A solid foundation here makes later delays less likely to be deal-breakers.
  • Use contract deadlines as tools, not suggestions.
    Arizona’s standard contract gives clear markers for inspections, appraisal, and loan approval. When delays arise, your agent can use those dates to negotiate extensions, request documentation, or, if needed, reposition you to take backup offers seriously.
  • Insist on real communication, not just reassurance.
    It’s perfectly reasonable to ask: What exactly is causing the delay? Who is responsible for resolving it? What’s the new target date, and what happens if that’s not met? Specific answers are a sign of competence; vague answers are where I get firm.
  • Keep your own move as flexible as possible.
    I know that’s not always easy, especially if you’re coordinating school start dates, new jobs, or another purchase. But a few days of cushion in your movers, lease end, or new-home closing can soften the blow of “normal” delays.

Listening to your instincts

I always tell my sellers: you’re allowed to trust your gut. If everything is being communicated clearly, the professionals are on top of their roles, and the delay has a logical cause, it’s often worth a little grace.

If instead you feel like you’re constantly chasing answers, timelines keep slipping, and no one can tell you exactly what’s happening, that’s usually your intuition picking up on something very real—this may not be the buyer who will get you to the finish line.


If you’re in the middle of a Phoenix sale and wondering whether a delay is “just part of the process” or a sign you should rethink your agreement, you don’t have to sort that out on your own. I’m always here to walk through your specific situation, review the contract dates and lender updates with you, and help you decide when to stay patient—and when to stand your ground.

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