Sell a House in
Jacksonville
Max Cohen
Owner, FL Home Buyers
CALL OR TEXT US (561) 258-9405
Property Reviewed As-Is. Seller Costs in Writing.
Florida cash buyer since 2014. Closing timing depends on title, payoff, access, and seller documents.
FL Home Buyers purchases homes in Jacksonville, Florida for cash. We buy houses with repair, title, and timing problems, with seller costs stated in writing before you decide. Get a written cash offer after property review, then choose a closing target based on title, payoff, access, and seller documents. We're a Florida company based in Palm Beach Gardens and serving Jacksonville, not a franchise.
127+
Homes Purchased
Clear
Title-Ready Closings
$0
Fees or Commissions
10+
Years Buying in Florida

A Contractor Who Knows Jacksonville
I've been buying houses across Florida since 2014, including properties throughout Duval County. Whether it's an older home with foundation issues or a rental you're done managing, I've seen it. As a State Certified General Contractor (CGC1534000), I price repairs myself. Our offers are based on real numbers.
We use standard FAR/BAR "As-Is" contracts and close with Duval County title companies.
Selling a House in Jacksonville? Here's What We See.
Jacksonville is the largest city by land area in the lower 48, and that sprawl means wildly different markets block by block. Springfield (32206) is mid-gentrification with investor rehabs next door to boarded-up duplexes. Arlington (32211) has aging 1960s ranch homes where the original roofs and HVAC systems are finally giving out. On the Westside and Northside (32210, 32218), landlords often call when they are done dealing with Duval County's eviction timeline. Riverside and Murray Hill get the Instagram attention, but sellers in those neighborhoods still call us when they find termite damage behind the shiplap or discover their foundation is shifting. For Jacksonville sellers, the hard parts are usually practical: tenant issues, open permits, code violations, termite damage, and repair costs that financed buyers will not accept.
Related reading: Florida Real Estate Market Forecast 2026 · Selling a House on Military PCS in Florida
Neighborhoods We Buy In
Why Jacksonville Homeowners Call Us
Military PCS Relocations
With NAS Jacksonville and Mayport nearby, military families on PCS orders can't wait 90 days for a traditional sale. We close on your timeline, even if that's two weeks. Learn more →
Sprawl Market Complexity
Jacksonville's 874 square miles means your home's value depends heavily on micro-location. We know the difference between a $180K Arlington ranch and a $90K Northside duplex. Learn more →
Aging Rental Stock
Duval County's older rental properties in Arlington and Westside are hitting the point where major capital expenditures eat all the cash flow. We buy tenant-occupied properties as-is. Learn more →
How We Buy Houses in Jacksonville
No open houses, no "For Sale" signs, no strangers walking through your home.
- 1
Call or Fill Out the Form
Tell us about your Jacksonville property. Whether it's a home in Riverside, a ranch in Arlington, or a rental in Northside, we review Duval County records and the property condition before we make an offer.
- 2
Quick Walkthrough
We'll stop by for a look at the condition. We look at the specific repairs, access issues, cleanup needs, and title/payoff details before we put terms in writing.
- 3
Close & Get Paid
Accept our cash offer and we open escrow with a Florida title company that can handle Duval County closings. Closing timing depends on title, payoff, access, seller documents, and any HOA or municipal requirements. Seller costs are stated in writing before you decide.
Jacksonville Home Selling FAQ
How fast can you close on a Jacksonville house?
Do I need to make repairs before selling?
How much will you pay for my Jacksonville house?
Are there any fees or commissions?
What types of properties do you buy in Jacksonville?
Last updated: May 2026
We Also Buy Houses Near Jacksonville
Before you compare offers
What changes an as-is offer in Jacksonville
Two Jacksonville houses with the same bedroom count can have very different cash offers. The useful number depends on title, payoff, repair scope, insurance, code history, association rules, and how quickly the seller needs a clear closing.
Jacksonville issues that can change the number
Jacksonville sellers often deal with older roofs, wood rot, electrical or plumbing updates, tenant access, inherited ownership, code letters, and repairs that financed buyers may ask to be completed before closing. The offer should explain which of those risks are already priced in.
Title and payoff
Pull the mortgage payoff, property-tax balance, HOA or condo balance, code liens, judgments, and any open probate or divorce orders before relying on a net number.
Repairs and insurance
Roof age, electrical panels, plumbing, AC, flood-zone risk, storm history, foundation movement, and open permits can change whether a financed buyer can close.
Access and occupancy
Tenants, inherited belongings, vacant-home security, elderly-owner move timing, and association move-out rules can matter as much as the repair estimate.
How to verify records
Use Duval County records, your latest mortgage statement, association ledgers, insurance paperwork, and repair photos. A title company should confirm the final payoff and closing statement.
What to gather before asking for a written offer
Mortgage payoff, tax bill, lease if occupied, insurance notices, code letters, permit records, repair photos, and heir or probate paperwork if the owner has passed.
Questions worth asking before you sign
- What happens if title finds a lien, payoff shortage, or open permit? The answer should be in the contract or handled by the title company, not guessed over the phone.
- Which costs can still reduce my net? Mortgage payoff, taxes, HOA or condo balances, code liens, and seller-side obligations should be separated from any buyer-paid closing costs.
- What repair number are you using? Ask whether the offer assumes roof, insurance, electrical, plumbing, cleanout, tenant, mold, or permit risk.
When a direct cash sale may not be your best answer
If the property is clean, financeable, easy to show, title is simple, and you have time to wait, a good local agent may get you a higher gross price. A direct sale is usually most useful when repairs, insurance, tenants, probate, HOA or condo pressure, payoff timing, code issues, or uncertainty make a normal sale harder to complete.
Useful next pages: how we price offers, how cash buyers work, and Florida selling costs. Official starting points: Florida local property officials, Florida clerk locations, and FEMA flood maps.
