We Buy Houses in Wakulla County
37,000 residents. $310,000 median home price. 1 in 980 foreclosure rate. If you need to compare options quickly, we can review the property and give you a written as-is offer with closing timing tied to title, payoff, access, and seller documents.
Closing: agreed date after title review • Seller costs: stated in writing • As-is: repair scope stated in offer
Wakulla County Market Snapshot
Data compiled by FL Home Buyers from public county records and MLS reporting
Why Selling in Wakulla County Is Harder Than You Think
Wakulla County had the highest per-unit foreclosure rate in Florida in January 2026. Many homeowners in this small coastal county are struggling with storm damage and rising insurance costs.
Highest foreclosure rate in Florida per housing unit
Coastal flooding from Gulf storms
Septic system failures common
Limited infrastructure and services
Distance from Tallahassee limits convenience
I'm Max Cohen. I Buy Houses in Wakulla County.
I am a Florida Licensed General Contractor (License #CGC1534000) based in Palm Beach Gardens. When I review a Wakulla County property, I price the visible repairs, title issues, insurance problems, and holding costs before making an offer.
We review county records, property condition, code issues, and insurance concerns before we put a number in writing. That gives you a clear cash offer without a repair list or a lender approval process.
If you have a problem property in Wakulla County, we can review it and tell you whether a cash sale makes sense.
BBB A+ Rated • Licensed General Contractor • 100+ homes purchased across Florida
Selling to Us vs. Listing with an Agent in Wakulla County
| Factor | Sell to Max (Us) | List with Agent |
|---|---|---|
| Agent Commission | $0 | Usually negotiated in the listing agreement |
| Closing Costs | Stated in our written offer | Varies by contract, title, and loan payoff |
| Repairs Required | Repair scope stated in offer | Buyer, lender, or insurance may require repairs |
| Timeline | Agreed date when title is clear | Depends on market, buyer approval, and inspections |
| Showings / Open Houses | Zero | Showings, inspections, and buyer visits |
How We Buy Your Wakulla County House
Tell Us What's Going On
Fill out the form below or call (561) 258-9405. Tell us the address, current condition, payoff concerns, and what is making the sale difficult.
We Do a Walkthrough
We meet you at the property or review it virtually. As a licensed contractor, I look at the visible condition, repair scope, title/payoff issues, and anything that could affect a retail buyer.
You Get a Written Offer
We put the offer and seller costs in writing, then walk through the assumptions: comparable sales, repairs, payoffs, liens, closing costs, and closing date.
Close on Your Timeline
If you accept, we close through a local title company on the date agreed in the contract. Seller costs are stated in writing before you decide, and the title company confirms the final net.
Cities We Buy Houses In Across Wakulla County
Click any city to see our local page with neighborhood details
Zip Codes We Cover in Wakulla County
Sale Problems We See in Wakulla County
These are issues that can affect price, financing, insurance, title, or closing timing in Wakulla:
Hurricane Michael Legacy
Category 5 Hurricane Michael (2018) damaged many Panhandle properties. Some still have unresolved repairs, claim history, or insurance questions that can make a financed sale harder to complete.
Military Base Dependency
Panhandle economies rely heavily on military installations like Eglin AFB, Tyndall AFB, and NAS Pensacola. PCS transfers can leave sellers working around tight move-out and reporting timelines.
Rural Infrastructure Gaps
Many Panhandle properties rely on well water and septic systems. Failing septic costs $8,000-$20,000 to replace, and wells that test positive for contaminants require expensive treatment systems.
Insurance Availability Crisis
After Hurricane Michael, many Panhandle sellers have had to gather updated roof, wind, flood, and claim-history documentation before buyers and insurers will move forward. Current quotes and repair records matter more than old assumptions.
Timber and Agricultural Land
Panhandle counties have significant timber and ag land. Properties with mixed residential/agricultural use face zoning complications and a limited buyer pool.
Aging Housing Stock
Much of the Panhandle's housing was built in the 1960s-1980s. These homes need comprehensive updates, roofs, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, totaling $25,000-$45,000 to bring to market-ready condition.
Wakulla's Housing Market: What It Means for Sellers in 2026
Wakulla County's 2026 housing market should be read property by property, not from one county average. Current page data shows a median home price near $310,000, an average market time of about 52 days, and a year-over-year price change of -1.0%. Those numbers are useful context, but they do not tell you what a house with an old roof, septic issue, storm damage, tenant problem, probate delay, or payoff pressure will actually net. Before deciding between listing and a direct sale, compare the likely repair credits, holding costs, buyer financing risk, and closing timeline against a written cash offer.
Foreclosure & Legal Landscape in Wakulla County
Florida is a judicial foreclosure state, so foreclosure cases in Wakulla County go through the court system. The timeline from missed payment to final judgment in this region is often 8-12 months, but the actual deadline depends on the lender, court schedule, title issues, and whether a sale date has already been set. If you are behind, ask for a current payoff, review any court notices, and confirm with a title company whether a sale can close before the next deadline.
Foreclosure timing needs a payoff and title review
If a court deadline or sale date is coming up, gather the latest mortgage statement, court notices, tax balance, HOA balance, and lien letters. A title company can confirm whether a sale can close in time.
The Real Cost of Repairs vs. Selling As-Is in Wakulla
Wakulla construction costs depend on roof age, HVAC condition, insurance requirements, septic or well status, permits, and buyer financing. Before spending money on repairs, compare contractor bids, likely buyer credits, negotiated commission terms, taxes, insurance, HOA or CDD costs, and mortgage carry against a written as-is offer. Closing timing depends on title, payoff, and seller documents.
Common Sale Problems in Wakulla
Seller scenario
Hurricane Michael Legacy
Category 5 Hurricane Michael (2018) damaged many Panhandle properties. Some still have unresolved repairs, claim history, or insurance questions that can make a financed sale harder to complete.
Seller scenario
Military Base Dependency
Panhandle economies rely heavily on military installations like Eglin AFB, Tyndall AFB, and NAS Pensacola. PCS transfers can leave sellers working around tight move-out and reporting timelines.
Seller scenario
Rural Infrastructure Gaps
Many Panhandle properties rely on well water and septic systems. Failing septic costs $8,000-$20,000 to replace, and wells that test positive for contaminants require expensive treatment systems.
Seller Situations in Wakulla
Start with the issue that matches your property. Each page explains what can delay closing, what documents matter, and when a direct sale may or may not make sense in Wakulla.
Helpful Resources for Wakulla Sellers
Every Wakulla Neighborhood, Covered
We buy houses across Wakulla County, from Crawfordville and St. Marks to Panacea, Sopchoppy, and the communities along the Gulf Coast.
Nearby counties we also serve: Leon County, Franklin County, Jefferson County, Taylor County
Frequently Asked Questions About Selling in Wakulla County
As of late 2025, the median home sale price in Wakulla County is $310,000, representing a +2.0% change compared to the prior year. This data comes from county property appraiser records and MLS reporting. Your written offer should be based on the house's condition, repair scope, title and payoff issues, and nearby comparable sales rather than an automated estimate alone.
With clear title, payoff statements, and seller documents ready, a cash sale can move faster than a financed buyer. Most sellers in Wakulla County choose 14-30 days to get organized. Compare that to the average 55 days on market for MLS-listed homes in this county, and that's before you even start the 30-45 day closing process with a buyer's lender.
The foreclosure rate in Wakulla County is about 1 in 980 housing units. If you are behind on payments or have received a lis pendens, the useful first step is a current payoff, court-deadline review, and title check. A sale may help only if it can close before the relevant deadline and the payoff, taxes, liens, and documents line up. Learn more about selling during foreclosure →
I am the buyer. My name is Max Cohen. I'm a Licensed General Contractor (CGC1534000) and the founder of FL Home Buyers LLC. I buy houses with my own funds, renovate them myself, and either sell or rent them. We close at a standard Florida title company. I don't assign contracts to other investors. Learn how to spot "we buy houses" scams →
Those are the details we review before making a written offer. Max is a licensed contractor, so repair scope, cleanup, access, and leftover personal property are priced directly instead of hidden in a vague discount. Can I sell a house that needs repairs? →
Official Municipal Resources
Before selling your property, it is wise to verify ownership details and active tax statuses. You can check your official property records directly via the local municipal office:
Get Your Free Cash Offer
Tell us what is going on with the property. We review the details and put the offer terms in writing.
Written terms. Clear next steps. No spam.