Earnest Money Calculator

How much earnest money should you offer? Get market-based recommendations, understand exactly when you can walk and keep your deposit, model escalation clauses, and see your state's legal rules for EMD disputes.

$
%
Recommended Earnest Money Deposit
$8,500
Typical range for a balanced market: 1.0%3.0% of purchase price
Market Minimum (1.0%)
$4,250
Recommended (2.0%)
$8,500
Competitive (3.0%)
$12,750
Your EMD (2.0%)
$8,500
At Closing: Applied To
Down payment / closing costs
If Deal Falls Through (contingency)
EMD returned to you
EMD is not an extra cost — it applies directly to your down payment at closing. The only risk is forfeiture if you back out outside contingency protections.

How EMD amount strengthens your offer competitiveness in different market conditions:

Cold Market (1%)
$4,250
Standard minimum
Buyer has leverage
Full contingencies expected
Balanced Market (2%)
$8,500
Normal expectation
Shows serious intent
Keep all contingencies
Hot Market (3%+)
$12,750
Competitive signal
Multiple offer environment
Consider keeping appraisal contingency
Extreme Market (5–10%)
$21,250$42,500
Major commitment signal
Often waive contingencies
High risk of forfeiture
How EMD strengthens offers (vs competing buyers at same price):
In a 3-offer situation, a higher EMD signals:
  • Financial strength — you have liquid cash available
  • Commitment — losing the EMD hurts, so you're serious
  • Reduced seller risk — larger deposit reduces risk of buyer walking
  • In tied situations, sellers often choose the buyer with the largest EMD
days
%/yr
EMD Amount
$8,500
Days in Escrow
45 days
Your Alternative Return
$52
5.0% × 45 days
Typical Escrow Interest Earned
$21
~2% APY in escrow accounts
Net Opportunity Cost
$31
Cost of capital in escrow
Cost per Day in Escrow
$1
Daily opportunity cost
The true cost of a $8,500 EMD sitting in escrow for 45 days is approximately $31 in lost investment returns (after escrow interest). This is a relatively small cost compared to the strategic benefit of a strong EMD signal in competitive markets — but worth knowing when deciding how much to put up.

How to Use This Earnest Money Calculator

Enter your Home Price and select your Market Type — buyer's (cold), balanced, seller's (hot), or extreme seller's market (bidding wars). The calculator shows the recommended earnest money deposit (EMD) range for your market, your chosen EMD amount, and what happens to that money at closing.

The Advanced tier compares EMD strategy across market types, shows exactly which contingencies protect your deposit, and models escalation clause scenarios. The Pro tier calculates the true opportunity cost of EMD sitting in escrow, displays state-by-state legal rules, and explains how EMD signals seriousness in all-cash offers.

Earnest Money by Market Type

EMD Amount = Home Price × EMD %
Buyer's Market: 0.5%–1.5% typical
Balanced Market: 1%–3% typical
Seller's Market: 2%–4% typical
Extreme Seller's Market: 3%–10%+ competitive
Opportunity Cost = EMD × Annual Return × (Days / 365) − Escrow Interest Earned

Example: Earnest Money on a $425,000 Home

Balanced market | 2% EMD | 45 days in escrow

Home Price$425,000
EMD (2%)$8,500
Market Minimum (1%)$4,250
Competitive (3%)$12,750
At closing: applied toDown payment / closing costs
Opportunity cost (45 days at 5%)~$53 net (after escrow interest)
Risk if all contingencies keptFully protected — EMD returned if deal falls through
Risk if contingencies waivedForfeit $8,500 if you back out

The $53 opportunity cost for 45 days makes a larger EMD essentially "free" in competitive situations — the seriousness signal is worth far more than the minor cost of capital. The key protection is keeping contingencies in place so you can exit without losing the deposit.

Frequently Asked Questions

Earnest money (also called an earnest money deposit or EMD) is a good-faith deposit paid by the buyer when an offer is accepted. It shows the seller you're serious about buying. The money is held in escrow (usually by a title company or escrow agent) until closing, where it's applied directly to your down payment or closing costs. You don't lose it — it's part of what you're already paying. The only risk is forfeiture if you back out of the deal without a valid contractual reason.
Yes — if you exercise a contractual contingency within its allowed window. The three main protections are: (1) Inspection contingency — if the home fails inspection and the seller won't repair or credit, you can exit and get your EMD back. (2) Financing contingency — if your loan falls through (denial, job loss, major rate change), you can exit with EMD returned. (3) Appraisal contingency — if the home appraises below your offer price, you can exit. You lose the EMD if you back out without a valid contingency or after contingency deadlines pass.
It varies by market. In a buyer's market with plenty of homes available, 0.5%–1% is common. In balanced markets, 1%–2% is standard. In hot seller's markets, 2%–4% is expected. In extreme bidding war situations, buyers sometimes offer 5%–10% to differentiate their offer. New construction purchases often require a fixed amount ($5,000–$10,000) regardless of percentage. Always ask your agent what's typical for the specific neighborhood.
If the seller breaches the contract (backs out, fails to disclose material defects, or refuses to complete the sale), the buyer is entitled to the full return of their earnest money — and may also have grounds to sue for additional damages, including specific performance (forcing the sale) in some jurisdictions. In practice, if a seller backs out, the escrow holder cannot release the funds without both parties agreeing or a court order, so the buyer's EMD is protected.
Yes — a higher EMD can differentiate your offer when price and terms are otherwise similar. Sellers view a large EMD as evidence of financial strength and commitment. The opportunity cost of extra EMD in escrow (typically 30–60 days) is minimal — on a $10,000 increase in EMD for 45 days at 5% annual return, you're giving up about $62. That $62 is well worth it if it tips a competitive offer in your favor. Always keep your contingencies so the extra EMD doesn't create extra risk of forfeiture.

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