Damaged Burlington home? Whether fire, water, storm, or structural, we buy as-is. No insurance approval needed, no repairs required, no waiting for adjusters. Cash close in days, you walk away from the disaster.
Fire, flood, hurricane, hail — disaster damage to your Burlington, Vermont home creates impossible decisions. Insurance often falls short of repair costs. Contractors are unreliable. The home may be uninhabitable. BuyHousesInCash buys damaged properties as-is, regardless of insurance status, repair scope, or current livability.
Insurance settlement disputes prolong Burlington damaged-property timelines indefinitely. Vermont statute provides for appraisal clauses, ombudsman review, and litigation, but each step takes months. Some Chittenden County homeowners spend 18 months fighting an insurer while the damage worsens. Selling the property with the claim assigned or unassigned ends the fight.
Hail damage in Vermont hail-prone counties (and Chittenden County specifically) creates surges of insurance claims. Burlington carriers process backlogs in batches; payment delays of 90-180 days are common. Selling during the wait converts an uncertain claim into a certain cash close.
Flood damage in Vermont flood zones requires specific NFIP disclosures. Burlington properties with prior flood claims show in CLUE reports that buyers and lenders pull. Chittenden County FEMA flood maps determine insurance requirements going forward. BuyHousesInCash buys flood-damaged properties; we evaluate elevation and floodway status independently.
Foundation issues in Burlington clay-soil or hillside neighborhoods compound damage values. Vermont disclosure law requires reporting known foundation work, settlement, or movement. BuyHousesInCash buys with active foundation issues; engineering reports influence offer math but don't kill deals in Chittenden County.
No obligation. We close at a Chittenden County title company.
Call (555) 555-CASHYes. Fire damage is one of the most common conditions we buy in Burlington, Vermont. Whether kitchen fire, full structural burn, or smoke-only damage, we make as-is offers. The fire investigation, insurance claim, and rebuild scope all become our responsibility post-close. You take the cash and the insurance check (if any) and walk away.
You typically keep your insurance settlement. We buy the home in its current condition, separately from any insurance proceeds you've received or are owed. In some Vermont cases, lenders require insurance proceeds to be applied to repairs or mortgage payoff — we coordinate with your lender at closing to handle this cleanly.
No. BuyHousesInCash can close before, during, or after your insurance claim. Some sellers prefer to close fast and let us handle the claim post-close (we'd own the policy interest). Others want to settle first and pocket the proceeds, then sell to us at the as-is value. Both work — your choice.
Yes. Flooded and uninhabitable Burlington, Vermont homes are within our normal scope. Flood-damaged homes often have mold, foundation issues, electrical hazards — we buy regardless. Vermont flood zone classifications and FEMA buyout programs are different conversations; if you're considering a buyout, sometimes we can offer faster than FEMA.
Structural damage — settling, sinkholes, foundation failure, leaning walls — falls within our as-is purchase scope. We've bought Burlington homes that needed full demolition. The price reflects the structural reality, but we close. Traditional buyers won't touch structural issues; that's why these properties sit unsold for years before sellers find us.
There's no legal deadline, but practical clocks tick: insurance claim deadlines (typically 1 year from loss in Vermont), city safety orders, mortgage default if you can't make payments, mold growth, weather exposure. The longer you wait, the worse the property gets. Call us for a fast offer to lock in current condition.
Hurricane-damaged Vermont properties (where applicable) follow predictable patterns: roof tarp for months, insurance dispute, contractor scarcity, mold growth, eventually homeowner exhaustion. Burlington in Chittenden County experiences these patterns post-event. BuyHousesInCash acquires at any point in the cycle, often paying off the existing mortgage and ending the homeowner's exposure.
Electrical fire causes range from old aluminum wiring to overloaded panels to DIY work. Burlington pre-1980 homes occasionally still have aluminum branch circuit wiring requiring panel-level remediation. Vermont 12 V.S.A. requires disclosure of known electrical defects; BuyHousesInCash accepts the disclosure and adjusts offers for permitted electrical work.
Fire damage in Burlington ranges from cosmetic smoke staining to total structural loss. Vermont requires sellers to disclose known fire history. Chittenden County records show fire incidents in real-estate disclosures. BuyHousesInCash buys fire-damaged properties at any stage — pre-restoration, mid-restoration, or after — accepting the disclosure and adjusting offers for repair scope.
Water damage drives more Burlington insurance claims than fire by a wide margin. Plumbing failures, weather events, foundation seepage — all leave structural and mold consequences. Vermont mold remediation costs $3,000-$30,000 depending on extent. BuyHousesInCash buys with active mold; remediation becomes our post-closing project.