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The Real DFW Timeline

The Real DFW Timeline: What Actually Happens When You Buy (or Sell) a Home in Texas

The Real DFW Timeline: What Actually Happens When You Buy (or Sell) a Home in Texas

f you’ve ever felt like real estate is “mystery + urgency + paperwork,” you’re not being dramatic. It can feel that way—especially the first time.
So here’s the calm version: what typically happens in a Texas transaction in Dallas–Fort Worth (DFW), what the steps mean, and where people get surprised (so you don’t).
(Quick note: This is educational, not legal advice. For legal/tax decisions, you’ll always want the right pros.)

Step 0: Before anything else — your “comfort numbers”

Most people start with “What price can I buy?”
I want you to start with: What monthly payment feels calm? That means looking beyond the mortgage number into the real monthly costs—taxes, insurance, HOA, and more.
If you’re getting a loan, this is where a Loan Estimate becomes your best friend. The CFPB has an explainer that’s genuinely useful for reviewing and comparing Loan Estimates.

Step 1: Touring homes looks different now (and that’s normal)

As of the industry changes that began August 17, 2024, many MLS-based transactions require agents working with buyers to use a written buyer agreement before touring. This doesn’t force one specific relationship—but it does make expectations clear earlier in the process.
If you haven’t bought recently, this is one of those “wait, what?” moments. Totally normal.

Step 2: Offer accepted → the Texas clock starts

Once a Texas contract becomes effective, the deal becomes a series of deadlines. Texas contracts are deadline-driven—so the calmer you feel later usually depends on how organized you are now.

Earnest money + option fee

In Texas, buyers often negotiate an option period—a window where you can terminate for any reason (usually used for inspections). That option right is tied to an option fee and has very specific delivery timing in the standard TREC contract. If the option fee isn’t delivered properly, the “unrestricted right to terminate” under that paragraph may not apply.
That sounds technical. It is. The takeaway is simple: don’t be late on earnest money/option fee delivery.

Step 3: Option period = inspection + negotiation (not panic)

This is where you learn what you’re really buying.

Inspection reality check

An inspection report will almost always find something. The goal isn’t “perfect house.” The goal is understanding:
  • what’s normal maintenance.
  • what’s expensive soon.
  • what’s a safety issue.
  • what’s a “walk-away” red flag for you.
During the option period, buyers typically negotiate repairs, credits, or price adjustments—or decide it’s not the right home.

Step 4: Appraisal + underwriting (the lender side)

If you’re financing, the lender will verify:
  • income/asset documentation
  • credit
  • the property value (appraisal)
  • insurance requirements
This is where timelines matter: underwriting doesn’t care about anyone’s stress level (rude, but true).

Step 5: Title work + survey (Texas-specific “adulting”)

In Texas, closings are commonly handled through a title company. Title insurance protects against title problems that existed when you bought the property (liens, unknown heirs, fraud, etc.). You typically pay once, and coverage lasts as long as you own the home.
This is also where the title commitment shows up before closing, and the policy is issued after closing.
Survey questions can also come up here (boundaries, easements). This is not the moment to “just assume it’s fine.”

Step 6: Closing week

Closing is usually quieter than people imagine. It’s:
  • final numbers confirmed
  • documents signed
  • funds delivered
  • title recorded
  • keys (timing can vary)
A good closing feels boring—in the best way.

If you’re selling, the timeline has parallel steps

Selling is basically:
Tu hogar debe ser el lugar donde recargas energía, no la fuente de tu estrés.
  1. Preparation + pricing strategy (your “launch plan”)
  2. Marketing + showings
  3. Offer review (not just price—terms matter)
  4. Contract deadlines
  5. Buyer inspections (repair negotiations)
  6. Appraisal (if buyer is financing)
  7. Title + closing
A seller win is not just “sold.” It’s “sold with terms you can live with.”

The most common Texas surprises (so you’re ready)

  • Option period deadlines sneak up fast.
  • Insurance costs can change your monthly payment more than you expect.
  • Special districts / assessments (more on that below) can add to what you pay.
  • Title commitment items can feel like a foreign language.

If you want to talk it through

Consultations are free, there’s no time limit, and you can ask anything—buying, selling, or “I don’t even know where to start.”
Native Spanish support—spoken, not translated.

Do you feel identified?

👉 Book a free, no-obligation consultation with me here.
alejandra zamora

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