There's no universally right answer when it comes to how you sell your house. What matters is understanding the real tradeoffs — not the version where agents minimize fees and cash buyers oversell speed. This is our honest take as people who've been on the buying side of hundreds of transactions.
The Core Tradeoff
Selling to a cash buyer typically means accepting a lower headline price in exchange for certainty, speed, and zero costs. Listing with an agent typically means you have a shot at a higher price — but with more time, more risk, and more money going out the door before you close.
The question isn't "which is better?" — it's "which is better for your situation?"
The Real Net Math (Not Just the Headline Price)
Let's look at a $300,000 home to illustrate both paths. These numbers are typical — your situation may vary.
| Factor | Cash Buyer (Roth) | Traditional Listing |
|---|---|---|
| Gross sale price | $255,000–$270,000 | $295,000–$305,000 |
| Agent commissions | $0 | −$15,000–$18,300 |
| Closing costs (seller) | $0 (we pay) | −$3,000–$9,000 |
| Pre-sale repairs | $0 | −$5,000–$20,000 |
| Carrying costs (months) | Minimal (7–21 days) | −$4,000–$8,000 |
| Risk of deal falling through | Very low | 20–30% chance |
| Estimated net to seller | $255,000–$270,000 | $240,000–$259,000 |
When a Cash Offer Makes Clear Financial Sense
- The property needs significant work. If you're looking at $20,000–$50,000 in repairs just to list, a cash buyer who buys as-is often nets you more.
- You need to sell in a specific timeframe. Relocation, foreclosure, life transitions — a 90-day listing process doesn't work for every seller.
- You've already tried the market. If the home sat for 60+ days, a cash buyer provides a clean exit without further carrying costs.
- The deal falling through is a risk you can't afford. If you've already purchased another home, a deal that collapses at closing can be catastrophic.
When the Traditional Route Makes More Sense
- Your home is move-in ready and in a strong seller's market. A well-priced listing in a competitive area can generate multiple offers above asking.
- You have time and flexibility. If you're not under any timeline pressure, the listing route gives you the best shot at top dollar.
- The property has unique features that buyers pay a premium for — waterfront, luxury finishes, large acreage — where the retail premium is significant.
The Factors Most Sellers Don't Account For
Financing fall-throughs
According to the National Association of Realtors, approximately 5% of all signed contracts fall through — with financing issues being the most common cause. But in markets with softening buyer demand, that number can be significantly higher. When a deal falls through after 60 days under contract, you restart from scratch.
Inspection concessions
Most traditional buyers require a home inspection. Inspectors almost always find issues. Buyers then come back with a list of demands — repairs or price reductions. This is a second negotiation after the first one you already won.
The emotional cost
Sellers often underestimate the toll of living in a "show-ready" home for months, coordinating showings around their schedule, and the anxiety of an uncertain timeline. This isn't a dollar figure, but it's real.
Questions to Ask Before You Decide
- How much will it realistically cost to prepare this home for listing? (Get actual quotes, not estimates.)
- How long is the typical days-on-market in this neighborhood right now?
- Can I financially and logistically handle a 60–90 day listing process?
- What happens to my situation if the deal falls through?
- When I compare net proceeds (not gross), how do the options actually stack up?
This article was written by the Roth Home Buyers team. We purchase homes directly from sellers — we are not real estate agents or brokers. Our goal is to help sellers make informed decisions, whether or not that decision involves us.