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QuickClose Home Buyers

QuickClose vs. Realtor

Cash buyer vs. listing with a Realtor: which actually nets you more?

A realtor will usually get a higher gross sale price. A cash buyer will usually get you a faster, more certain net — especially when you account for the costs Realtors don't talk about up front.

Honest comparison

QuickClose vs. a Realtor vs. an iBuyer

We won't pretend cash is always the right choice. Here's the real trade-off.

 QuickCloseRealtor (MLS)iBuyer
Commissions / fees$05–6% of sale price5–8% service fee
Closing costsWe cover them1–3% to seller1–2% to seller
Repairs requiredNone — as-isOften $5K–$15KRepair credits at close
Days to close7–14 days60–90 days average14–30 days
Showings / open housesZero15–40+Zero
Inspection contingenciesNo contingenciesBuyer can renegotiateRepair credit at close
Financing fall-through riskZero — cash funds~15% of pending salesLow
Offer guaranteed?Yes — writtenHope a buyer makes oneYes — but adjusted post-inspection

The true cost of a Realtor sale

Take a $300,000 listing as an example. Here's where the money actually goes:

  • Listing agent commission (3%): –$9,000
  • Buyer's agent commission (3%): –$9,000
  • Seller closing costs (2%): –$6,000
  • Pre-listing repairs (avg): –$8,000
  • 2 months carrying costs (taxes, ins., utilities): –$4,000
  • Inspection credit (avg): –$3,000
  • Net to seller: $261,000

A cash offer on the same property might come in at $260,000–$270,000 — but with zero deductions, zero repairs, and you close in 10 days instead of 75.

When the MLS wins

Move-in-ready home, no urgency, can carry the mortgage for 60–90 days, willing to allow showings: list it.

When cash wins

Repairs needed, behind on payments, inherited or vacant, tenant issues, relocating, divorcing, or simply can't afford to carry it: cash is usually the better net.

Compare

Realtor vs. cash: common questions

Will I get more money selling with a Realtor?
On gross sale price, almost always — yes. On net proceeds after commissions, repairs, holding costs, and inspection credits, the gap is often much smaller (or negative) — especially if your home needs work or you can't carry it for 60–90 days.
How long does a Realtor sale really take?
National average is 65–90 days from listing to closing once you include time on market, escrow, and any inspection or financing delays. Cash sales close in 7–14 days.
Can I list with a Realtor and also get a cash offer?
Yes — and you should. Get a cash offer first as your floor, then list. If the MLS delivers a better net offer, take it. If not, exercise the cash offer. We hold offers open 7 days to give you time.

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