In the Houston market right now, roughly 35% to 40% of closed transactions include some form of seller concession. That means the seller is paying part (or all) of the buyer's closing costs. If you're buying a home in Houston in 2026 and you're not asking for concessions, you're probably leaving money on the table.

I've been structuring deals in Houston for over 20 years, and seller concessions are one of the most underused tools in a buyer's toolkit. This guide covers exactly how they work, what the limits are by loan type, and how to strategically ask for them without killing your deal.

What Are Seller Concessions?

A seller concession is when the seller agrees to pay some of the buyer's closing costs. Instead of the buyer bringing $15,000 to closing for a $350,000 home, the seller covers $10,000 of that, and the buyer only needs $5,000.

The money doesn't change hands directly. The concession is built into the transaction at closing. The seller's net proceeds are reduced by the concession amount, and those funds are applied to the buyer's closing costs on the settlement statement.

What Seller Concessions Can Cover

What Seller Concessions Cannot Cover

Seller concessions reduce your cash to close but do not reduce your down payment requirement. If you need 3.5% down on an FHA loan, you still need that 3.5%. The concessions cover the other costs that pile up at closing.

Seller Concession Limits by Loan Type

Every loan program has a maximum amount of seller concessions it allows. Go over the limit and the lender will require the excess to be deducted from the sale price or returned to the seller.

Loan TypeDown PaymentMax Seller ConcessionExample on $350,000 Home
ConventionalLess than 10%3% of sale price$10,500
Conventional10% to 25%6% of sale price$21,000
Conventional25%+9% of sale price$31,500
FHA3.5%+6% of sale price$21,000
VA0%+4% of sale price$14,000
USDA0%6% of sale price$21,000

For most Houston buyers putting down less than 10% on a conventional loan, the 3% cap means a maximum of $10,500 in concessions on a $350,000 home. That usually covers most closing costs but not all of them. FHA buyers have more room at 6%, which is almost always enough to cover everything.

Understanding these limits is critical when you're structuring your offer. For a full comparison of FHA and conventional loan costs in Houston, check out our FHA vs. Conventional Loans in Houston guide.

How Much Are Closing Costs in Houston?

Before you know how much to ask for, you need to know what you're paying. Here's a realistic breakdown for a $350,000 purchase in the Houston metro.

Cost CategoryTypical Range
Title insurance (owner's policy)$2,100 to $2,400
Escrow / title company fees$400 to $800
Lender origination fee$0 to $3,500
Appraisal$450 to $650
Survey$400 to $600
Credit report$50 to $100
Recording fees$100 to $200
Prepaid property taxes (2 to 4 months)$1,500 to $3,500
Prepaid homeowner's insurance (14 months)$2,500 to $4,500
Prepaid interest$300 to $900
FHA upfront MIP (if applicable)$6,125 (1.75% of loan)

Total buyer closing costs in Houston typically run $10,000 to $18,000 on a $350,000 home (excluding any upfront FHA MIP, which is usually financed into the loan). Property taxes are the wildcard because Houston's tax rates vary significantly by location. A home in a high MUD district can push prepaid taxes much higher.

For an exact breakdown at different price points, read our Houston Closing Costs Explained guide.

How to Ask for Seller Concessions in Houston

Asking for concessions is a negotiation. And like all negotiations, how you ask matters as much as what you ask for. Here's the strategy I use with my InSync clients.

Strategy 1: Concessions Built Into the Offer

The most common approach. You submit your offer and include a line item requesting seller concessions. For example: "Buyer requests seller contribute $10,000 toward buyer's closing costs and prepaids."

This is straightforward, and sellers in Houston's current market are generally receptive when the request is reasonable. The key word is reasonable. Asking for 6% on a home that's priced correctly and getting multiple offers will get your offer tossed. Asking for 3% on a home that's been sitting for 30 days is perfectly reasonable.

Strategy 2: Higher Price with Concessions

This is one of the most powerful strategies in my toolbox, and many buyers don't know about it.

Instead of offering $340,000 with no concessions, you offer $350,000 with $10,000 in seller concessions. The seller nets the same amount either way ($340,000). But the buyer gets $10,000 in closing cost coverage, which reduces cash to close by $10,000.

The trade off: the buyer finances the $10,000 concession amount as part of the higher sale price. At 6.25% over 30 years, that adds roughly $62 per month to the payment. For a buyer who's cash constrained, that's often a worthwhile trade.

Important caveat: the home must appraise at the higher price. If you offer $350,000 with $10,000 in concessions and the appraisal comes in at $345,000, you have a gap to deal with. Work with your agent and lender to set the offer price at a level the comps support.

Strategy 3: Concessions for Rate Buydown

This is the smartest use of seller concessions in 2026, and I use this strategy aggressively for my clients.

Instead of applying seller concessions to closing costs, you use them to buy down your mortgage rate. Here's how the math works on a $350,000 home with a $332,500 loan (5% down).

ScenarioRateMonthly P&IMonthly Savings5-Year Savings
No buydown6.25%$2,048BaselineBaseline
1 point buydown ($3,325)5.875%$1,969$79$4,740
2 point buydown ($6,650)5.50%$1,889$159$9,540

Using $6,650 in seller concessions to buy down your rate from 6.25% to 5.50% saves you $159 per month. Over 5 years, that's $9,540 in savings on a $6,650 investment. That's a return most financial advisors would love.

The buydown approach works especially well in the current rate environment because rates are expected to trend down. If rates drop to 5.0% in two years, you can refinance at that point and still have benefited from the lower payments in the interim.

Strategy 4: Concessions After Inspection

Sometimes the best time to ask for concessions is after the inspection reveals issues. Instead of asking the seller to make repairs (which they'll do as cheaply as possible), ask for a closing cost credit equivalent to the repair cost.

Example: the inspection reveals a 14 year old HVAC system that's working but near end of life. Instead of asking the seller to replace it (they'll buy the cheapest unit available), ask for a $7,000 closing cost credit. Apply it to your closing costs and handle the HVAC replacement yourself after closing with a contractor you trust.

For more on what to watch for during inspections, read our Houston Home Inspection Guide.

Seller Concessions vs. Price Reduction: Which Is Better?

This is one of the most common questions I get. Let me break it down with real numbers.

Scenario: $350,000 Home, 5% Down, 6.25% Rate

OptionSale PriceLoan AmountMonthly PaymentCash to Close
Full price, no concessions$350,000$332,500$2,048$30,000
$10,000 price reduction$340,000$323,000$1,990$29,000
Full price, $10,000 concession$350,000$332,500$2,048$20,000

The price reduction saves you $58 per month and reduces cash to close by $1,000. The seller concession keeps your payment the same but reduces cash to close by $10,000.

If you're cash constrained (which most first time Houston buyers are), the concession wins. If you have plenty of cash and want the lowest possible payment, the price reduction wins. In most cases, I recommend the concession approach for buyers who need to preserve cash and the price reduction for buyers who are well capitalized.

When Sellers Are Most Likely to Agree

In Houston's current market, seller willingness to offer concessions depends on several factors.

High Probability (Ask Confidently)

Moderate Probability (Ask Strategically)

Low Probability (Be Prepared to Compromise)

Even in competitive situations, you can still ask for concessions. Structure your offer to be strong in other ways: higher earnest money, shorter option period, flexible closing date. A seller is more likely to accept a slightly lower net price from a buyer who appears qualified and easy to close. At InSync, we write pre-approval letters that communicate strength to listing agents.

How Down Payment Assistance and Seller Concessions Work Together

This is a combination play that many Houston buyers don't realize is possible. If you qualify for a down payment assistance program (TSAHC, City of Houston HAP, TDHCA), those funds cover your down payment. Then seller concessions cover your closing costs. The result: you can potentially buy a home with minimal out of pocket cash.

Example on a $300,000 Houston home:

This is how we get first time Houston buyers into homes with $3,000 to $5,000 total out of pocket instead of the $25,000+ they thought they needed. For a full breakdown of every DPA program available, read our Houston Down Payment Assistance 2026 guide.

Common Mistakes When Asking for Seller Concessions

Mistake 1: Asking for Too Much on a Hot Listing

If a home just hit the market, is priced well, and is in a desirable Houston neighborhood, asking for 6% in concessions signals that you're not a serious buyer. Know the market conditions for the specific property before you ask.

Mistake 2: Not Knowing Your Loan's Concession Limit

I've seen deals fall apart because the buyer's offer included 6% in concessions on a conventional loan with less than 10% down. The limit is 3%. The seller agreed, but the lender rejected the excess at underwriting. Know your limits before you write the offer.

Mistake 3: Confusing Concessions with Repair Credits

Seller concessions are applied to closing costs. Repair credits are applied to the sale price or handled separately. Mixing these up in your offer creates confusion and can delay closing. Work with an experienced agent and lender who understand the distinction.

Mistake 4: Forgetting the Appraisal Impact

If you offer above asking price to accommodate concessions, the home must appraise at that higher price. If it doesn't, you'll need to renegotiate. Factor in appraisal risk when deciding how much above asking to offer.

My Approach at InSync

Here's exactly how I handle seller concessions for my clients at InSync.

  1. Calculate total closing costs: Before we make any offer, I run a detailed loan estimate showing exactly what the buyer will owe at closing.
  2. Determine optimal concession amount: Based on the loan type, down payment, and cash position, we determine how much to ask for and how to structure it (closing costs, rate buydown, or both).
  3. Market analysis: We look at days on market, comparable sales, and seller motivation to determine how aggressively to ask.
  4. Offer structure: We build the concession request into the offer in a way that makes sense for both buyer and seller. Often this means a slightly higher price with concessions, resulting in the same net to the seller.
  5. Lender coordination: I make sure the concession amount doesn't exceed the loan program limit and that the appraisal will support the offer price.

This is where working with a mortgage broker who is also deeply involved in the real estate transaction makes a difference. At InSync, I'm not just processing a loan. I'm helping structure the entire deal to minimize your costs and maximize your position.

Book a free consultation or call 713-548-7350. Let's figure out exactly how much you can save on your Houston home purchase.