You need to sell quickly
Months of repairs and showings aren’t on the table. We’ll find the fastest honest path forward.
Whether your home needs repairs, cleanup, updates, or a faster sale, get a clear look at your selling options before spending money you may not need to spend.
Older homes, inherited properties, deferred maintenance, insurance claims, vacant houses — these need a different conversation. Here’s the version that’s actually useful.
Months of repairs and showings aren’t on the table. We’ll find the fastest honest path forward.
Roof? Siding? Kitchen? Bath? Floors? Structural? You don’t need to fix everything. Most homes don’t need most of it.
Managing a property you don’t live in — often with siblings, attorneys, and timelines — is a category of its own. Let’s simplify it.
Roof, siding, water intrusion — these need documentation and a plan before any listing or claim discussion gets messy.
Buyers walking, big credits, last-minute renegotiation — common and avoidable. Pre-listing diligence usually changes the story.
As-is sale, investor offer, targeted repair plan, traditional listing — which one nets you the most? Depends on your situation, not a slogan.
We’ll figure out which based on your property, timeline, and how much hassle you can take on. None of these is the “right” answer — they’re just different.
| Option | Typical timeline | Out-of-pocket cost | Likely net | Best when… |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sell as-is on the open market | 30 – 75 days | Minimal | Mid-range | You want speed and simplicity with broad buyer pool |
| Targeted repairs, then list | 60 – 120 days | Moderate | Often highest | A few specific fixes meaningfully change the buyer pool |
| Investor / direct cash offer | 14 – 30 days | None | Usually lower | You need certainty, privacy, or a very fast close |
| Full pre-list renovation | 4 – 9 months | Significant | Highest if executed well | Property has strong upside and you have time + capital |
These are general patterns, not guarantees. Your actual outcome depends on the property, neighborhood, condition, and current buyer demand. The point of the conversation is to figure out which row is yours — not to push you onto one.
Form, photos if you have them. Tell me what’s going on, plainly.
I review what you sent, pull comps, and check what buyers are paying for similar condition right now.
The four paths above, with honest numbers for your situation. No spin, no upsell.
If we move forward together, great. If not, you have clarity you didn’t have before.
Some repairs can increase your sale price. Others may cost more than they return. The right choice depends on your timeline, condition, equity, and the type of buyer most likely to want the home.
Compare My Selling OptionsAfter my mom passed, the house was full and the roof needed work. Chris helped us decide what to fix, what to skip, and who to sell to. A real plan, finally.Janelle R.Inherited property · Berks County
We had a storm-damaged roof and were sure we’d have to replace it before selling. Chris showed us why we didn’t — and we sold for nearly what we hoped for, no roof work.Kevin O.Storm damage · Chester County
The house had been vacant for almost two years and we didn’t know what to do. He laid out three options with actual dollars and we picked the simplest one.Robert M.Vacant home · Delaware County
Sometimes, but not always — and not as much less as people fear. The right buyer pool for an as-is home in this area is often happy to skip the wait, the credits, and the repair drama. Whether as-is or repair-first wins for you depends on the specific home.
When it makes sense, yes. An investor offer is one of four options we discuss — not the default. The point is to get you the best net for your situation, not to push one channel.
That’s a common reason to start the conversation early. We can talk through carrying costs, timing, and the realistic options — including not selling.
Common, manageable, and usually less scary than people fear. We’ll talk through disclosure, documentation, and which fixes (if any) are worth doing pre-sale.
Yes — and very often. Estate situations, out-of-state heirs, sibling coordination — this is a regular part of what I do. We’ll move at your pace.
If the property feels overwhelming, start with a short options review. I’ll help you understand what is possible, what to avoid, and how to move forward without guessing.
Have photos of the property? Send them after the form for a more accurate first look.
Short intake — we’ll cover the rest on a call.