
If you’re aiming for a quick, clean sale in Georgia, a little jargon fluency goes a long way. Here’s a plain-English glossary of terms you’ll hear from agents, investors, attorneys, appraisers, and title pros—plus a few fast-sale specifics you won’t see in every textbook. Have questions? Call us anytime at 478-216-1795 .
Pricing & Value
Appraised Value: A licensed appraiser’s opinion of market value—often required by a lender. If a buyer’s loan is involved, the deal may hinge on this number.
Assessed Value: What the local tax authority says your property is worth for tax purposes. It rarely equals market value.
Market Value: What a well-informed buyer and seller would agree to without pressure. Comps (recent similar sales) help estimate this.
Comparative Market Analysis (CMA): An agent’s comp report that brackets a likely list/offer range based on recent nearby sales adjusted for condition and features.
Contracts, Conditions & Timelines
Offer / Purchase Agreement: The binding contract once signed. It sets price, dates, contingencies, who pays what, and what personal property (if any) conveys.
Contingency: A condition that must be met for the contract to proceed (common ones: inspection, financing, appraisal, sale of buyer’s home).
Due Diligence Period: A short window (often 5–10 days in fast deals) for the buyer to inspect and decide whether to move forward without penalty.
As-Is: You’re selling without making repairs or credits. You still must disclose known defects.
Inclusions / Exclusions: Items that do or do not stay (appliances, sheds, window treatments, etc.). Put it in writing to avoid surprises.
Post-Closing Occupancy (Rent-Back): You sell now but stay briefly after closing, per a written agreement (daily rent, deposit, end date).
Title, Liens & Ownership
Title: Legal ownership of the property.
Clear Title: No competing claims or unresolved liens. Clean title is required for most sales.
Title Search / Commitment: The attorney or title company’s report showing who owns the property and any liens, easements, or defects that must be cleared.
Title Defect: Anything in the ownership chain that clouds your right to sell (unreleased mortgage, estate issue, judgment lien).
Mechanic’s Lien: A contractor’s lien for unpaid work that must be satisfied or released to close.
Quitclaim Deed: A deed that transfers whatever interest the grantor has—without warranties.
Money, Closing & Paper Trail
Earnest Money: The buyer’s good-faith deposit, typically held by the closing attorney/title company and credited to the buyer at closing.
ALTA Settlement Statement / Closing Disclosure: The final line-item receipt of every dollar—price, payoffs, taxes, prorations, fees, and your net.
Prorations: Splitting property taxes/HOA dues/ rents between buyer and seller based on the closing date.
Carrying Costs (Holding Costs): What you spend per day to keep the home: mortgage interest, taxes, insurance, utilities, lawn/HOA, and maintenance.
Seller Concession: Money or credit you agree to pay toward the buyer’s closing costs or rate buydown.
Wire Instructions (Fraud Alert): Get them directly from the closing attorney and verify by phone before wiring money.
Lending & Valuation Speed Bumps
Pre-Approval vs. Pre-Qualification:
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Pre-Qualification: A quick, informal estimate.
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Pre-Approval: Lender-reviewed docs—stronger and preferred.
Appraisal Contingency: Lets the buyer renegotiate or exit if the appraised value comes in below the contract price.
Appraisal Gap Coverage: Buyer agrees to bring extra cash if appraisal is short (helps keep fast deals on track).
Negative Amortization: When your payment is too low to cover interest, so the loan balance grows (rare for standard fixed-rate mortgages, but good to know).
Distress & Alternative Paths
Delinquency: Falling behind on mortgage payments; fees and collection activity begin.
Foreclosure: The lender takes legal action to repossess the property after sustained delinquency.
Short Sale: Selling for less than the mortgage balance with the lender’s written approval—can take time.
Sale-Leaseback: You sell the home and lease it back from the buyer, often used to unlock equity while staying in place short-term.
Owner Financing (Seller Financing): You act as the bank, collecting a down payment and monthly payments from the buyer (attorney-drafted docs required).
Assignment (Wholesaling): A buyer (wholesaler) contracts to buy and then assigns that contract to an end buyer for a fee. Ensure your price and terms don’t change upon assignment.
Fast-Sale Extras (Useful When Speed Matters)
Proof of Funds (POF): Bank statement/letter confirming a cash buyer has the money to close—request it with the offer.
Escrow Holdback: Money set aside at closing to cover a specific unfinished item (roof completion, permit close-out) so the deal can still fund on time.
“Take What You Want, Leave the Rest”: A common as-is convenience in direct sales—put it in the contract so there’s no debate about remaining items.
Quick Copy/Paste Checklist
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CMA / pricing plan
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Seller’s disclosures (+ lead-based paint if pre-1978)
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Clear “as-is” language (if applicable)
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Proof of funds or strong lender pre-approval with offer
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Earnest money held by closing attorney/title
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Short due diligence window (keep momentum)
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Title search ordered early; resolve liens
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ALTA/Closing Disclosure reviewed; confirm net
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Verified wire instructions from the attorney
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Keys, remotes, codes, warranties ready for handoff
Want a fast, fair sale with no repairs, no showings, and a date-certain closing? We’ll walk you through every term above and keep the paperwork simple.
Call Middle Georgia Cash Homes LLC at 478-216-1795 .