A dowry of 32000florins and a dower of 10000florins were agreed upon, and her Wittum was to consist of castle and town of Neuenstadt am Kocher near Heilbronn.
Pope Innocent VIII had in February 1490 delegated the investigation necessary for this dispensation to bishop Sixtus of Freising and two clergymen from Munich.
During this long engagement, the Palatine branch of the Wittelsbachs investigated other options for Louis, such as he French princess Suzanne of Bourbon-Beaujeu and Mary, the daughter of Duke William IV of Jülich and Berg.
In 1501 Emperor Maximilian I, who was Kunigunde's brother, suggested that his niece Sidonie could marry Duke Charles of Guelders.
It was not broken off when, after the death of Duke George of Bavaria-Landshut in 1503, Bavaria-Munich and the Palatinate found themselves on opposite sides in the Landshut War of Succession.