What a cash buyer actually is
A real cash buyer pays for your house with their own money, no mortgage lender in the deal. That is the whole point: no loan application, no appraisal that has to come in, no underwriter who can kill the sale two days before closing. In Houston, where a financed deal can fall apart over a roof an FHA appraiser does not like or a foundation an inspector flags, that certainty is worth a lot to the right seller.
The problem is that the phrase has been worn out. Out-of-state wholesalers, lead-flippers, and a few local outfits all say "we buy houses for cash" on a bandit sign or a postcard. Most of them are not buying your house at all. They are trying to lock it up under contract and sell that contract to someone else. Knowing the difference protects your equity and your time.
How to tell a funded buyer from a tire-kicker
You do not have to take anyone's word for it. Ask three direct questions and watch how fast they answer:
- "Can you show proof of funds?" A real cash buyer has a recent bank statement or a letter from their bank ready to send. If they dodge, stall, or send something dated a year ago, they are probably planning to assign your contract to someone else.
- "Who is on the contract, and can you assign it?" If the buyer named in the paperwork is not the one bringing the money, you are dealing with a wholesaler. That is legal in Texas, but you deserve to know it up front so you can judge whether their number is real.
- "What earnest money are you putting down, and is it non-refundable after the option period?" Skin in the game tells you they intend to close. A buyer who wants a long inspection window and a tiny, fully refundable deposit can walk for free.
A funded buyer answers all three without flinching. The ones who get cagey are the ones who lock up houses, shop the contract around for a couple weeks, and re-trade you lower at the last minute when they cannot find anyone to take it.
What a fair cash offer looks like in Houston
Cash buyers do not pay retail, and an honest one will tell you that to your face. The math most investors run is straightforward: they estimate your home's value fixed up (the after-repair value, or ARV), take roughly 70 to 75 percent of it, then subtract their repair budget. The gap covers their renovation, the months they carry the property, closing costs on both ends, and their profit. None of that is a scam. It is how anyone who buys, fixes, and resells a house stays in business.
What matters is that the inputs are honest. A lowball offer usually comes from one of two places: an inflated repair estimate, or a deflated ARV that ignores what comparable Houston homes actually sold for. The single best defense is a competing number. When a buyer knows they are the only one at the table, they sharpen their pencil in their own favor. When they know a couple of other verified buyers are looking at the same house, the offers tighten up fast. That is the entire reason we run a multiple-offer process instead of handing you one take-it-or-leave-it figure. If you want to sanity-check a number you already have, our guide on whether a cash offer is fair and the one on how much cash buyers pay both walk through the math.
When a cash sale is the wrong move
We will say this plainly because most "we buy houses" sites never will: a cash sale is not always your best deal. If your home is in solid, market-ready shape and you have eight to ten weeks to sell, listing it on the open market will almost always net you more, even after agent fees. Cash earns its discount by buying speed, certainty, and an as-is condition. If you do not need those three things, you are paying for convenience you are not using.
Where cash genuinely wins is when speed and certainty are the whole point: a house that needs more repairs than you can fund, an inherited property two states away, a divorce that needs to be settled, a job that already moved you, or a deal that has to close on a hard date. In those situations the discount buys you out of months of carrying costs, repair bills, and uncertainty, and the cash offer can clear more than a stressful, drawn-out listing would. If you are not sure which camp you are in, the honest move is to look at both numbers. Our cash offer vs. listing breakdown puts them side by side.
How Sellers First does it differently
We are a local, family-owned Houston company, not an out-of-town call center buying leads and firing off the lowest number that might stick. When you come to us, we do not hand you a single offer and a clock. We pull your home in front of a network of vetted, funded local buyers, let them compete, and lay every offer next to a real listing estimate so you can see all of it at once. Our licensed Texas REALTOR®, Maxwell Buffamante, runs the numbers with you and tells you straight when a cash sale is not your best path, even when that means we are not the buyer. Sellers first is not a tagline here. It is the order we actually work in.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are cash home buyers in Houston legit?
Plenty are, and some are not. The legitimate ones can show proof of funds, close in their own name or tell you up front if they plan to assign the contract, and put real earnest money down. The ones to watch out for tie up your house, shop the contract around, and try to renegotiate lower right before closing. Always ask for proof of funds before you sign anything. Our guide on whether we-buy-houses companies are legit goes deeper.
How much do cash buyers actually pay for a house in Houston?
As a rule of thumb, expect somewhere around 70 to 75 percent of your home's fixed-up value, minus the cost of the repairs the buyer expects to make. The exact number swings with the neighborhood, the real comps, and how much work the house needs, so treat any single percentage as a starting point, not a promise. The cleanest way to know your real range is to get more than one offer and compare them.
How fast can a cash sale close?
Because there is no lender, appraisal, or loan underwriting in the way, a clean cash deal can close in roughly one to three weeks once the title company confirms a clear title. If there are liens, probate, or title issues to clear, it takes longer, and that is true no matter who is buying. A good buyer will give you a realistic date instead of a fantasy one.
Do I have to make any repairs for a cash buyer?
No. The whole premise of an as-is cash sale is that the buyer takes the home in its current condition and prices the repairs into their offer. You do not fix anything, clean anything out, or stage anything. Texas still requires you to fill out a Seller's Disclosure and tell the buyer what you know about the property, but disclosing a problem is completely different from being asked to fix it.
What if I am not sure selling for cash is right for me?
Then do not commit to it yet. Ask for the cash number and a listing estimate at the same time and compare them honestly. If your home is in good shape and you have time, a listing will likely net more. If you need speed, certainty, or an as-is sale, cash may come out ahead once you subtract the costs and months a listing would have taken. Seeing both numbers is free and it is the only way to decide with real information instead of a guess.