Earnest money is one of those real estate concepts that sounds simple but has enough nuance to trip up even experienced buyers. At its core, it’s a deposit you make when your offer is accepted to demonstrate you’re serious about purchasing the home. But how much is appropriate, when can you get it back, and what happens if the deal falls apart? Here’s a clear breakdown of how earnest money works in Oregon, with specifics about what’s typical in the Central Oregon market.
What Earnest Money Is and Why It Exists
Earnest money is a good-faith deposit that accompanies your purchase offer. It tells the seller: I’m serious about this transaction and I’m putting real money behind my commitment. Without it, a buyer could tie up a property with an offer, preventing the seller from accepting other offers, with zero financial risk. That wouldn’t be fair to the seller, so earnest money creates skin in the game.
When the transaction closes successfully, your earnest money is applied toward your down payment and closing costs. It’s not an additional cost; it’s money you were going to spend anyway, just paid earlier in the process.
Typical Amounts in Central Oregon
There’s no fixed rule for how much earnest money to offer. Oregon law doesn’t mandate a specific amount. However, market conventions exist, and the amount you offer signals how serious you are.
In the Central Oregon market, typical earnest money deposits range from:
- $2,000 to $5,000 for homes priced under $400,000
- $5,000 to $10,000 for homes in the $400,000 to $700,000 range
- $10,000 to $25,000 for homes above $700,000
- 1% to 3% of the purchase price is a general guideline that applies across price ranges
In competitive situations with multiple offers, a larger earnest money deposit can make your offer more attractive. It signals to the seller that you’re committed and less likely to back out for frivolous reasons. During peak season in Bend (typically April through September), buyers competing for popular properties sometimes offer 3% to 5% earnest money to stand out.
That said, more earnest money means more of your cash is at risk if something goes wrong. Balance the desire to be competitive with prudent risk management.
How Earnest Money Is Held in Oregon
In Oregon, earnest money is held by the escrow company (also called the title and escrow company) in a trust account. The money does not go to the seller. This is an important distinction: the escrow company is a neutral third party that holds the funds until either the transaction closes (at which point the money goes toward your purchase) or the deal falls through (at which point it’s returned based on the contract terms).
When your offer is accepted and you write the earnest money check or initiate a wire transfer, you send it directly to the escrow company, not to the seller or the listing agent. In Central Oregon, several well-established title and escrow companies handle the majority of transactions.
Delivery Timeline
Under the standard Oregon purchase agreement (OREF forms), earnest money must be delivered within 2 to 3 business days of mutual acceptance. Missing this deadline is a contract violation that could give the seller grounds to terminate the agreement. Set a reminder and have your funds ready before your offer is submitted.
When Earnest Money Is Refundable
This is where contingencies become critical. A contingency is a condition in your purchase agreement that must be satisfied for the deal to proceed. If a contingency isn’t met and you terminate within the specified timeframe, you get your earnest money back.
Standard Contingencies That Protect Your Earnest Money
Inspection contingency: The most important protection for buyers. In Oregon, the standard inspection period is 10 business days. During this time, you can terminate for any reason related to the property’s condition (or, in practice, for almost any reason) and receive your earnest money back. This is your broadest protection and your primary safety net.
Financing contingency: If your loan falls through despite good-faith efforts to obtain financing, you can terminate and get your earnest money back. This protects you if the lender denies your application, the appraisal comes in too low, or other financing-related issues arise that weren’t caused by your own actions (like quitting your job mid-escrow).
Appraisal contingency: Often wrapped into the financing contingency, this specifically protects you if the property appraises below the purchase price and you and the seller can’t agree on how to handle the gap.
Title contingency: If the title search reveals issues (liens, encumbrances, ownership disputes) that can’t be resolved, you can terminate.
Sale of buyer’s home contingency: If your purchase is contingent on selling your current home and that sale falls through, this contingency protects your earnest money. However, this contingency weakens your offer significantly and is rarely used in competitive markets.
When Earnest Money Is NOT Refundable
If you’ve waived your contingencies (or they’ve expired) and you decide to back out, the seller may be entitled to keep your earnest money as liquidated damages. This is the risk you take on as contingencies expire.
Common scenarios where buyers lose earnest money:
- Cold feet after contingencies expire: You simply change your mind about buying the home after your inspection and financing contingencies have been satisfied and removed.
- Failing to perform: You miss a deadline in the contract (like failing to deliver additional earnest money when required) without the seller agreeing to an extension.
- Voluntary financial changes: You lose financing because you made a large purchase, changed jobs, or took on new debt during escrow. The financing contingency protects you from circumstances beyond your control, not from self-inflicted problems.
- Waived contingencies: In competitive markets, some buyers waive inspection or appraisal contingencies to make their offers more attractive. If you then want to back out for a reason that would have been covered by those waived contingencies, your earnest money is at risk.
The Dispute Process
If a deal falls apart and there’s a disagreement about who gets the earnest money, the escrow company doesn’t make that decision. They hold the funds until both parties agree on the disposition, a court orders it, or the dispute is resolved through the mediation and arbitration process outlined in the purchase agreement.
Oregon purchase agreements typically require mediation before either party can pursue legal action. In practice, most earnest money disputes are resolved through negotiation between the agents and parties without reaching the mediation stage, because the cost of mediation often exceeds the amount of earnest money in dispute.
Earnest Money Strategy
In a Competitive Market
When multiple buyers are competing for the same property (common in Bend during spring and summer), you can use earnest money strategically:
- Larger deposit: Offering $10,000 instead of $5,000 on a $500,000 home shows commitment.
- Quick delivery: Offering to deliver earnest money within 24 hours instead of the standard 3 days shows you’re ready to move.
- Non-refundable after inspection: Some buyers offer to make a portion of earnest money non-refundable after the inspection period. This is aggressive and carries real risk, but it signals very strong commitment.
In a Balanced or Buyer-Friendly Market
When inventory is higher and competition is lower (typical in Central Oregon during November through February), there’s less pressure to offer large earnest money deposits. The standard 1% to 2% is usually appropriate, and you have more room to maintain all your contingency protections.
Common Earnest Money Mistakes
Missing the delivery deadline. This is the most avoidable mistake. Know the deadline, have your funds ready, and deliver on time. If you’re wiring money, initiate the wire the day before the deadline (wires can take 24 hours to process).
Not understanding contingency deadlines. Your contingencies have specific expiration dates. If you need more time for inspections or your lender needs an extension, request it in writing before the deadline expires, not after. Once a contingency expires, your protection disappears.
Waiving contingencies without understanding the risk. In a competitive offer, your agent might suggest waiving the inspection contingency. Understand that this means if the inspection reveals a $30,000 foundation problem, you can’t back out without potentially losing your earnest money. Only waive contingencies you’ve carefully considered.
Using earnest money from someone else’s account. The earnest money should come from your own account. If a family member is gifting you funds for the purchase, have those funds in your account before writing the earnest money check. Lenders scrutinize the source of funds, and earnest money from an unexplained source creates complications.
Confusing earnest money with the down payment. Earnest money is part of your down payment, not separate from it. If you’re putting 10% down on a $500,000 home ($50,000), and your earnest money was $5,000, you owe $45,000 more at closing for the remainder of the down payment.
Tax Implications
Earnest money that becomes part of your down payment at closing has no separate tax implications; it’s simply part of your home purchase. However, if you forfeit earnest money because a deal falls through, you may be able to deduct the loss in some circumstances. Consult a tax professional for advice specific to your situation.
Putting It All Together
Earnest money is a necessary part of the home buying process that serves a legitimate purpose. When handled properly, it protects both parties and demonstrates commitment. The key points to remember:
- In Central Oregon, $2,000 to $10,000 is typical depending on price range
- It’s held by the escrow company, not the seller
- Contingencies protect your deposit; understand when they expire
- Deliver on time, every time
- Don’t waive contingencies unless you fully understand the financial risk
- At closing, it applies toward your purchase costs
Want to discuss how much earnest money is appropriate for a specific property you’re interested in? Get in touch and we’ll help you craft a competitive offer that protects your interests.