
By Steven J. Thomas
You priced your DeSoto home right, the photos look great, and showings are steady. Then the offer comes in and the buyer asks for $10,000 toward closing costs and a rate buydown. Your first instinct is to say no. In the 2026 DFW market, that instinct can cost you the deal. The good news is that a smart concession is not the same as cutting your price, and when you structure it correctly it can move your home faster while protecting most of your bottom line. Here is how to think about concessions like a seller who knows the numbers.
In DFW's 2026 buyer's market, most sellers should budget 1 to 3 percent of the sale price for buyer concessions, usually closing-cost help or a temporary rate buydown. A concession often sells your home faster than an equal price cut because it lowers the buyer's monthly payment while keeping your sale price on record. Start by checking your readiness with a free Home Selling Score.
DeSoto's median sale price sat near $350,000 in spring 2026, down roughly 6.7 percent year over year, with homes taking about 43 to 49 days to sell according to Redfin and Orchard data. That slower pace means buyers have leverage, and a $7,000 to $10,000 closing-cost credit often closes the gap faster than dropping your list price by the same amount. If your home needs minor updates, a targeted repair credit can keep negotiations friendly. See where your value stands with a free DFW Home Value Maximizer report.
Just north and west of DeSoto, Cedar Hill and Duncanville sellers are competing with rising resale inventory and nearby new construction that comes with builder incentives. Buyers here compare your home directly against a builder offering a rate buydown, so matching that offer with your own concession keeps you in the running. A 2-1 temporary buydown that lowers the buyer's rate for the first two years is one of the most effective tools in these submarkets right now. Compare your options with the Home Selling Options guide.
These growing southwest DFW markets attract first-time and move-up buyers who are payment-sensitive. For homes under $400,000, total concessions of $3,000 to $8,000 are common in 2026. The right number depends on your competition, not a guess. Pull a current snapshot from the DFW Market Statistics page before you set your strategy.
Pro Tip: Before you decide how much to offer, run a free Home Selling Score so you know your pricing strength and how much room you actually have.
Here is what those numbers mean for you. Buyers are not panicking, and they are not in a hurry. They are shopping payment first. When a buyer asks for a concession, they are usually trying to solve a monthly-payment problem, not insult your home. If you can lower their payment with a buydown instead of slashing your price, you keep your sale price on the comps and help the next seller in your neighborhood too.
"The sellers winning in this market are the ones who treat a concession like a precision tool, not a loss. A $9,000 buydown can feel like a $30,000 price cut to a payment-focused buyer."
Concessions are negotiable, but these 2026 ranges reflect what DFW sellers are actually agreeing to:
The ROI math is simple. A price reduction lowers every future comp in your neighborhood and your own net at the same time. A concession is a one-time cost that often closes the deal at a higher recorded sale price. For most DeSoto and southwest DFW sellers, the concession route protects more equity.
Your real competition in 2026 is often the new construction community down the road. Builders in DeSoto, Lancaster, Cedar Hill, and the broader DFW corridor are using aggressive incentives such as permanent rate buydowns, flex cash, and closing-cost credits to move standing inventory. When a buyer can get a 5.99 percent rate and $15,000 in flex cash on a brand-new home, your resale listing has to answer that with something. That is exactly why a structured concession matters. If your buyers are also weighing new construction, point them to the value of using your team on a new build through the New Construction Rebate Program, which returns up to 1 percent at closing, up to $10,000.
The strongest concession in 2026 is almost always the one that attacks the buyer's monthly payment. A temporary 2-1 buydown drops the buyer's effective rate by two points in year one and one point in year two, which can shave hundreds off the payment while they settle in. Because I am dual licensed as a broker and a loan officer, I can model the buyer's payment and your net at the same time, so you are not guessing whether a buydown or a flat credit serves you better.
There is also a timing angle. With rates drifting down from a year ago, some buyers are waiting for a refinance window. A seller-paid temporary buydown bridges that gap and gives the buyer a reason to act now instead of waiting. If you want to see how the financing side affects your sale, start with a quick pre-strategy conversation so we can run your numbers before you list.
"One person handling both the listing and the financing means the concession is built around your equity, not a lender's convenience."
A concession is not a defeat. In the 2026 DFW buyer's market, it is often the fastest, cheapest way to close at a strong recorded price. Decide your number before the first offer lands, lead with a buydown when payment is the buyer's real objection, and keep your price on the comps so your equity and your neighbors' values hold. The sellers who plan their concession strategy in advance negotiate from strength instead of scrambling. Let's build that plan before you go live.
Ready to move? Start here:
You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas. Call or text 972-846-9170.
Offer a concession when a buyer's main objection is the monthly payment or upfront cash, which is most of the time in 2026. A buydown or closing-cost credit solves that without lowering your recorded sale price.
Usually less than an equal price cut. A $9,000 buydown is a one-time cost, while a $9,000 price reduction lowers your net and drags down every future comp in your neighborhood.
Concessions do not change the appraised value, but they can affect the deal structure. A dual-licensed broker and loan officer can adjust the buydown or credit so the financing still works and the sale holds together.
Builders often offer permanent buydowns and flex cash to move standing inventory, but your resale home can compete with a targeted temporary buydown and a move-in-ready condition that beats a construction wait.
Recent data puts DeSoto's median days on market near 43 to 49 days. A well-priced home with a smart concession often sells faster than the average because it removes the buyer's payment objection early.
Download the Lone Star Living App to track active DeSoto and DFW listings, price changes, and market pace in real time.
Steven J. Thomas is a dual-licensed Texas real estate broker (Refind Realty DFW) and loan officer (Envision Home Lenders, NMLS #689220) based in DeSoto, TX. All housing services are offered in compliance with the Fair Housing Act and TREC. Market figures are sourced as of June 2026 and are not a guarantee of price, timeline, or outcome.
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
Call :(713) 505-2280
Email: [email protected]
Office 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto TX 75115
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