When to Order Closing Gifts So You’re Never Scrambling at the Last Minute
Every realtor has a closing gift horror story.
The deal closes faster than expected. The client hands over the keys on a Tuesday. You’ve got nothing. You’re driving to a home décor store on the way to the handover meeting, grabbing whatever looks presentable, and hoping the gift wrap station near the checkout is still open.
It doesn’t have to go like this. The scramble is almost always a planning problem, not a budget problem or a taste problem. This post is about fixing the planning part — when to order, how to build a system that doesn’t depend on memory, and what lead times actually look like when you’re sourcing engraved hardwood cutting boards for client gifts.
Why Closing Gifts Are Harder to Time Than They Look
On paper the timeline seems manageable. Deal closes, gift gets ordered, gift arrives, everyone’s happy. In practice, real estate transactions compress at the end. The last two weeks before closing are when everything happens at once — final walkthroughs, mortgage conditions, last-minute inspection items, occupancy date shuffles. That’s also when most agents think about ordering a gift. Which is also when there’s no time to order anything that requires more than two days to arrive. Add engraving to the picture and the window gets tighter. A laser-engraved cutting board with the client’s name, the address, and the closing date needs design file prep, engraving time, and shipping. That process doesn’t compress to 48 hours. It needs room. The agents who never scramble are the ones who figured out that closing gifts can’t be ordered reactively. They have to be ordered ahead of the close — sometimes weeks ahead.The Two Approaches That Actually Work
There are really only two systems that eliminate the scramble. Most realtors eventually land on one or the other. System one: order in batches at the start of each quarter. At the beginning of January, April, July, and October, the agent looks at their pipeline, estimates how many closings they expect that quarter, and orders that many boards. Unengraved, unfinished, ready to go to the engraver on short notice. When a deal firms up, the board is already on hand. The engraver gets a few weeks of lead time rather than a few days. The closing gift arrives before the handover, not after. This system works best for agents closing five or more deals per quarter. The 24-board minimum per SKU lines up well with a quarterly batch approach — one order covers a full quarter of closings at typical mid-volume agent pace. System two: order on firm date, not closing date. The moment a deal firms up — conditions removed, deposit cleared, everyone committed — the agent places the gift order. Not when the deal closes. When it firms. That’s usually four to eight weeks before closing, which is enough lead time for shipping and engraving without any scramble. The key discipline here is treating the firm date as the trigger rather than the closing date. Agents who wait until closing to order gifts are always behind. Agents who order on firm are almost always on time.Real Lead Times: What to Actually Plan For
This is where most estimates go wrong. People assume two weeks is plenty. It usually isn’t, once you factor in every step. Blank boards ship from Quebec via Purolator, FedEx, or UPS. Toronto gets boards in one to two business days. Calgary and Edmonton in four to six. Vancouver in three to five. That’s shipping time — not processing time, not engraving time. Add engraver lead time. A busy engraver during peak season — spring real estate market, Q4 holidays — might be running two to three weeks out. Off-peak, a week or less. The agent who orders in September for an October close has no problem. The agent who orders in March for a March close is gambling. Add design file prep. If the engraving includes a custom address, the couple’s names, and the closing date, someone has to set up that file. Some engravers do this as part of the service. Some charge extra. Either way, it takes time. Realistic total lead time for an engraved closing gift: three to four weeks minimum in normal conditions. Five to six weeks during peak periods — spring market (March through June) and the holiday Q4 rush (October through December).Seasonal Ordering Calendar
Closing gift ordering calendar — when to order for each market period
Market period
Closing months
Order by
Risk level
Highest volume
Spring market
March — June
January — February
High — order early
Summer
July — August
Late June — July
Low — most flexible
Fall market
Sept — November
August — September
Medium — don’t wait
Engravers fully booked
Holiday Q4
October — December
October at the latest
High — order in October
January
January
Order + build inventory
Low — best time to stock up
Rule of thumb: 3–4 weeks minimum lead time in normal conditions. 5–6 weeks during spring market and Q4. Order on firm date, not closing date.