Divorce is already one of the most stressful things a person can go through. Adding a drawn-out home sale on top of it - months of listings, showings, negotiations, inspections, and waiting for a buyer's financing to come through - makes everything harder and longer than it needs to be. I offer a different path: a fair cash offer, a fast closing, and a clean split so both parties can move on.
When I buy a house during a divorce, the process is simple. I look at the property, I make an offer based on condition and comps, and if both parties agree, we close. There are no contingencies on my end - no financing, no appraisal, no inspection period that could fall through and send you back to square one. The number I offer is the number you get at the closing table, minus zero fees and zero commissions.
I work with both spouses and their attorneys throughout the process. If communication between the parties is difficult, I can coordinate separately with each side. I've been through this scenario dozens of times, and I understand the sensitivity involved. My job is to make the real estate piece as painless as possible so everyone can focus on the bigger picture.
Confidentiality matters during a divorce, and I take it seriously. There are no yard signs in your front yard, no open houses with strangers walking through your home, no listing on the MLS for everyone to see. This is a private, off-market transaction. Your neighbors don't need to know. Your coworkers don't need to know. The sale happens quietly and quickly.
A fast closing also prevents one of the most common problems in divorce real estate: the house sitting on the market while both parties argue about price reductions, repairs, or who's responsible for the mortgage during the listing period. With a cash sale, you skip all of that. I close on your timeline - as fast as 7 days or on whatever date works for both parties. The proceeds get split at the closing table according to your agreement or court order, and both sides walk away with their share the same day.
If one spouse is reluctant to sell, a concrete cash offer can actually help move things forward. It's much easier to make a decision when there's a real number on the table instead of a hypothetical listing price that might take months to materialize. And if the court has ordered the sale, I can work within whatever timeline and requirements the order specifies.