The complete guide to understanding your options, calculating your property's worth, and making the right decision—whether that's repair, sell as-is, or partner with a buyer who handles everything.
Get an instant estimate of your fire-damaged property's value and compare your options: repair and sell traditional, or sell as-is for cash.
Based on market data and your inputs
Not all fire damage is equal. The type and extent of damage directly impacts your home's value and your best selling strategy.
The most serious category, structural damage affects load-bearing walls, foundation, roof systems, and the overall integrity of the home. This type of damage often reduces property value by 40-60% and may require complete demolition in severe cases.
Fire and heat can destroy wiring insulation, damage circuit breakers, and create serious safety hazards. Complete rewiring typically costs $8,000-$30,000 depending on home size.
Often underestimated, smoke penetrates walls, HVAC systems, and porous materials. Professional remediation costs $3,000-$25,000, and lingering odors can make a home unsellable to traditional buyers.
Firefighting efforts often cause significant water damage. If not addressed within 48-72 hours, water damage leads to mold growth, adding $2,000-$10,000+ in remediation costs.
Source: Angi, HomeGuide, NIFC 2024 Annual Report
Each option has distinct advantages depending on your timeline, financial situation, and tolerance for risk.
Best for minor damage under $15,000 when you have time (6+ months), capital, and your insurance covers most costs. You'll maximize sale price but face contractor delays, permit requirements, and traditional buyer scrutiny.
Best when repair costs exceed 20-30% of ARV, you need to sell quickly, or you lack capital for repairs. Cash buyers purchase in any condition, close in 7-21 days, and handle all cleanup post-closing.
When structural damage is severe and the land is more valuable than the structure, selling for lot value or at auction may be optimal. Common in high-demand locations where teardown/rebuild is preferred.
In most states, you're legally required to disclose fire damage—even after repairs. Click any state below for specific requirements.
Regardless of your state, prepare to disclose the following on your seller disclosure form:
California, Texas, New York, and Florida have particularly detailed disclosure requirements. California uses standardized forms that specifically ask about fire damage history. Texas requires disclosure of all known material defects.
A few states like Alabama follow "buyer beware" principles, but even in these states, intentional concealment of known fire damage constitutes fraud and exposes you to legal liability.
Full disclosure actually protects you. Documented repairs and honest communication build buyer confidence and reduce post-sale liability. Hiding damage rarely works—fire department records, insurance claims, and neighbor knowledge often surface during due diligence.
All states shown require material defect disclosure including fire damage.
Your insurance payout significantly impacts your selling strategy. Understanding RCV vs. ACV coverage and coordinating with your insurer is critical.
RCV policies pay the full cost to repair or rebuild with similar materials, without depreciation deductions. However, many RCV policies only release the full amount after you complete repairs—which may require selling after restoration.
ACV policies pay depreciated value, meaning you receive less than full repair costs. If your payout falls short of repair expenses, selling as-is may be more financially sound than funding the gap out-of-pocket.
Yes. Many homeowners successfully sell during the claims process. Coordinate with your lender (if mortgaged) and insurer about endorsements and payout distribution. The settlement statement typically shows liens paid first, with net proceeds to you.
In many cases: Insurance Payout + As-Is Sale Price ≈ Pre-Fire Value. When repair costs exceed insurance coverage, this formula often delivers better financial outcomes than self-funding the gap.
Expert answers to the most common questions about selling fire damaged properties.
Fire damaged homes typically sell for 20-50% below pre-fire market value depending on damage severity. Minor smoke damage may only reduce value 10-15%, while structural damage can reduce value 40-60%. Factors include: damage extent, local market conditions, lot value, and repair feasibility. Use our calculator above for a personalized estimate based on your specific situation.
Yes. You can sell a fire damaged house as-is to cash buyers or real estate investors. This eliminates repair costs ($3,000-$180,000+), contractor delays (3-12 months), and the uncertainty of traditional buyer financing. Many homeowners net more selling as-is when factoring in carrying costs, time value, and risk reduction.
Yes. Most states require sellers to disclose known material defects including fire damage, even after repairs are completed. California, Texas, New York, Florida, and Georgia have specific disclosure requirements. Non-disclosure can result in lawsuits, contract rescission, and financial penalties. Always complete your state's seller disclosure form accurately and keep documentation of all repairs.
Timeline depends on your chosen path. Selling to a cash buyer: 7-21 days from offer to closing. Traditional sale after full repairs: 6-18 months (repair time + listing period + closing). Cash buyers purchase as-is, handle all cleanup and permits post-closing, and can close on your preferred timeline.
Consider selling as-is when: repair costs exceed 20-30% of after-repair value, you need to sell quickly, insurance payout is insufficient, or you lack capital for repairs. Consider repairing first when: damage is minor (under $10,000), you have 6+ months, insurance covers most costs, and comparable sales support higher post-repair valuations.
Your mortgage obligation continues regardless of fire damage. Insurance proceeds may be held in escrow by your lender until repairs are completed. If selling, the settlement statement shows the mortgage balance paid from sale proceeds before you receive any net amount. If you're underwater (owe more than as-is value), discuss options with your lender before listing.
Yes. Many homeowners sell during active claims. Coordinate with your insurer about claim assignment or payout timing. The buyer may assume the claim in some cases, or you may receive settlement before or at closing. Work with a buyer experienced in insurance coordination to avoid delays.
Several buyer types actively purchase fire damaged properties: real estate investors (pay cash, close quickly), house flippers (seek profitable renovation projects), land developers (interested when teardown makes sense), and FHA 203(k) buyers (use renovation loans but require longer closing timelines). Cash investors typically offer the fastest, most certain transactions.
We buy fire damaged houses nationwide. No repairs, no showings, no agent commissions. You pick the closing date—we handle everything else.