
By Steven J. Thomas
[Caption: A Dallas-Fort Worth buyer goes over the termination option on their contract, the short window that gives them the most control in the whole deal.]
Most Dallas-Fort Worth buyers sign a contract, hand over an option fee, and never fully understand the one clause that protects them the most. The Texas option period is the short window right after you go under contract when you can walk away for almost any reason and get your earnest money back. In the 2026 buyer-leaning market, that window is your biggest edge, and knowing how to use it can save you thousands or save you from a bad house entirely.
The Texas option period, formally the termination option in the standard TREC contract, is a set number of days during which a buyer can cancel the purchase for any reason and keep their earnest money. You pay a negotiated option fee for that right. In 2026, DFW buyers use the period to complete inspections, negotiate repairs, and confirm financing before they are locked in. Not sure how to structure yours? Book a quick call and I will walk you through it.
Texas is one of the few states with a built-in termination option. It lives in the One to Four Family Residential Contract published by the Texas Real Estate Commission, so nearly every DFW resale deal uses it. You negotiate two things: the number of option days and the option fee you pay the seller for that right. You can review the standard contract forms directly on the TREC website.
During the option period you have an unrestricted right to terminate. If you cancel within the window and deliver notice correctly, you get your earnest money back. The option fee itself is usually not refundable, but it is typically credited to you at closing if you move forward. Think of it as buying yourself time to look before you leap.
When homes fly off the market, sellers push for short option periods and high fees, and buyers take what they can get. That is not today. Across Dallas-Fort Worth in 2026, months of supply sat near 5.4 and homes averaged about 63 days on market, according to Redfin and Norada data. Buyers have room to breathe, and that changes what you can ask for.
In this market you can often negotiate a longer option period, sometimes 10 days instead of 5 to 7, and a lower option fee. More days means more time to get a thorough inspection, gather repair bids, and lock your financing without pressure. With the 30-year fixed near 6.4 to 6.5 percent in early July 2026 per Freddie Mac, that financing confirmation window matters more than ever. Before you shop, it helps to get pre-approved so your option days are spent verifying, not scrambling.
The option period is not just a safety valve. It is a work window. Here is how to spend it.
Two dollar figures come with the option period. The option fee is what you pay the seller for the right to terminate, often a few hundred dollars in DFW and negotiable based on price and market. It is usually credited back at closing. Your earnest money is separate, typically 1 percent of the price, held in escrow, and refundable if you terminate correctly during the option period.
The risk is simple. Miss the deadline or deliver notice the wrong way and you lose that protection. Texas deadlines are firm and notice has to be delivered properly, which is exactly why buyers work with an agent who tracks every date. A missed option deadline can turn a walkable deal into a locked one.
Here is a catch many DFW buyers miss. Builders often use their own contracts, not the TREC form, and those builder contracts may not include the same termination option. That means the protection you count on with a resale home may look very different on a new build. If you are buying new construction in the DFW corridor, understand your out clauses before you sign, and get an agent representing you rather than only the builder's sales office. The New Construction Buyer Guide breaks down what to watch for, and you can explore active communities on the DFW new construction hub.
The option period is the most buyer-friendly clause in a Texas contract, and in the 2026 DFW market you have more room to use it than buyers did a couple of years ago. Negotiate the days and the fee, order your inspection fast, verify what the seller disclosed, and confirm your financing before the window closes. Used well, those few days protect your money and your peace of mind. Here is how to put it to work.
Book a free 15-minute call and I will help you structure your offer and option period.
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It is negotiable, but 5 to 10 days is common. In the 2026 buyer-leaning market, buyers can often push for the longer end to allow time for inspections and financing.
The option fee is usually not refundable, but it is typically credited toward your costs at closing if you move forward with the purchase. Your earnest money is separate and refundable if you terminate correctly during the window.
You lose the unrestricted right to terminate. After the window closes, backing out can put your earnest money at risk, which is why tracking the exact date and delivering notice properly is critical.
Not always. Builders often use their own contracts rather than the TREC form, and those may not include the same termination option. Review the builder contract carefully and have your own agent.
Once you move past the option period, a typical DFW financed purchase closes in about 30 to 45 days, depending on your lender and the appraisal timeline.
Browse live listings anytime on the Lone Star Living App, which pulls current MLS inventory across Dallas-Fort Worth.
Steven J. Thomas is a licensed Texas real estate broker with Refind Realty DFW and a loan officer with Envision Home Lenders (NMLS 689220), based in DeSoto, TX. This article is general information, not legal advice, and not a guarantee of outcome. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Site: www.stevenjthomas.com
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