What "as-is" actually means in Texas
Selling as-is means you sell the home in its current condition and you don't fix anything before closing. The buyer takes it exactly as it stands today, the good and the bad. That's the whole idea, and for a lot of Houston sellers it's the difference between moving on this month and pouring money into a house they're trying to leave.
One thing as-is does not mean: hiding problems. Texas still requires you to fill out a Seller's Disclosure Notice and answer honestly about what you know, water damage, foundation movement, a roof that leaks when it rains, electrical that's been flagged. As-is just means you're telling buyers about those issues instead of repairing them. Disclose what you know and you're on solid ground. Sellers get in trouble for covering things up, not for selling a house that needs work.
So you can sell with a roof at the end of its life, a slab that needs leveling, dated wiring, or a kitchen straight out of 1985, without spending a dollar making it pretty first.
Why Houston sellers go the as-is route
Repairs are the part people underestimate. A full roof replacement on an average Houston home runs into the thousands, foundation work can climb into five figures, and an HVAC system isn't far behind. Those are just the big three, before you touch cosmetics. When you add it all up, the repair tab on a tired house can land anywhere from $10,000 to $50,000 or more depending on what's actually wrong. Selling as-is hands that whole problem to the buyer.
The other big draw is speed and sanity. No contractors tramping through, no weekend showings, no inspection that turns one repair request into ten. A cash buyer can typically close in roughly one to three weeks once the title work is done, instead of the months a fix-up-then-list plan can eat.
And it works for situations a retail sale can't easily handle: code violations, an inherited house full of belongings, fire or water damage, or a home you simply can't afford to keep carrying. If any of that sounds familiar, our guide on selling a Houston house that needs repairs goes deeper.
The honest tradeoffs
We're not going to pretend as-is is free money. A few things to weigh:
- An as-is cash offer usually comes in under full retail price, because the buyer is taking on the repairs and the risk. The number that matters is your net, what you actually walk away with after you subtract the repairs, agent fees, and months of holding costs you skip. Often the gap is smaller than the headline suggests.
- You'll have a smaller pool of buyers. Most as-is purchases come from investors and cash buyers, not the family touring open houses, because a financed buyer's appraiser can flag visible damage and stall the loan.
- You still owe an honest disclosure. As-is doesn't switch that off.
If your home is in decent shape and your timeline is flexible, a traditional listing might net more, and we'll tell you so. The right move depends on the house and your situation, not on what's easiest for us to sell.
How as-is offers get priced, and how to get the most
Here's the part most sellers never get told, so it feels like a lowball when it isn't. Picture the house finished and back on the market, that's its After Repair Value. The investor takes that ARV, carves out the repair budget, and trims it down to roughly 70 to 75 percent to leave room for the months they'll carry the property and the profit that makes the project worth doing. What's left is your offer. It's a formula, not a personal judgment of your home, and once you see the moving parts you can tell a fair number from a cheap one.
Which means the single biggest mistake is taking the first offer that shows up. With one number on the table, you have no way to know if it's fair. The fix is simple: make buyers compete. When several investors bid against each other for the same house, the price climbs without you lifting a hammer. That's the core of how we run multiple offers, and you can also see what a fast cash offer looks like next to it.
Who actually buys as-is homes in Houston
Three kinds of buyers, and they don't pay the same:
- Cash investors and flippers. They close fast, often one to three weeks, with no lender in the loop, and they price off ARV minus repairs. Best fit when speed and certainty matter most.
- Our investor network. Instead of one investor's take-it-or-leave-it number, we put several in competition, which tends to pull the price up.
- The occasional retail buyer. Some buyers will take a home as-is if it's priced right and shown to the right audience, and they can sometimes pay closer to market, especially on a house that mostly needs cosmetics.
Want to see those side by side on your own home? Start by comparing your options here, no obligation, no repairs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I really sell my Houston house as-is without doing any repairs?
Yes. We work with local buyers who purchase homes as-is every month, no repairs, no cleanout, and no passing a traditional buyer's inspection. They price the condition into the offer and close on your timeline.
Do I still have to disclose problems if I sell as-is in Texas?
Yes. Texas sellers complete a Seller's Disclosure Notice and must answer honestly about known issues like water damage, foundation movement, or roof leaks. As-is means you won't fix those things, not that you can hide them. Disclosing honestly is exactly what keeps you protected.
Will an as-is offer be a lowball?
A single offer can be. That's why we don't rely on one. The best protection against a low number is comparing several offers at once so buyers compete, and looking at your true net after repairs and fees rather than just the top-line price.
How fast can I get an offer on an as-is home?
Usually within about 24 hours of telling us about the house. If a cash or investor offer doesn't make sense for you, we'll show you honestly what listing it could net instead, with no obligation either way.
Why a local Houston team matters here
We're a local, family-owned Houston company, not an out-of-town call center firing off one number sight unseen. We know which neighborhoods flooded, which buyers actually close on rough houses, and when it's smarter to fix-and-list than to sell as-is. Our licensed Texas REALTOR®, Maxwell Buffamante, walks the numbers on every path with you and lets you choose, even when the answer is "don't sell as-is, list it." The whole reason we exist is to give you the real options instead of one pressured number.