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Selling your home as-is sounds like the simplest path forward, no repairs, no showings, no contractor headaches. And in many situations, it is the right call. But there's a question most homeowners don't ask until after closing: how much equity did you actually leave behind?
The as-is discount is real, and it's often larger than people expect. Combined with closing costs and relocation expenses, the total gap between what you could have received and what you actually walked away with can reach six figures on a mid-priced home.
This guide gives you the complete picture, the numbers, the tradeoffs, and a third option most people don't know exists. Learn how a sale-leaseback works โ
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1. What Does Selling a House As-Is Actually Mean?
In real estate, selling as-is means listing the property in its current condition, no repairs, no upgrades, no seller credits at closing. The buyer takes it exactly as it stands.
This does not mean skipping disclosure. In most U.S. states, sellers are legally required to disclose known material defects regardless of how the home is listed. Selling as-is only means you won't fix those issues, it doesn't allow you to hide them.
As-is listings attract three main buyer types: house flippers, iBuyers, and independent cash buyers. Every one of them builds their offer around purchasing below market value, that spread is how they profit.

2. The Real Price Discount When Selling a House As-Is
According to the National Association of Realtors, as-is homes sell for 10โ25% below their estimated market value. The exact number depends on condition, local demand, and buyer type:
- Minor cosmetic issues (outdated finishes, paint): 5โ10% below market
- Moderate deferred maintenance (aging roof, old HVAC): 10โ15% below market
- Significant structural or system issues: 15โ25%+ below market
On a $350,000 home, that's a gap of $35,000 to $87,500. That's not a rounding error, that's a real wealth difference that compounds over time.
3. Hidden Closing Costs That Further Reduce Your Net Proceeds
The as-is discount is only the first layer. Even when you eliminate repair costs, you still face closing costs, title fees, and in many cases, agent commissions that quietly reduce your proceeds.
Traditional listings carry seller-side closing costs of 8โ10% of the sale price โ including a 5โ6% real estate commission. Cash buyers often advertise zero fees, but their lower offer price typically more than compensates for that.

Even with a cash buyer who charges zero commission, your net often comes out close to ,or lower than, a traditional listing after repairs. Run the comparison before you decide: what would a $15K kitchen refresh add to your sale price? In a strong market, sometimes more than twice the cost.
4. iBuyers vs. Cash Investors: Who Actually Pays More?
Not all as-is buyers are equal. iBuyers like Opendoor or Offerpad use automated pricing models to generate fast offers, typically closer to market value, but with service fees of 5โ8% added at closing.
Independent cash investors offer lower prices but rarely charge service fees. In many cases, your net proceeds after fees are similar to what you'd receive from the iBuyer. The real variable is how much below market the offer starts.
Neither path is wrong. But both are designed to transfer a portion of your equity to the buyer. Understanding that dynamic is what allows you to negotiate from a position of clarity rather than urgency.
5. When Selling a House As-Is Is the Right Move
There are clear situations where accepting an as-is discount is the strategically correct decision, not a compromise, but a choice:
- You need to close in under 30 days due to a job relocation, estate settlement, or divorce
- The home has major structural issues that would cost more to fix than they'd recover in sale price
- You're managing an out-of-state property and can't oversee renovation work
- Your market is highly competitive and buyers are paying premiums regardless of condition
In each scenario, speed and certainty outweigh the price gap. The key is making the choice consciously, knowing the full cost, rather than defaulting to as-is because it feels easier in the moment.
6. The Cost Nobody Factors In: Where Will You Go After Closing?
Here's the question that gets overlooked in almost every as-is conversation: once you sell, what does it cost to establish yourself somewhere else?
Relocation isn't free. First-month rent, last-month rent, a security deposit, moving services, and setup costs add up fast, and in competitive rental markets, they add up even faster.

That figure comes directly off your net proceeds. A homeowner who accepted a $40,000 as-is discount and spent $15,000 on relocation effectively traded $55,000 in equity for the convenience of a fast close. That may still be the right decision, but it deserves to be a conscious one.
7. A Third Option: Sell at Fair Market Price and Stay in Your Home
If your goal is to access equity without accepting a discount or uprooting your life, a sale-leaseback is worth understanding.
In a sale-leaseback, you sell your home at fair market value, receive the proceeds at closing, and sign a lease to remain in the property as a renter. You get the financial benefit of selling without the disruption of moving.
Sell2Rent connects homeowners who want to unlock equity with investors who want stable, tenant-occupied properties. It's a full market-rate transaction, not a bridge loan, not a temporary rescue, with a leaseback agreement built in from the start.
Unlike an as-is sale, Sell2Rent doesn't require you to accept a price discount to move the deal. You're selling at fair value because investors on our platform are paying for the stability of a tenant already in place, which is you
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8. Side-by-Side: As-Is Sale vs. Sell2Rent Leaseback
9. How to Evaluate Which Option Is Right for You
Ask yourself three questions before deciding:
- What is the fair market value of my home if it were fully prepared for a traditional listing?
- What would I realistically net after the as-is discount, closing costs, and relocation expenses?
- Would staying in my home while accessing the same equity change my financial picture?
If the answer to question three is yes, or even maybe, it's worth getting a Sell2Rent offer alongside any cash buyer offer you're considering. The comparison takes minutes and gives you a clear picture of the real gap.
10. The Bottom Line on Selling a House As-Is
Selling as-is is a legitimate, often smart strategy. It's fast, certain, and eliminates renovation risk. For homeowners in the right situation, it's the right move.
But it's not free. The discount is real. The closing costs are real. And the question of where you'll live next, and what that costs, deserves a clear answer before you sign.
If you've been considering selling because life has gotten expensive, or because you want to unlock equity without upending your daily routine, a Sell2Rent sale-leaseback gives you a third option, one that doesn't require you to choose between financial flexibility and stability.
You don't have to leave your home to access what it's worth. Sell your house, stay home, and breathe again. Get a no-obligation offer โ
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