Selling a house is one of the largest financial transactions most people ever make. Yet most homeowners walk into it blind—relying on a single agent's opinion, guessing at costs, and hoping for the best.
This guide changes that. We'll walk you through everything you need to know: how to understand your home's real value, the costs nobody tells you about, your actual options (not just "list with an agent"), and how to compare offers using real math—not emotion.
No fluff. No sales pitch. Just the facts you need to make a smart decision.
Chapter 1: Understanding Your Home's Value
Before you can sell, you need to know what your house is actually worth. Not what Zillow says. Not what your neighbor got. What the market will actually pay for your house, right now.
The Three Types of Value
Market value is what a ready buyer will pay. List price is your asking price. Sale price is what you actually get. They're often different numbers.
How Professionals Determine Value
1. Comparable Sales (Comps)
The most reliable method. Look at similar homes that sold in your area within the last 3-6 months. "Similar" means:
- Within 0.5 miles (closer in dense areas)
- Same bedroom/bathroom count (±1)
- Similar square footage (±20%)
- Similar lot size and condition
- Similar age and construction type
2. Automated Valuation Models (AVMs)
Zillow's Zestimate, Redfin Estimate, and similar tools. Useful as a starting point, but have significant blind spots:
Condition: AVMs can't see your new roof or outdated kitchen.
Unique features: Pools, views, corner lots—often miscalculated.
Rural areas: Fewer data points = less accuracy.
Recent changes: Remodels, damage, or neighborhood shifts.
3. Professional Appraisal
A licensed appraiser physically inspects your home and provides a formal opinion of value. Costs $300-600 but gives you a defensible number. Required by lenders for financed purchases.
The Condition Adjustment Factor
Two houses with identical specs can be $50,000+ apart based on condition. Be honest about where your home falls:
| Condition | Description | Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| Move-in Ready | Updated finishes, no repairs needed | +5-10% |
| Average | Clean, functional, some dated elements | Baseline |
| Needs Work | Deferred maintenance, cosmetic issues | -5-15% |
| Major Repairs | Structural, roof, foundation issues | -15-30% |
Get at least 3 opinions of value: one from an agent (free CMA), one from an AVM, and ideally one from a cash buyer. If they're all within 5%, you have a solid range. If they vary wildly, dig deeper.
Chapter 2: The Real Costs of Selling
The sale price is not what you walk away with. Not even close. Here's where the money actually goes:
Cost Breakdown
Agent Commissions: 5-6% (Negotiable)
Traditionally split between listing and buyer's agent. After the 2024 NAR settlement, buyer commissions are more negotiable than ever. You can offer less (or nothing) to the buyer's agent, but it may affect showings.
Seller Closing Costs: 1-3%
- Title insurance for buyer
- Escrow fees
- Transfer taxes (varies by state/city)
- Attorney fees (required in some states)
- Prorated property taxes
- HOA transfer fees
Pre-Sale Repairs: Variable
Items buyers commonly request after inspection:
- Roof repairs: $500-$15,000
- HVAC issues: $200-$8,000
- Plumbing/electrical: $300-$5,000
- Foundation: $2,000-$20,000+
Holding Costs (The Hidden Killer)
Every month your house sits unsold costs money:
Mortgage payment + Property taxes + Insurance + Utilities + Maintenance = Monthly burn
On a $350K house, this is often $2,500-4,000/month. A 3-month delay = $7,500-12,000 in holding costs alone.
Chapter 3: Your Selling Options
You have more options than "list with an agent." Each path has tradeoffs. Here's an honest comparison:
Traditional Listing (MLS)
Most Common- Move-in ready homes in good markets
- Sellers with time flexibility
- Maximizing sale price
- Showings, open houses, disruption
- Repairs and staging costs
- Deal can fall through (financing, inspection)
Cash Buyer / Investor
Fastest- Urgent timelines (foreclosure, relocation)
- Houses needing major repairs
- Avoiding showings and hassle
- Lower net proceeds
- Must vet buyer carefully (scams exist)
- Less competition = less leverage
Novation / Partnership
Best of Both- Sellers wanting speed + higher net
- Houses that show well to retail buyers
- Avoiding traditional listing hassle
- Not available in all markets
- Investor fee at closing
- Less seller control than DIY
For Sale By Owner (FSBO)
DIY- Experienced sellers
- Hot markets with buyer demand
- Selling to someone you know
- Limited exposure without MLS
- You handle all showings, paperwork, negotiation
- Statistically sells for less than agent-listed
At Local Home Buyers USA, we offer a hybrid approach: we partner with you (you stay on title), market to retail buyers for full market value, and split the upside at closing. You get speed + higher net proceeds. Learn more →
Chapter 4: Timeline Expectations
The "how long will this take?" question. Here's the realistic answer for each path:
Traditional Listing Timeline
Cash Sale Timeline
Financing denial (28%): Buyer can't get loan approved
Inspection issues (15%): Problems discovered, can't agree on repairs
Appraisal gap (10%): House appraises below sale price
Buyer cold feet (9%): Contingency used to exit
Cash sales eliminate 3 of these 4 risks.
Chapter 5: Preparing Your Home (Or Not)
Should you fix up before selling? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Here's how to decide:
Repairs That Usually Pay Off
- Fresh paint (neutral colors): $1-3 return per $1 spent
- Deep cleaning & decluttering: Nearly free, high impact
- Landscaping cleanup: Curb appeal drives first impressions
- Fixing obvious issues: Leaky faucets, broken fixtures, etc.
Repairs That Rarely Pay Off
- Full kitchen remodel: Recover 50-75% of cost
- Bathroom remodel: Recover 50-70% of cost
- Pool installation: Often negative return
- Over-improving for neighborhood: Caps exist
When to Sell As-Is
Skip repairs entirely if:
- You don't have cash for repairs
- Timeline is too tight
- Repairs exceed potential value gain
- House needs major work (better left to investors)
- You're emotionally done and want certainty
If repairs cost $20K and would only increase sale price by $15K, you're losing money. Add in 3 months of holding costs ($9K), and that "smart investment" actually cost you $14K.
Chapter 6: Comparing Offers Like a Pro
Never compare offers by sale price alone. Use this framework:
The Net Sheet Test
For every offer, calculate what actually hits your bank account:
The Certainty Factor
Not all offers have equal probability of closing:
| Offer Type | Typical Close Rate | Certainty Score |
|---|---|---|
| Cash, No Contingencies | 95%+ | ★★★★★ |
| Cash, Inspection Contingency | 90% | ★★★★☆ |
| Conventional Loan, Pre-approved | 80% | ★★★☆☆ |
| FHA/VA Loan | 70-75% | ★★☆☆☆ |
| Contingent on Selling Their Home | 50% | ★☆☆☆☆ |
A $300K cash offer with 95% certainty ($285K expected value) often beats a $320K financed offer with 75% certainty ($240K expected value).
Chapter 7: The Closing Process
You've accepted an offer. Now what?
What Happens During Closing
- Title Search: Title company verifies you can legally sell
- Inspection: Buyer examines property (may negotiate repairs)
- Appraisal: Lender confirms value supports loan (financed only)
- Underwriting: Lender finalizes loan approval
- Final Walkthrough: Buyer confirms condition
- Signing Day: Execute deed, receive funds
Documents You'll Sign
- Deed: Transfers ownership to buyer
- Settlement Statement (HUD-1/CD): Shows all costs and credits
- Affidavits: Various legal certifications
- Tax Documents: 1099-S if applicable
When You Get Paid
Typically same day or next business day via:
- Wire transfer: Most common, funds in hours
- Cashier's check: Old school but still used
Real estate wire fraud is rampant. Never wire money based on emailed instructions. Always call the title company directly using a number you looked up yourself (not from the email) to verify wire instructions.
Chapter 8: Common Mistakes to Avoid
Pricing Mistakes
- Overpricing "to leave room to negotiate": Causes your listing to go stale
- Pricing based on what you "need": Market doesn't care about your mortgage
- Ignoring days on market: If 30+ days with no offers, you're overpriced
Process Mistakes
- Accepting the first offer emotionally: Always evaluate on paper
- Hiding known defects: Disclosure laws exist; you'll pay later
- Moving out too early: Empty houses sell for less
- Being inflexible on showings: Fewer showings = fewer offers
Financial Mistakes
- Not accounting for all costs: Use a net sheet, not sale price
- Ignoring carrying costs: Time is money
- Over-improving before sale: Rarely recovers cost
- Not getting multiple offers/opinions: You need comparison data
Never make decisions based on emotion or a single data point. Get multiple valuations, multiple offers, and always do the math on paper before deciding.
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This guide is for educational purposes and reflects general real estate practices. Laws and customs vary by state and locality. For advice specific to your situation, consult with licensed professionals in your area. At Local Home Buyers USA, we believe informed sellers make better decisions—even if that decision isn't to work with us.