Some homebuyers are being called back to the office earlier than expected, and it’s forcing them to drop out of deals and list the homes they just moved into, agents told Inman.

Would-be homebuyers from Detroit and San Diego to Plano, Texas, and the islands of Hawaii are dropping out of deals thanks to suddenly changing work-from-home policies that are re-tethering Americans closer to their offices now that new cases of the COVID virus are beginning to subside, agents told Inman.

Since mid-April, new cases of COVID-19 have declined from an average of 71,000 a day across the United States to just 12,500 a day last week, according to a New York Times database, prompting employers across the country to reconsider work-from-home policies and in some cases abruptly reverse plans for permanent remote work or, instead, adopt hybrid work models.

“My team has had two [deals fall through] in the last week,” Christopher Paul, an agent at Keller Williams in San Diego, wrote in a Facebook post on Inman Coast to Coast. “One cancelled a sale and a listing because the employer abruptly changed their WFH policy. Another changed their criteria (to a much more competitive one) due to needing to be at the office more.”

Brandon Kekich, a Realtor with RE/MAX in the suburbs of Detroit, told Inman he’s already working with two Ford Motor employees who, after moving about an hour away from the office last summer, are now being called back in. They moved because they thought they had at least two years of remote work ahead of them, Kekich said.

The exodus of remote workers began to cement in May and June of 2020, Kekich said during a follow-up call.

But he knew that for many of those movers, remote life wouldn’t last forever. In fact, last summer, he tried to convince one of the sellers he’s now working with not to buy too far out.

Brandon Kekich.

“He ditched us because I was really trying to talk him out of the move,” Kekich said. 

Now, Kekich is expecting to get at least four more listings by the fall from Ford employees who need to move back to the area.

All the way in Hawaii, Kinga Mills, an Inman Brand Ambassador and Realtor with Hawaii Life, is witnessing a similar phenomenon on the island of Oahu in Hawaii, where she’s been working for approximately six years. 

“I had a cancellation shortly before closing date,” Mills wrote on Facebook. “NY employer decided that they wanted everyone back in the office, which totally screwed my client.” 

Over a month ago, while in escrow, her buyer’s employer in New York sent out a notice stating that employees had to be back in the office before year’s end. Because the buyer was trying to get a primary residence loan, the deal fell apart. 

“We do have an influx, since early 2020, of remote workers. So I’m sure I’m not the only one,” she told Inman during a follow-up call.

And while not everyone who banked on the longevity of remote work is being forced to move closer to the office, people are hoping a rise in reversals will ease the strain on inventory and soften competition.

“People here are HOPING that folks who bought homes during the pandemic in the hopes of working from home for the foreseeable future will be called back..so we have more inventory!” Julie Chancerelle Ziemelis, a co-founder and owner at Move To Hawaii 365, wrote on Facebook.

Over in the Lone Star State, however, one buyer’s call back to the office was another buyer’s lucky day.

Nicole Arenas, an agent with Keller Williams in Plano, Texas, told Inman that one of her buyers recently scored a home because the top bidder pulled out at the last minute.

“The original buyer terminated because their office emailed that they would be returning to office three days a week, the buyer could not work remotely and the location no longer worked for them.” she wrote on Facebook.

The deal came through in May, Arenas told Inman during a follow-up call. The market was, and still is, tight with limited inventory. While Arenas’ buyer made a strong offer, the seller selected another.

“We thought we had lost the house,” she continued. “It’s very hard to find a house, love it, and not get it. I followed up with the listing agent and just told her that if anything changed please let me know.”

Not long after, the listing agent called Arenas to tell her the selected offer had fallen through.

“So I called my buyer, of course they were very excited about it,” she said. “We worked through a couple of logistics, and we got the house.”

Arenas told Inman she’s been hearing buzz about houses going back on the market lately. She believes it’s a result of buyers making offers on multiple homes at once and the inability for some to work fully remote anymore. 

But even for those who are able to remain remote, Mills pointed out that the cost of living in different states can alter salaries. Salary adjustments could potentially impact the ability to get a mortgage, thus resulting deals falling through.

Kinga Mills.

“Read an interesting post about one of the CEOs of a major Wall Street bank saying that employees that aren’t going to be coming into the office because they have moved away from NY and are wanting to work remotely will be able to keep their jobs, but not their NYC salaries,” a Facebook commenter wrote.

“Which then would impact their ability to make the mortgages they signed up for..that would be an interesting one to track,” another commenter replied.

Email Libertina Brandt

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