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Home Selling Advice From Our Team

Straight answers on foreclosure, inherited property, repairs, timing, and everything else that comes up when you're deciding how to sell — written by the people who actually buy houses across Maryland and Pennsylvania.

Selling Education

Common Home Selling Scams to Watch Out For

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Jun 20, 2026 · 8 min read

Most cash buyers are legitimate, but the industry does attract bad actors — here's what to watch for.

Offers that seem too good, with no explanation

If a number sounds unusually high and no one can explain how they got there, that's often a sign the number will change later, or won't hold up.

Requests for money upfront

A legitimate buyer never needs you to pay anything to receive or process an offer — if someone's asking for fees before a sale, that's a serious red flag.

Pressure to sign without review time

Legitimate buyers expect you to read the contract, ask questions, and take the time you need. Urgency tactics are a common warning sign.

If anything about an offer feels off, trust that instinct — and feel free to compare it against a straightforward, no-pressure offer from us.

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Selling Education

What Is Earnest Money and How Does It Work?

SK Simmy Kaur · Jun 2, 2026 · 5 min read

Earnest money shows up in almost every real estate contract — here's what it actually is and why it matters.

What it represents

It's a deposit a buyer puts down to show they're serious about the purchase, typically held in escrow until closing.

What happens to it at closing

It's usually applied toward the buyer's down payment or closing costs, effectively becoming part of the purchase price rather than an extra fee.

What happens if a deal falls through

Depending on the contract terms, earnest money may be returned to the buyer or forfeited to the seller, depending on why the deal didn't close and what contingencies applied.

In a straightforward cash sale, this is one less thing to negotiate and track — the offer and closing terms are typically much simpler.

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Selling Education

Closing Costs Explained: Who Pays What When You Sell

MN Michael Nyman · May 15, 2026 · 8 min read

Closing costs get mentioned constantly in real estate but rarely explained clearly — here's a straightforward breakdown.

What sellers typically pay

In a traditional sale, sellers commonly cover agent commissions, transfer taxes, and a prorated share of property taxes — often totaling several percent of the sale price.

What buyers typically pay

Buyers usually cover their own loan-related fees, title insurance for their policy, and recording fees, though exact splits vary by local custom and negotiation.

How this differs in a cash sale

With no agent commissions and closing costs built into the offer, a seller in a direct cash sale typically doesn't pay anything out of pocket at closing.

If you want to see exactly what you'd walk away with either way, we're happy to lay out the real numbers side by side.

Call (443) 815-8024
Market Trends

How Property Taxes Affect Your Home Sale in Maryland

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Apr 26, 2026 · 5 min read

Property taxes come up at closing whether you're selling traditionally or for cash — here's how they factor in.

Taxes are prorated at closing

You're generally only responsible for property taxes up through your closing date, with the buyer taking over from that point forward — this gets calculated and adjusted at closing.

Unpaid back taxes get settled from proceeds

If there are any outstanding property tax balances, they're typically paid off directly from the sale proceeds rather than being your responsibility to resolve beforehand.

This doesn't require any action from you

Prorating and settling taxes is handled by the title company as part of the standard closing process.

If you're behind on property taxes and that's part of why you're considering selling, that's a common and solvable situation — reach out and we'll walk through it.

Call (443) 815-8024
Market Trends

Selling a House in Rural vs. Urban Maryland: Key Differences

MN Michael Nyman · Mar 21, 2026 · 3 min read

Where your property sits changes who's likely to buy it and how — here's how rural and urban Maryland sales typically differ.

Buyer pool size

Urban and suburban areas generally have a larger, more active buyer pool, while rural properties can sit longer simply due to fewer interested buyers in the area.

Financing can be more complex in rural areas

Certain loan types have restrictions around acreage, well and septic systems, or property type that don't come up as often in more urban settings.

Cash buyers reduce that variable

Since a cash sale doesn't depend on a lender's specific requirements, rural properties with wells, septic systems, or unusual acreage aren't a complication.

Wherever your property sits in Maryland, we evaluate it the same way — condition and comparable sales, not whether it fits a lender's checklist.

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Market Trends

Baltimore Housing Market: What Sellers Should Know Right Now

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Mar 3, 2026 · 8 min read

Baltimore's housing market has its own dynamics distinct from the state as a whole — here's the general shape of it.

Neighborhood variation is significant

Baltimore City's market can differ dramatically block by block, with some areas seeing strong demand and others facing longer time on market.

Older housing stock means more deferred maintenance

Baltimore's older homes often come with roof, plumbing, or electrical systems that need updating, which affects how they perform with traditional financed buyers.

Investor and cash buyer activity remains steady

Baltimore has long been an active market for cash buyers, in part because of the volume of homes needing work.

If you're selling a Baltimore property that needs work, that's a very familiar situation for us — reach out for a straightforward look at your options.

Call (443) 815-8024
Market Trends

Best Time of Year to Sell a House in Maryland

SK Simmy Kaur · Feb 12, 2026 · 5 min read

Spring gets most of the attention in real estate advice, but the "best" time depends heavily on how you're selling.

Why spring works for traditional listings

More buyers are actively looking in spring and early summer, which can mean more competing offers and potentially a higher sale price for move-in-ready homes.

Why it matters less for a direct sale

A cash sale isn't dependent on buyer foot traffic or seasonal demand, since it's a direct transaction rather than a competitive listing.

What actually matters more

Your personal timeline — job changes, financial pressure, or a family situation — is usually a bigger factor than the calendar for most sellers.

If your situation calls for selling in December instead of May, that's not a disadvantage for a cash sale the way it can be for a traditional listing.

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Market Trends

Pennsylvania Home Selling Guide: What's Different From Maryland

MN Michael Nyman · Jan 25, 2026 · 7 min read

Maryland and Pennsylvania share a border but not identical real estate processes — here's what actually differs.

Transfer taxes vary

Both states charge transfer taxes on real estate sales, but rates and who typically pays (buyer, seller, or split) can differ by state and even by county or municipality.

Closing customs differ slightly

Pennsylvania sales are more commonly handled through title companies with escrow, similar to Maryland, but local customary practices can vary between counties.

Disclosure requirements are broadly similar

Both states require sellers to disclose known material defects, though the specific forms and timelines differ.

We buy houses across both states and handle these differences as part of the process, so you don't have to research them yourself.

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Relocation

How Long Does It Really Take to Sell a House in Maryland?

SK Simmy Kaur · Dec 20, 2025 · 8 min read

The honest answer depends heavily on which path you take — here's a realistic breakdown of both.

Traditional listing timeline

Once listed, homes in Maryland often take several weeks to receive an accepted offer, followed by another 30-45 days for financing and closing — two to three months total is common.

What can extend that further

Financing falling through, inspection negotiations, or a slower market can push a traditional sale well past the original estimate.

Cash sale timeline

From first contact to closing, a cash sale can realistically complete in 7 to 14 days if you want it to — or longer, on your schedule, if you don't.

If timeline is the deciding factor for you, that gap is usually the clearest reason to consider a cash sale.

Call (443) 815-8024
Relocation

Military PCS Orders and Selling Your Home Quickly

MN Michael Nyman · Dec 1, 2025 · 7 min read

PCS timelines don't leave much room for a traditional real estate process — here's how military families often approach selling under those constraints.

Your timeline usually isn't negotiable

Unlike a typical move, PCS orders come with a fixed date, which makes a 60-90 day traditional sale process a real risk.

VA loan buyers still need financing timelines

Even if you find a buyer who wants to use VA financing, that process has its own timeline that may not fit your orders.

A cash sale removes the financing timeline entirely

Since there's no loan approval to wait on, closing can align with your actual report date instead of a buyer's mortgage process.

We've worked with military families on tight PCS timelines before, and we're glad to build the closing date around your orders.

Call (443) 815-8024
Relocation

Downsizing in Retirement: Should You Sell As-Is or List Traditionally?

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Nov 13, 2025 · 5 min read

This decision often comes down to how much energy you want to spend versus how much money is on the table — here's how to think it through.

What a traditional sale would require of you

Repairs, staging, showings, and negotiations take time and effort, which may or may not be how you want to spend the months before a move.

What an as-is cash sale simplifies

No repairs, no showings, and a closing date you control — often a meaningful trade for a modestly lower price.

There's no universally right answer

Some people prioritize maximizing sale price and have the time to do it; others prioritize simplicity and peace of mind. Both are valid.

We're happy to give you a real cash offer so you have an actual number to weigh against listing traditionally — no pressure either way.

Call (443) 815-8024
Relocation

Relocating for a Job? How to Sell Your House Fast

SK Simmy Kaur · Oct 26, 2025 · 8 min read

When a new job means being somewhere else in a matter of weeks, a traditional listing timeline usually isn't realistic — here's what actually is.

Traditional listings take longer than most job start dates allow

Between listing, showings, negotiating, and a typical 30-45 day closing, a conventional sale can easily outlast the time you actually have.

A cash sale can match your real timeline

Closing in as little as a week or two means you can sell the house and be gone before your start date, not months after.

You can handle it remotely

Most of the process — from getting an offer to signing closing documents — can be done without being physically present, which matters once you've already relocated.

If your move date is the constraint, tell us the timeline and we'll build the sale around it, not the other way around.

Call (443) 815-8024
Repairs & Condition

The Real Cost of Fixing Up a House Before Selling

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Oct 8, 2025 · 4 min read

Contractors and real estate agents often recommend repairs before listing — the advice isn't wrong, but it's worth running the actual numbers first.

Repair costs add up fast

Even "minor" updates like paint, flooring, and fixtures commonly run into the thousands, before touching anything structural like a roof or HVAC system.

You're fronting the cost with no guarantee

Unlike a renovation you'll live in, repairs before a sale are a bet that buyers will pay enough more to cover the investment — which doesn't always play out.

Compare against what you'd actually recoup

Some updates (like a fresh coat of paint) tend to pay for themselves; others (like a full kitchen remodel) often don't return their full cost at resale.

Before spending on repairs, it's worth getting a no-obligation cash offer for the house as it sits, just to see the real comparison.

Call (443) 815-8024
Repairs & Condition

Mold, Water Damage, and Selling As-Is: What Buyers Should Know

MN Michael Nyman · Sep 19, 2025 · 8 min read

Mold and water damage carry a stigma, but they don't have to be a dead end for selling — here's what's actually involved.

Disclosure requirements still apply

Most states, including Maryland and Pennsylvania, require sellers to disclose known material defects like mold or water damage, even in an as-is sale.

Why financed buyers often walk away

Visible mold or water damage frequently triggers additional inspections and can affect loan approval, which is a major reason these homes struggle on the open market.

How a cash sale handles it differently

The condition is factored into the offer directly, without requiring remediation before the sale can close.

Be upfront about what you know — beyond that, we handle these situations regularly and can move forward without requiring repairs first.

Call (443) 815-8024
Repairs & Condition

Does Your House Need to Be "Market Ready" to Sell? Not Always

SK Simmy Kaur · Sep 1, 2025 · 4 min read

There's a common assumption that a house has to be fixed up before it can sell — that's true for a traditional listing, but not the only path.

Why traditional listings push toward "market ready"

Agents recommend repairs and staging because retail buyers are comparing your house to move-in-ready alternatives, and first impressions drive offers.

What "as-is" actually changes

Selling as-is means the buyer is pricing in the current condition from the start, rather than asking you to invest in the house before they'll consider it.

Weigh the actual trade-off

The question isn't whether repairs would help the price — they usually would — it's whether the cost, time, and hassle are worth it for your situation.

If you'd rather skip the repair-and-stage cycle entirely, an as-is cash offer is a legitimate way to do that.

Call (443) 815-8024
Repairs & Condition

Selling a House With Foundation Issues in Maryland

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Aug 14, 2025 · 5 min read

Foundation problems are one of the fastest ways to lose a traditional buyer — here's why, and what your alternative looks like.

Why it scares off financed buyers

Most mortgage lenders require an inspection, and significant foundation issues can be enough to deny financing outright, regardless of how much a buyer wants the house.

The cost of fixing it varies widely

Foundation repair can range from a few thousand dollars for minor cracks to well over twenty thousand for structural work — a huge unknown to take on before selling.

A cash sale sidesteps the inspection problem

Without a lender requiring specific repairs, foundation issues become a factor in the offer rather than a reason the sale falls through.

If foundation issues are the reason you haven't listed yet, that's a very solvable problem on our end.

Call (443) 815-8024
Repairs & Condition

Fire-Damaged House? Here's How to Sell It Without Repairs

MN Michael Nyman · Jul 27, 2025 · 3 min read

Fire damage is one of the most difficult conditions to sell through traditionally — here's what your realistic options look like.

Most traditional buyers and lenders will pass

Fire-damaged homes often can't be financed conventionally until significant repairs are made, which rules out most retail buyers.

Insurance proceeds factor into your decision

If you've already received a settlement, that changes the math on repairing versus selling as-is — worth factoring in before deciding either way.

Cash buyers regularly take on damaged properties

This is a common, well-understood category for investment buyers, who account for the damage in the offer rather than requiring it be fixed.

We've purchased fire-damaged homes before — reach out and we'll give you a straightforward look at what's possible.

Call (443) 815-8024
Repairs & Condition

Selling a House That Needs a New Roof: Your Options

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Jul 8, 2025 · 8 min read

A roof in bad shape can scare off traditional buyers before they even walk inside — here's how to think about your options.

Replace it first

This can cost anywhere from several thousand to well over ten thousand dollars depending on size and materials, and it doesn't guarantee a buyer won't ask for other repairs too.

Price around it

Listing as-is with a lower price to account for the roof can work, but many financed buyers' lenders won't approve a loan on a home with a failing roof at all.

Sell to a cash buyer

A cash sale removes the roof issue from the equation entirely — it's accounted for in the offer, and there's no lender requiring it be fixed first.

If a bad roof is the main thing standing between you and selling, that's exactly the kind of situation a cash offer is built for.

Call (443) 815-8024
Landlord Exit

Calculating Whether to Sell or Keep Renting Your Property

SK Simmy Kaur · Jun 20, 2025 · 4 min read

This decision usually comes down to a few concrete numbers rather than a gut feeling — here's what to actually look at.

Your real net cash flow

Subtract mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, and vacancy periods from rental income — many landlords are surprised how thin (or negative) this margin actually is.

What the equity could do elsewhere

Compare what selling and reinvesting that equity could return against what the property is actually generating today.

Your own time and risk tolerance

A property that pencils out on paper can still be the wrong choice if the day-to-day management is costing you more than it's worth personally.

If you run these numbers and selling starts to look better, we're happy to give you a real cash offer to compare against holding on.

Call (443) 815-8024
Landlord Exit

How to Sell a Problem Rental Property Fast

MN Michael Nyman · Jun 2, 2025 · 3 min read

Bad tenants, deferred maintenance, or both — none of these have to be resolved before you can sell.

You don't need to evict anyone first

A cash buyer purchasing as an investment can often take on a problem tenant situation directly, rather than requiring you to resolve it beforehand.

Deferred maintenance doesn't need to be fixed

Years of put-off repairs are priced into the offer, not a reason to delay selling until you can afford to address them.

Speed limits your ongoing exposure

The faster this kind of property sells, the less additional cost and stress it adds to your plate in the meantime.

We buy problem rentals regularly — tenants, deferred repairs, and all — reach out and we'll give you a straightforward look at your options.

Call (443) 815-8024
Landlord Exit

What Are Your Rights as a Landlord Selling in Maryland?

HM Harmanjot Mavi · May 15, 2025 · 4 min read

Selling a rental property comes with some legal obligations toward your tenants — here's the general shape of them in Maryland.

Notice requirements

Tenants generally need to be notified of a change in ownership, and depending on lease terms, may have specific rights regarding continued occupancy.

Leases typically survive a sale

In most cases, a new owner inherits the existing lease as-is — they can't simply void it because ownership changed hands.

Security deposits transfer too

Any security deposit held generally needs to be transferred to the new owner or properly returned, depending on how the sale is structured.

A real estate attorney can confirm the specifics for your lease and situation — and we're glad to work within whatever those requirements are.

Call (443) 815-8024
Landlord Exit

Tired Landlord's Guide: When to Sell Your Rental Property

SK Simmy Kaur · Apr 26, 2025 · 4 min read

Being a landlord isn't always the passive income it's advertised as. Here are the signs it might be time to sell.

The math stopped working

If rent barely covers the mortgage, taxes, and repairs — or doesn't cover them at all — the property may be costing you more than it's worth holding onto.

The time cost is wearing you down

Late-night maintenance calls, chasing down rent, and turnover between tenants add up to a second job most people didn't sign up for.

You're holding it out of inertia, not strategy

If you're not sure why you still own it beyond "it seemed like a bad time to sell," that's worth examining honestly.

Selling to a cash buyer means you don't have to wait for the lease to end, fix anything up, or manage one more turnover before walking away.

Call (443) 815-8024
Landlord Exit

Selling a Rental Property With Tenants Still Living In It

MN Michael Nyman · Apr 8, 2025 · 3 min read

You don't have to wait for a lease to end to sell a rental property — here's how it typically works with tenants still in place.

Selling to another landlord vs. an owner-occupant

A cash buyer purchasing as an investment can take on the property with tenants in place, unlike an owner-occupant buyer who usually needs it vacant.

What tenants are entitled to

Existing leases generally transfer with the property, and tenants typically must be given proper notice of any change in ownership — requirements vary by state and lease terms.

Why this often moves faster

Because there's no need to wait for tenants to move out or to show the property to traditional buyers, a sale like this can close on a much shorter timeline.

We regularly buy occupied rental properties as-is — the tenants and the situation stay exactly as they are.

Call (443) 815-8024
Divorce

How to Divide Home Sale Proceeds Fairly During a Divorce

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Mar 21, 2025 · 6 min read

Once you've agreed to sell, dividing the proceeds fairly is usually more straightforward than the decision to sell in the first place.

Start with what's owed

Any remaining mortgage balance, liens, or closing costs typically come off the top before the remaining equity is split.

Follow your settlement agreement or court order

If a divorce settlement already specifies a split, that governs — otherwise, this is something to resolve with your attorneys before or during the sale process.

A faster sale can simplify the math

The longer proceeds are tied up in an unsold house, the more room there is for disagreement about upkeep costs, taxes, and timing in the meantime.

We can provide a clear, documented sale price early in the process, which often makes these conversations easier for both sides and their attorneys.

Call (443) 815-8024
Divorce

Who Gets the House in a Maryland Divorce?

MN Michael Nyman · Mar 3, 2025 · 7 min read

Maryland is an equitable distribution state, which doesn't mean an automatic 50/50 split — here's what that actually means for a shared home.

What "equitable" means

Courts divide marital property fairly based on factors like each spouse's contributions, income, and circumstances — not necessarily equally down the middle.

The house is usually marital property

If it was purchased during the marriage, or if a separate property was later commingled, it's typically treated as a shared asset subject to division.

Selling avoids the question entirely

Rather than deciding who keeps the house, many couples find it simpler to sell and split the proceeds according to whatever agreement or court order applies.

This is genuinely a conversation for a family law attorney — but if selling ends up being the path forward, we're ready when you are.

Call (443) 815-8024
Divorce

Selling the House During a Divorce: What You Need to Know

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Feb 12, 2025 · 8 min read

The house is often the largest shared asset in a divorce, and how it's handled can shape the rest of the settlement.

Selling is one of several options

Alongside one spouse buying out the other's share or continuing joint ownership temporarily, an outright sale is often the cleanest way to fully separate finances.

Speed can reduce conflict

The longer a shared asset sits unresolved, the more opportunities there are for disagreement — a faster sale can help both parties move forward sooner.

Both parties usually need to agree to the sale

Unless a court has ordered otherwise, both names on the deed generally need to consent to and sign off on selling.

We've worked directly with both parties in a divorce before to keep the process fair and straightforward — reach out whenever you're ready to explore it.

Call (443) 815-8024
Inherited Property

How to Clean Out and Sell an Inherited Home Without the Overwhelm

SK Simmy Kaur · Jan 25, 2025 · 3 min read

A house full of someone else's belongings can feel like the biggest obstacle to selling — it doesn't have to be.

You don't have to clean it out first

Selling as-is means exactly that — furniture, belongings, and everything else can stay, and it becomes part of what the buyer takes on, not your responsibility.

Take what matters, leave the rest

Without the pressure of preparing for a traditional sale, you can take time to go through anything sentimental without a deadline forcing rushed decisions.

There's no "right" timeline for this

Grief and logistics don't follow a schedule — whatever pace you need to go through a family home at is a reasonable one.

When you're ready to sell, we buy homes exactly as they sit — nothing needs to be sorted, donated, or removed beforehand.

Call (443) 815-8024
Inherited Property

Selling a House With Multiple Heirs: A Practical Guide

MN Michael Nyman · Jan 7, 2025 · 4 min read

When a property has more than one legal owner, selling it requires a bit more coordination — here's what that looks like.

Every owner needs to agree and sign

Unless one heir has been given specific authority (like power of attorney or executor status), all owners typically need to consent to and sign off on a sale.

Proceeds are usually split by ownership share

This is often defined by the will or by state inheritance law if there's no will, and it's worth confirming exact percentages before you get to closing.

Distance and scheduling don't have to slow things down

Remote closings and electronic signatures mean heirs living in different states can usually complete a sale without needing to be in the same place.

If you're the one coordinating between multiple heirs, we can help make the actual sale process the easy part.

Call (443) 815-8024
Inherited Property

What to Do When Siblings Disagree About Selling an Inherited House

SK Simmy Kaur · Dec 20, 2024 · 5 min read

This is one of the most emotionally difficult parts of inheriting property together, and there's no single right answer — but there are practical ways forward.

Get a neutral number first

Disagreements often get easier once everyone is looking at the same real, no-obligation offer instead of guessing at what the house might be worth.

Consider a buyout

If one sibling wants to keep the house and others want to sell, a buyout — where one party pays the others for their share — is often simpler than it sounds.

Know when to bring in a mediator

If conversations keep stalling, a neutral third party (mediator or estate attorney) can help move things forward without turning it into a legal fight.

We've talked with families in exactly this situation before — sometimes just having a real number on the table is what breaks the stalemate.

Call (443) 815-8024
Inherited Property

Do You Have to Pay Taxes on an Inherited House You Sell?

MN Michael Nyman · Nov 13, 2024 · 8 min read

This is one of the most common questions, and the answer is usually better than people expect.

The step-up in basis

Inherited property typically gets a "stepped-up" tax basis to its value at the date of death, not what the original owner paid — which often significantly reduces or eliminates capital gains tax when you sell.

What could still apply

If the home appreciates further between the date of death and the sale, you may owe capital gains tax on that difference — but usually not on the full sale price.

Estate taxes are separate

Maryland has its own estate and inheritance tax rules that are separate from capital gains — worth checking with a tax professional about your specific estate.

This is genuinely a "talk to a tax professional about your specific numbers" situation — but the step-up in basis is good news worth knowing about going in.

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Inherited Property

Inherited a House in Maryland? Here's What to Do First

SK Simmy Kaur · Oct 26, 2024 · 6 min read

Inheriting a house comes with a lot of decisions at once, often while grieving. Here's a sensible order of operations.

Confirm the legal status

Find out whether the property needs to go through probate, and if so, whether an executor has been formally appointed — this affects what you're legally able to do with the house.

Assess what you're dealing with

Check on outstanding mortgage balances, unpaid property taxes, and the general condition of the home before deciding whether to keep, rent, or sell it.

Decide with the full picture, not urgency

There's rarely a reason to rush this decision in the first few weeks — take the time to actually understand your options before committing to one.

When you're ready to talk through what selling might look like, we're glad to have that conversation whenever it's useful, with no pressure attached.

Call (443) 815-8024
Foreclosure Help

Can You Sell a House That's Already in Foreclosure?

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Oct 8, 2024 · 3 min read

Yes — and it happens more often than people expect. Here's how it generally works.

Before the auction date

As long as a foreclosure sale hasn't been finalized, the homeowner typically still owns the property and can sell it — including to a cash buyer — using the proceeds to pay off what's owed.

Why timing matters

The closer you get to the scheduled auction date, the less time there is to complete a sale, which is why reaching out as early as possible matters.

What we can do

We've worked with sellers in this exact situation before, and we move as quickly as the timeline requires — sometimes closing in days rather than weeks.

If you're in this position, don't wait to reach out — every day matters, and we're not going to charge you anything to have the conversation.

Call (443) 815-8024
Foreclosure Help

Understanding Maryland's Foreclosure Timeline

MN Michael Nyman · Sep 19, 2024 · 5 min read

Maryland's foreclosure process has specific stages, each of which takes time — here's the general shape of it.

Missed payments and notice of intent

After a payment is missed, Maryland law requires lenders to send a notice of intent to foreclose, generally after 45 days of delinquency.

Filing and mediation

Homeowners in Maryland have the right to request mediation before a foreclosure sale is finalized, which can add meaningful time to the process.

Sale and post-sale rights

Even after a foreclosure sale is scheduled, there are often additional steps and timelines before it's finalized — which is exactly why acting early matters.

Exact timelines vary by lender and case — a HUD-approved housing counselor or real estate attorney can tell you precisely where you stand.

Call (443) 815-8024
Foreclosure Help

Short Sale vs. Cash Sale: Which Makes Sense Before Foreclosure?

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Sep 1, 2024 · 4 min read

Both can help you avoid foreclosure, but they work very differently. Here's the real comparison.

What a short sale requires

Your lender must approve selling for less than what's owed on the mortgage, which involves paperwork, financial disclosures, and often weeks or months of waiting for a decision.

What a cash sale requires

If you have equity in the home, a cash sale doesn't need lender approval at all — it's a direct transaction that can close in a fraction of the time.

Which applies to your situation

If you owe more than the house is worth, a short sale may be your only path. If you have equity, a cash sale is usually faster and simpler.

We can help you figure out which situation you're in — reach out and we'll give you a straight answer, even if it points you toward a short sale instead.

Call (443) 815-8024
Foreclosure Help

Behind on Mortgage Payments? Here Are Your Real Options

SK Simmy Kaur · Aug 14, 2024 · 8 min read

Missing a payment or two doesn't mean foreclosure is inevitable. Here are the paths people in this situation typically have.

Forbearance or repayment plans

Many lenders offer temporary payment pauses or reduced payments for a set period, especially if the hardship is temporary — job loss, medical issue, and similar situations.

Loan modification

This permanently changes the terms of your loan — interest rate, term length, or both — to make payments more manageable long-term.

Selling before it escalates

If neither of the above is realistic, selling the house — traditionally or for cash — lets you settle the mortgage and walk away with any remaining equity instead of losing it to foreclosure.

Whatever you choose, the earlier you act, the more options stay available — this is true whether you're talking to your lender, a housing counselor, or us.

Call (443) 815-8024
Foreclosure Help

What Happens to Your Credit After a Foreclosure?

MN Michael Nyman · Jul 27, 2024 · 6 min read

A foreclosure has a real, lasting impact on your credit — here's what that actually looks like and how long it lasts.

The immediate impact

A completed foreclosure can drop a credit score significantly, often more than a bankruptcy in some scoring models, and it's reported to all three credit bureaus.

How long it stays on your report

A foreclosure typically remains on a credit report for seven years from the date of the first missed payment that led to it, though its impact on your score lessens over time.

What helps afterward

Rebuilding involves the same fundamentals as any credit recovery — on-time payments on remaining accounts, low balances, and time. Some homeowners qualify for a new mortgage again in as little as three years with a strong recovery record.

If you're weighing foreclosure against selling now, the credit impact alone is often a meaningful reason to explore a sale first — talk to a housing counselor about what fits your specific situation.

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Foreclosure Help

How to Stop Foreclosure in Maryland: A Step-by-Step Guide

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Jul 8, 2024 · 5 min read

If you've received a notice of default, you likely have more time and more options than it feels like right now. Here's a general overview — but talk to a housing counselor or attorney about your specific timeline as soon as you can.

Understand where you are in the process

Maryland requires lenders to go through several notice stages before an auction can be scheduled, which typically gives homeowners months, not days, to act.

Explore options with your lender first

Loan modification, forbearance, and repayment plans are all things your lender may offer, and reaching out proactively is almost always better than waiting.

Know that selling is also a valid option

If keeping the house isn't realistic, selling before the auction date — including as a cash sale — can let you walk away with equity instead of losing it entirely.

HUD-approved housing counselors offer free guidance in Maryland, and we'd encourage using that resource alongside anything else you're considering, including talking to us.

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Cash Sales 101

The Truth About "We Buy Houses" Companies (And How to Spot a Bad One)

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Jun 20, 2024 · 7 min read

The cash home buying industry has a mixed reputation, and honestly, some of that is earned. Here's how to tell a legitimate buyer from one that isn't.

Red flag: pressure to sign immediately

A legitimate buyer gives you time to review the offer and ask questions. If someone's pushing you to sign before you've had a chance to think it over, that's a warning sign.

Red flag: no explanation of the number

If a buyer won't explain how they arrived at an offer, or the number keeps changing after you've agreed to something, walk away.

Green flag: licensing and a real track record

Ask whether the company is licensed to do business in your state, and ask for references from people they've actually bought from. A legitimate operation won't hesitate to answer either question.

We're a licensed cash buyer in Maryland and Pennsylvania, and we'll answer any question about our process before you sign anything — that's the standard every buyer should be held to.

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Cash Sales 101

Is Selling Your House for Cash Right for You? A Simple Checklist

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Jun 2, 2024 · 5 min read

Before you talk to anyone, run through this list honestly. It'll save you time either way.

Ask yourself these questions

Do you need to sell in under 60 days? Would repairs cost more than you can front right now? Is certainty more valuable to you than squeezing out the highest possible price? Are you dealing with a life situation — divorce, inheritance, foreclosure — where speed and simplicity matter?

If you answered yes to two or more

A cash sale is very likely worth exploring further, even if you ultimately decide against it.

If you answered no to most of these

A traditional listing with an agent might net you more money, assuming you have the time and cash flow to see it through.

Either way, getting a no-obligation cash offer costs you nothing and gives you a real number to compare against.

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Cash Sales 101

What "No Fees, No Commissions" Actually Means for Sellers

SK Simmy Kaur · May 15, 2024 · 6 min read

This phrase gets used a lot, so let's be specific about what it actually removes from your side of the transaction.

No agent commission

In a traditional sale, you'd typically pay both your agent's and the buyer's agent's commission, often 5-6% combined. That doesn't apply here at all.

No closing costs passed to you

Title fees, transfer taxes, and other standard closing costs are covered as part of the offer, not added on top of it.

No repair costs

Whatever condition the house is in in when we walk through, that's the condition we buy it in — you don't pay to fix anything before closing.

The number we offer is the number that lands in your account, minus nothing else you weren't told about upfront.

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Cash Sales 101

How Fast Can You Actually Close on a Cash Sale?

MN Michael Nyman · Apr 26, 2024 · 8 min read

"Fast" gets thrown around a lot in this industry, so here's a realistic timeline based on what actually happens.

The fastest realistic timeline

With a clean title and no complications, closing in 7 days is achievable — the title search and paperwork can move that quickly when everything is straightforward.

What can slow it down

Unresolved liens, probate that hasn't been finalized, or multiple owners who need to coordinate signatures can add days or weeks — none of which are unique to cash sales, they'd slow any sale down.

What if you need more time

There's no rule that says a cash sale has to close fast. If you need 30 or 60 days to plan your move, that's just as valid a timeline as closing next week.

The point isn't that it has to be fast — it's that you get to pick, instead of waiting on a buyer's mortgage approval.

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Cash Sales 101

Do You Really Get Less Money Selling for Cash? We Break Down the Math

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Apr 8, 2024 · 4 min read

On paper, yes — a cash offer is usually below what a traditional sale might list for. But that's an incomplete comparison. Here's the fuller picture.

What a traditional sale actually costs

Agent commissions typically run 5-6% of the sale price. Add closing costs, repairs to pass inspection, and staging, and it's common to lose 8-10% of the sale price before you see a dime.

What carrying costs add up to

Every month a house sits on the market is another mortgage payment, utility bill, and insurance premium — money spent with no guarantee the sale closes on schedule.

The real comparison

Once you subtract commissions, repair costs, and months of carrying costs from a traditional sale price, the gap between that and a cash offer is often much smaller than it first appears.

We're happy to run this comparison with your actual numbers so you can see where you'd really land either way.

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Cash Sales 101

What Happens After You Accept a Cash Offer?

SK Simmy Kaur · Mar 21, 2024 · 8 min read

Accepting an offer isn't the finish line — here's what the days between acceptance and closing actually look like.

Paperwork and title work begins

A title company opens a file to confirm the property can legally transfer — checking for liens, unpaid taxes, or ownership disputes that need to be cleared first.

A final walkthrough, if needed

Depending on the situation, we may do a brief visit to confirm the property's condition matches what was discussed — this is not an inspection you need to prepare for.

Closing day

You sign the paperwork, funds are transferred, and the sale is complete. Depending on your state and title company, this can happen in person or remotely.

Most of this happens in the background — your main job is just choosing the date that works for you.

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Cash Sales 101

How We Calculate Your Cash Offer (No Hidden Math)

SK Simmy Kaur · Mar 3, 2024 · 8 min read

A fair cash offer isn't a guess — it's based on a specific set of factors, and we'll walk you through exactly how we got to the number.

Recent comparable sales

We look at what similar homes in your immediate area have actually sold for recently, not list prices, which don't always reflect reality.

Condition and needed repairs

We estimate what it would cost to bring the home to a sellable condition, and that cost comes off the top — but you never pay for it directly.

Our resale and holding costs

Like any buyer, we account for the time and cost of eventually reselling the property. This is the only real markup, and it's built to be reasonable, not padded.

If a number ever doesn't make sense to you, ask us to break it down — we'd rather explain it than have you wonder.

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Cash Sales 101

Cash Offer vs. Traditional Sale: What's the Real Difference?

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Feb 13, 2024 · 8 min read

The honest answer is that both can work — it depends on what you're optimizing for. Here's how they actually compare, not the sales-pitch version.

Price

A traditional sale usually nets a higher sticker price, but that number doesn't account for repairs, commissions, and months of carrying costs. A cash offer is lower up front but has none of those deductions.

Timeline

Traditional listings average 30 to 90 days just to get to closing, assuming nothing falls through. A cash sale can close in as little as a week, on a date you choose.

Certainty

Financed buyers can lose their loan approval days before closing, restarting the whole process. A cash buyer with funds ready doesn't have that risk.

If speed and certainty matter more to you than squeezing out the last few thousand dollars, a cash sale is usually the better fit — and we're glad to run the actual numbers for your specific house.

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Cash Sales 101

5 Signs You Should Sell Your House As-Is

MN Michael Nyman · Jan 26, 2024 · 5 min read

Not every house needs to be fixed up before it sells. Here are the situations where selling as-is genuinely makes more sense than listing traditionally.

The repair list is longer than your patience

If you're looking at a new roof, HVAC, and foundation work all at once, the cost and time to fix everything before listing can easily outweigh what you'd gain in sale price.

You don't have the cash to fix it up front

Traditional buyers often expect a move-in-ready home, which means spending money you don't have before you've sold anything. Selling as-is skips that entirely.

You need to sell on a specific timeline

Repairs, staging, and a traditional listing can easily stretch a sale to two or three months or more. If you're working against a deadline, that math often doesn't work.

If two or more of these sound like your situation, it's worth getting a no-obligation cash offer before you spend a dollar on repairs.

Call (443) 815-8024
Cash Sales 101

How Does Selling Your House For Cash Actually Work?

HM Harmanjot Mavi · Jan 8, 2024 · 5 min read

Selling for cash sounds simple, but most people have never actually done it and aren't sure what's real and what's marketing. Here's the process stripped down to what actually happens, in order.

You reach out with basic details

You share the address, condition, and why you're selling — no walkthrough required to get started. This takes a few minutes, either by phone or through a short form.

You get a real number, fast

A serious cash buyer evaluates the property using recent comparable sales and the cost of any needed repairs, then gives you an actual offer — not a vague range — usually within 24 hours.

You pick the closing date

If you accept, you choose when to close, not the buyer. Closings can happen in as little as 7 days, or you can push it out further if you need more time to move.

That's the whole process — no showings, no financing contingencies, no repairs. If it sounds like a fit for your situation, we're happy to walk through the specifics with you.

Call (443) 815-8024