TL;DR: Earnest money is a good-faith deposit that shows a seller you're serious about buying their home. In Franklin, deposits typically range from 1% to 3% of the purchase price, and understanding how it's held, protected, and potentially lost can save you thousands.
Earnest money confuses a lot of buyers because it doesn't fit neatly into the "cost of buying a home" category. It's not a fee you pay to someone for a service. It's a deposit you put down after your offer is accepted to demonstrate that you're committed to following through on the purchase.
Think of it as skin in the game. A seller who accepts your offer is pulling their home off the market, turning away other potential buyers, and trusting that you'll show up at the closing table. Your earnest money deposit backs up that trust with real dollars.
In most Franklin transactions, earnest money eventually gets applied toward your down payment or closing costs. You're not spending extra—you're putting money down earlier in the process.
There's no fixed rule in Tennessee, but Franklin's market has established its own norms. Most buyers deposit somewhere between 1% and 3% of the purchase price.
On a $600,000 home—which is common in neighborhoods like Westhaven, Lockwood Glen, or parts of downtown Franklin—that means an earnest money deposit between $6,000 and $18,000.
A few factors influence where you land in that range:
Your agent can advise on what's appropriate for the specific property and situation. In spring 2026, with Franklin's market continuing to attract both local and out-of-state buyers, a strong earnest money deposit can make your offer more appealing without changing your actual purchase price.
Your earnest money doesn't go directly to the seller. In Tennessee, it's held in an escrow account—typically managed by the title company or closing attorney handling the transaction.
This is an important protection for both sides. The funds sit in a neutral third-party account until closing, at which point they're applied to your purchase. Neither the buyer nor the seller can access the money unilaterally during the contract period.
When you're buying in Franklin, your purchase agreement will specify who holds the escrow and under what conditions the funds are released. Read that section carefully. It's one of the most consequential parts of the contract, even though it's easy to gloss over.
Buyers are often most anxious about one question: Can I lose this money?
The short answer is that your earnest money is protected by the contingencies written into your contract. The most common contingencies in Franklin transactions include:
Each contingency has a deadline. Miss a deadline, and you may lose the protection it provides. Your agent and your contract will outline these dates clearly—put them in your calendar immediately.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau offers a helpful overview of the home-buying process, including how deposits and contingencies work together to protect buyers.
Earnest money becomes vulnerable when a buyer backs out of a deal for reasons not covered by a contingency. A few real scenarios where this happens:
In these situations, the seller may be entitled to keep your deposit as compensation for the time their home was off the market. Tennessee's purchase agreements outline a dispute resolution process, but preventing the dispute in the first place is far less stressful than resolving one.
A few straightforward steps reduce your risk significantly:
Earnest money isn't complicated once you understand how it works. It's your commitment in writing—and in dollars—that you intend to buy the home. Protect it with good contingencies, clear communication, and realistic timelines, and it simply becomes part of your down payment on closing day.
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At Redbird Real Estate, we specialize in residential sales, property management, and commercial real estate services in and around Franklin,...
Franklin, Tennessee
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