Code Violations · Blog

How to Sell a House With Open Code Violations

By John Quigley · May 22, 2026 · ~6 min read
Quick Answer
Open city or county code violations attach to title and must be resolved before closing on most traditional transactions. Cash buyers can typically negotiate settlement of citations at closing, paying the city directly from sale proceeds. The seller needs to weigh remaining equity after citations vs walking away.

The traditional sale problem

When a homeowner needs to sell a property with code violations, the traditional MLS route presents several hurdles. Buyers using FHA, VA, or conventional financing typically require the property to pass an inspection — and code violations disqualifies the property in most cases. Even when financing is theoretically possible, buyers either walk after the inspection report or demand repair credits that wipe out the seller's equity.

The result: properties with code violations sit on the MLS for 90-180 days, undergo multiple price cuts, and often sell only after the seller has invested $15,000-$50,000+ to remediate the issue. Many sellers don't have that capital and aren't willing to wait that long.

The cash sale alternative

Cash buyers — including BuyHousesInCash — purchase properties with code violations routinely. The mechanics differ from a traditional sale in several important ways:

How the offer is calculated

Cash buyers use the standard 70% of After Repair Value (ARV) minus repair costs formula. For a property with code violations, the math looks like this:

  1. Estimate the home's ARV — what it would sell for fully repaired.
  2. Multiply by 0.70.
  3. Subtract the estimated cost to address the code violations plus any other repairs needed.
  4. The result is the typical cash offer.

Use our free Cash Offer Estimator to run the exact math for your property.

What you'll need to disclose

Most states require sellers to disclose known material defects, even on as-is sales. For code violations, this typically includes:

A reputable cash buyer will not use disclosure against you to renegotiate price — they expect the issue and have already factored it into the offer.

Common questions

Will I get full market value?

No. Cash offers are typically 50-70% of fully-repaired ARV. But they come with zero out-of-pocket repair costs, zero showing risk, no inspection renegotiation, and 7-14 day close. For properties with code violations, the cash net often exceeds what the seller would net after traditional listing costs + repairs + 60-90 day holding.

How fast can I close?

Typically 7-14 days. The title company handles title search, payoff letters, and document preparation. You sign at closing, and proceeds wire to your account the same day.

What if my issue is severe?

Cash buyers purchase properties in any condition — including condemned, fire-damaged, and properties with multiple major issues. The offer reflects the cumulative repair cost.

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