
It is not particularly difficult to create a binding real estate agreement.
Two parties can agree on terms, put them in writing, and sign. At that point, there is a contract.
What is much harder, and far more important, is understanding whether that contract actually protects you.
Buying or selling a home can look surprisingly straightforward from the outside. There are forms. There are signatures. There is a process that appears structured enough that, with the right documents, it might feel manageable to handle on your own.
That assumption is not limited to inexperienced buyers or sellers. It often shows up with people who are smart, capable, and used to figuring things out on their own.
It is also where unnecessary risk tends to enter the picture.
Despite how simple the process can appear, very few sellers actually choose to handle a transaction entirely on their own. According to the most recent data from the National Association of REALTORS®, only about 6% of home sales are completed without an agent, a figure that has trended downward over time. A significant portion of those transactions are between parties who already know each other, rather than traditional open-market sales.
That does not mean it cannot be done. It does highlight that the challenge is not simply filling out forms.
Where most issues arise is not in getting a contract signed, but in how the terms are structured and carried out.
Deadlines are missed.
Contingencies are misunderstood.
Informal agreements are assumed to carry weight.
Text messages are treated as binding.
Required disclosures are overlooked.
None of these mistakes prevent a contract from being enforceable. They simply determine who is protected and who is exposed.
Even well-trained professionals can run into this. I have worked with attorneys who reviewed standard contracts and suggested revisions that, on the surface, seemed to improve the language. In practice, those changes often created conflicts within the agreement or removed protections that had been carefully built into the standard form.
Real estate contracts are not just collections of terms. They are structured systems designed to allocate risk, define responsibilities, and create clear paths forward when something does not go as planned.
Changing one piece without understanding how it interacts with the rest can have unintended consequences.
The same is true when relying on templates or documents found online. A form, on its own, does not account for the specifics of a property, the structure of a transaction, or the timing requirements that make the agreement work in practice.
A contract can make a deal enforceable without making it safe.
That distinction is easy to miss because most transactions do not run into major issues. When everything goes smoothly, it can reinforce the idea that the process itself is simple.
It is only when something does not go according to plan that the details of the agreement begin to matter.
This is not about avoiding certain types of transactions or suggesting that one approach works for everyone. It is about recognizing that a signed agreement is not the end of the process. It is the framework that governs everything that follows.
The question is not whether you have a contract.
It is what that contract actually does for you.

Karen Moeller
STLKaren.com
Karen.McNeill@STLRE.com
314.678.7866
About the Author:
Karen Moeller is a St. Louis area REALTOR® with MORE, REALTORS® and a regular contributor to St. Louis Real Estate News, helping clients make informed, data-driven decisions.



