A buyer makes a full-price offer, and all the other terms of the offer are acceptable to the Seller.
They received a full-price offer of $469,000 on their house, which they had bought for $40,000 in 1975.
They made a full-price offer but were outbid.
But before we can make up our minds, somebody else decides to make a full-price offer and the house is gone.
They made a full-price offer of $449,000.
But buyers can sometimes make full-price offers and lose a house anyway, she said.
By 3:30 p.m. that day she received a full-price offer of $559,500.
"We're still in a market where it's not unusual for sellers to get several full-price offers," he said.
By Friday afternoon, there were two full-price offers.
"Within four hours I had three full-price offers," he said.