The Curveball You Didn’t Expect
Buyers change their tune for all kinds of reasons, some honest, some strategic. Here's how to manage these situations so you can win.
You’re deep in negotiation.
The buyer seemed ready.
Then suddenly… the story changes.
“Actually, I need to talk to my partner.”
“Can you send me the comps again?”
“I thought it had a new roof?”
“I didn’t realize I couldn’t assign it.”
“We might pass on this one unless you come down.”
It’s frustrating. But it’s common.
Buyers change their tune for all kinds of reasons, some honest, some strategic.
This article breaks down:
Why buyers change their story
How to respond without losing leverage
How to spot red flags early
And how to protect your time and control the deal
Part 1: Why Buyers Change Their Story
Buyers shift narratives for a variety of reasons. Understanding the “why” helps you stay calm, and react strategically.
1. They Were Never Fully Committed
Many buyers say “yes” before doing full due diligence. Once they look deeper, into comps, access, repairs, or title, they backpedal.
Reality check: A verbal “yes” means nothing without action (contract, EMD, access scheduled).
2. They’re Shopping Your Deal Around
If you’re dealing with a wholesaler buyer, they may have intended to assign your deal, and now they’re not getting bites.
So they come back with:
“It’s too tight.”
“Another buyer passed.”
“My contractor found issues.”
“My dispo guy has concerns.”
Translation: I can’t make the spread I hoped for.
3. They’re Using It as a Negotiation Tactic
Some seasoned buyers will agree quickly to create urgency… then flip the script last-minute to:
Ask for price reductions
Add special terms
Remove contingencies
This is anchoring after agreement, a high-level tactic designed to put pressure on you once they think you’re mentally “sold.”
4. Fear, Risk Aversion, or Outside Pressure
Sometimes the shift is emotional, not tactical.
Their spouse doesn’t like the deal
They watched a scary YouTube video
They’re nervous about the market
Their hard money lender got cold feet
Buyers are human. Even pro investors can get spooked and start asking new questions as a cover for fear.
Part 2: Spot the Warning Signs Early
Before we talk solutions, let’s talk patterns.
Here are 5 early signs your buyer might switch up on you:
1. Overeager Yes, Light on Details
They say “Yes” before:
Seeing photos
Walking the property
Reviewing comps
Asking access questions
Yellow flag: They may be committing too fast, likely to lock you out of the market while they shop it.
2. Asking for Extra Time “Just in Case”
They say things like:
“Can I have a few more days?”
“Still confirming with my lender”
“Waiting for my guy to get back to me”
Yellow flag: These can be genuine delays, but paired with no action, they often signal second thoughts.
3. Repeatedly Re-asking the Same Info
“What’s the ARV again?”
“What was the square footage?”
“You sure it’s not in a flood zone?”
Yellow flag: They’re either stalling or re-framing the deal to justify a pivot.
4. Sudden New Conditions or Expectations
After progress, they now want:
A lower price
Contingencies removed
Repairs thrown in
More inspection time
Red flag: They’re renegotiating, but pretending it’s always been part of the deal.
5. Blaming the “Partner”
When you hear:
“My partner doesn’t like it”
“They have the final say”
“It’s really not up to me”
Red flag: This is often a way to protect face while bailing or stalling.
Part 3: What to Say When the Story Changes
When the buyer flips their narrative, you don’t want to panic, or cave.
Here are tactical scripts to respond calmly, professionally, and in control.
Scenario A: “I’m not sure anymore. I thought it had [X].”
Say:
“Got it. Just so I understand, is this a dealbreaker, or something you’d factor into a new offer?”
This lets them show their cards. Either:
They’ll restate their interest with a revised offer
Or admit they’re backing out
Then follow with:
“Just want to be respectful of your time, and mine, so if this deal isn’t moving forward, no hard feelings. I’ll line it up for someone else.”
It puts the ball in their court, without chasing or pleading.
Scenario B: “Can we do $X instead?”
Say:
“I can run that by the team, but that’s a big shift from where we started. What changed for you?”
This invites transparency. Often they’ll reveal:
Another deal came up
Their buyer fell through
They can’t make the numbers work
Once you know that, you can decide if it’s worth flexing, or not.
Scenario C: “Actually, I didn’t know I couldn’t assign it.”
Say:
“We’re open to creative solutions, but this is a direct-to-buyer deal. Were you planning to take title, or move it to someone else?”
Then:
“If you have a real end buyer who’s ready, I’m happy to talk direct and get it done cleanly.”
This weeds out pure daisy-chaining wholesalers while keeping options open.
Scenario D: “I need more time.”
Say:
“I want to make this work, but we’re on a tight timeline. What’s the latest you’d have a yes/no decision?”
Then:
“If we don’t hear back by then, we’ll move forward with another interested party.”
This sets a soft deadline without burning the bridge.
Scenario E: No reply after a change in story
If they stop replying after shifting tone, try:
“Hey [Buyer Name], wanted to close the loop. Should I keep you in mind for future deals, or was this just a timing mismatch?”
This lets them save face while telling the truth, and opens the door for clean future business.
Part 4: Prevent Future Story Changes Before They Start
The best defense is setting expectations up front.
Here are systems to reduce mid-negotiation story changes:
1. Use a Buyer Vetting Script Early
Before you even pitch a deal, ask:
“What’s your typical buy box?”
“How do you usually close, cash, hard money, partners?”
“How quickly do you walk deals you like?”
“Are you buying to flip, rent, or assign?”
You’ll gather crucial intel, so if their story changes later, you’ll know it.
2. Summarize Agreements in Writing Immediately
After verbal agreements, send a quick confirmation:
“Appreciate you locking this in at $215k. Here’s what we’ve got so far…”
• Price: $215k
• Timeline: 7-day close
• Access: Friday @ 10AM
• Terms: Non-assignable, $5k EMD
Having this paper trail:
Prevents “memory lapses”
Discourages shady pivots
Gives you ammo to exit gracefully if they flake
3. Have a Backup Buyer or Exit Path
The more desperate you are for this buyer to close, the more leverage they have.
Instead:
Build a segmented buyer list by type (flipper, BRRRR, turnkey, wholetailer)
Track who closes fast vs. who stalls
Always have 2–3 warm buyers you can pivot to
That way, you can say:
“No worries if it doesn’t fit anymore. I’ve got a landlord who was next in line. Want me to send you the next one instead?”
It’s respectful, but firm.
4. Create a “No Drama” Brand
Reputation matters in this game.
If your buyers know:
You close clean
You’re honest but firm
You don’t entertain games
You respect timelines and expect the same
…they’ll be less likely to pull stunts. Why? Because you’ve built a no-nonsense reputation.
Put it in your emails. Say it on calls. Post it in your texts:
“We’re easy to work with, if you’re direct, decisive, and serious. If not, no hard feelings, we won’t waste each other’s time.”
You’re in Control (Even When They Pivot)
Buyers changing their story isn’t always a red flag.
It might be a clue they’re uncertain, stretched, or negotiating.
The key is:
Don’t overreact
Don’t chase
Don’t fold
Instead:
Ask questions to clarify
Frame the change as a decision point
Document everything
Have backup buyers so you can pivot fast
Build a brand that attracts real pros
Because at the end of the day, if a buyer changes their story mid-negotiation… that doesn’t mean you have to.
You stay clear. You stay consistent. That’s how you win.
Written By:

Austin Beveridge
Chief Operating Officer
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