“As-Is” Actually Means As-Is in Weymouth
When we say we buy Weymouth houses as-is, we mean it. There’s no repair list, no inspection objections, and no last-minute credits demanded at the closing table. The condition you’re living with is the condition we buy.
That’s a real difference from a traditional sale, where a buyer’s inspector finds problems, the buyer asks for repairs or a price cut, and the deal stalls — or where a lender simply won’t finance a home that needs too much work.
The Math on Repairs Usually Favors Selling As-Is
Prepping a tired Weymouth home for the open market — roof, kitchen, bath, paint, flooring — easily runs tens of thousands of dollars and weeks of work, often financed on credit while you still carry the mortgage, taxes, and insurance.
Selling as-is for cash skips all of that. You don’t spend a dollar, you don’t wait, and you don’t risk over-improving a house only to have the appraisal not cover it. For many owners the as-is cash net is surprisingly close to the “fixed up and listed” net once those costs come out.
Conditions We Buy Around Weymouth Every Day
- Major systems at end of life — roof, furnace, electrical, plumbing
- Water, fire, mold, or storm damage
- Foundation, septic, or structural issues
- Homes packed with belongings or in hoarder condition
- Failed or stalled renovations
Weymouth has one of the South Shore’s largest stocks of older two- and three-family homes, especially around Jackson Square and Weymouth Landing, plus the newer build-out at Union Point. That mix means a lot of tired rentals and inherited capes change hands here — exactly the kind of property a cash buyer takes off your plate without repairs, tenants, or showings.