On the Gulf Coast, termites are common, not catastrophic
Houston sits in one of the most active termite zones in the country. Between our heat, our humidity, and the aggressive Formosan subterranean termite that's spread across the region, finding termite activity or old damage on a home here is closer to routine than rare. So if an inspection turned up termites, take a breath. This is a known quantity that buyers, inspectors, and lenders deal with constantly, and it almost never has to wreck your sale.
What matters is the difference between two very different findings: a live, active infestation, and old damage from colonies that are long gone. They sound the same to a worried seller, but they're priced completely differently. Knowing which one you have is the first step.
How termites actually affect a Houston sale
On most financed deals in Houston, especially VA loans, the lender requires a wood-destroying insect inspection, the WDI report (the form pest pros call the NPMA-33). That report is where termites enter the conversation, and what it says drives everything that follows. A few things the buyer's side is really looking at:
- Active versus inactive. An active infestation usually has to be treated before a financed loan funds. Old, inactive damage from a treated colony is a repair question, not a deal-stopper.
- Subterranean versus drywood. Subterranean termites, including the Formosan, come up from the soil and leave mud tubes along the foundation. Drywood termites live in the wood itself. The treatment and the extent differ.
- Cosmetic versus structural. Surface damage to a baseboard or door frame is minor. Damage to joists, studs, or a load-bearing beam is a structural repair, and that's the expensive end.
- Whether it's been treated, and whether there's a transferable bond. An existing termite bond from a pest company can reassure a buyer and travel with the sale.
Treatment is usually modest relative to the fear it stirs up. The part that runs real money is the structural repair behind serious damage, replacing framing that termites have eaten through, and that varies enormously with how far the colony got. So the live infestation people panic about is often the cheaper half of the equation; the damage left behind is what actually moves your number.
The mistake that costs Houston sellers
Assuming the worst and either dumping the house at a fire-sale price or over-spending on repairs nobody credited you for. Termite damage looks scary, but a licensed pest control operator can tell you fast whether it's active, how far it spread, and what treatment costs. Without that, sellers either give the home away cheap or tear into framing in a panic. Neither is necessary.
The honest first step is to learn what each path nets you. Sometimes treatment plus repair plus a retail listing wins. Often, selling as-is to a buyer who's renovating anyway keeps more in your pocket, especially if the damage is structural. Our guide on selling as-is versus repairing first walks through the math so you're not guessing.
Your real options for selling with termite damage in Houston
The right move depends on whether it's active, how far it spread, your timeline, and what you want from the sale. The paths worth comparing:
- Sell as-is for cash. A cash buyer takes the home with the damage exactly as it is, no treatment, no framing repair, no showings, and closes on your schedule. See a fast cash offer, or read how selling as-is in Houston works.
- Let buyers compete. Investors who plan to repair anyway often pay more than a single lowball. We bring several to the table so they compete for your home.
- Treat, repair, then list retail. If the damage is contained and your timeline allows, treating it, repairing it, and listing on the MLS can net the most. We'll tell you honestly when the math supports it. Here's how we list a Houston home.
- Get a licensed pest pro first. Before you decide anything, a licensed pest control operator should confirm whether it's active and how far it went. Our vendor directory has Houston pros we trust.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to disclose termite damage when I sell in Texas?
Yes. The Texas Seller's Disclosure Notice asks about termites, wood-destroying insects, prior treatment, and any related damage, and you're required to disclose what you know. You are not required to treat or repair before selling. Selling as-is and disclosing honestly is legal. It's hiding a known problem that creates liability, not disclosing one.
Can I really sell my Houston house as-is with termite damage?
Yes. We work with local buyers who purchase homes with active termites and old termite damage regularly. No treatment, no framing repair, and no passing a buyer's inspection. They factor it into the offer and close.
What is a WDI report and will the buyer need one?
A WDI report (the NPMA-33 form) is a wood-destroying insect inspection that a licensed pest professional completes. Most financed buyers, and nearly all VA buyers, will need one. A cash buyer typically doesn't, which is one reason an as-is cash sale moves faster on a home with termite history.
How much does termite damage knock off my price?
It depends almost entirely on whether it's active and whether the damage is cosmetic or structural. A treated colony with surface damage barely moves the number. Termite damage in load-bearing framing is a bigger factor. Once a pest pro has confirmed how far it spread, we can put a real range on it for you, free.
Why a local Houston team matters here
We're a local, family-owned Houston company. We've seen how aggressive Formosan termites get on the Gulf Coast, we know which buyers actually close on homes with termite history, and we'll be honest about when treatment-and-repair pays off versus when it doesn't. Our licensed REALTOR®, Maxwell Buffamante, shows you what each path nets, then steps back so the choice is yours. If the termites are one of several issues, our guide on selling a house that needs repairs covers the bigger picture.