IsDVCForMe?
On the Kudu Trail 🦒
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2026
- Messages
- 170
I understand your logic. But as a seller, nobody has to buy your contract.In any way, it makes a lot of sense going with a title company that has significant experience with this type of transaction.
In the hypothetical scenario that the title company does not properly withhold the 15%, yes, there would be hardship for the buyer. But this risk, small as it is, can be further reduced by the buyer (e.g. check the statements, did they withhold the money). But for the international seller it's not hypothetical: they usually have to spend quite a bit of money to get those missing 15% back (paying someone to file for a withholding certificate, extra costs for FIRPTA filing).
In a transaction involving an international seller, I'd be expecting delays in getting the contract notarized. Depending on where they are living, notarization can be a much more difficult and expensive process than in the US. But I would not expect any problems with FIRPTA, if the title company is competent.
With this added level of complexity, people are going to submit lower offers. The buyer is still taking a risk. And with a risk, people will try to minimize it. And minimizing it would be offering 85% of the price you would typically pay to have that extra 15% in case it’s needed for the IRS. I didn’t do that, but I would moving forward if I decided to even buy from an international seller again.
And as you can see, other people wouldn’t. So that reduces the number of buyers, which reduces the number of offers.
In the scenarios below both contracts are comparable:
Scenario 1- buy from a seller with no risks.
Scenario 2 - buy from a seller with the risk that you may owe 15% of the sale to the IRS.
Which scenario do you think most of the people will choose? The only people choosing scenario 2 are going to be people submitting lower offers to minimize that risk or people who didn’t know.
