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Cash Offer vs. Listing With an Agent: Which Nets You More?

The honest answer is "it depends." A cash offer is almost always a lower headline price than what a polished MLS listing might fetch — but what matters isn't the headline. It's what hits your bank account at closing and how long it takes to get there. This article walks through the real math for a typical Central Florida home.

The MLS math: gross price isn't your money

Let's say your house lists for $250,000 and ultimately sells at $245,000 after some negotiation. Here's what comes out before you see anything:

  • Total real estate commission (5–6%): $12,250–$14,700
  • Standard seller closing costs (1–3%): $2,500–$7,500
  • Repairs and concessions after inspection: $3,000–$10,000 is typical
  • Holding costs during the 60–120 day listing period: $1,500–$5,000 (mortgage, insurance, taxes, HOA, utilities)
  • Prorated taxes and HOA at closing: varies

Add it up and you're often $20,000–$35,000 below your headline. So a $245,000 sale frequently nets the seller $210,000–$225,000.

The cash offer math: what you see is what you get

A cash offer on the same property might be $195,000 — substantially less than the listing price. But the math is much simpler:

  • No commission
  • No standard closing costs (most cash buyers cover them)
  • No repairs or concessions (sold as-is)
  • No holding costs (typically closes in 14–21 days)
  • Prorated taxes and HOA still apply

A $195,000 cash offer often nets the seller around $192,000–$194,000.

So which wins?

In the worked example above:

  • MLS net: $210,000–$225,000
  • Cash net: $192,000–$194,000
  • Difference: about $20,000 in favor of the MLS

If you can wait 60–120 days, handle showings, the house is in clean shape, and inspections won't surface major issues — the MLS wins this example.

But the comparison flips fast when:

  • The house needs $25,000+ in repairs to be MLS-ready
  • There's an active tenant who needs to be navigated
  • The seller is in pre-foreclosure or under timeline pressure
  • The seller is out-of-state and can't manage prep work
  • Property has insurance, code, or title issues

In any of those situations, the MLS net often drops below the cash net — and the cash offer wins.

The non-money factors

Money isn't everything. Cash offers also win on:

  • Certainty — once the contract is signed and inspection is done, the deal closes. No financing fall-through, no appraisal gap, no last-minute buyer changes of heart.
  • Speed — 14–21 days vs. 60–120
  • Privacy — no showings, no signs in the yard, no neighbors walking through
  • Simplicity — one decision, one contract, one closing date

The decision framework

Lean toward an agent listing if: the house is in great condition, you have 60+ days, you can handle showings and inspections, and you want maximum price.

Lean toward a cash offer if: the house needs work, you're under a timeline, there are tenants or condition issues, you're out of state, or you want certainty and privacy over maximum dollars.

The best move: actually compare

Get a real cash offer in writing AND get a comparative market analysis from an agent. Then do the math line-by-line. Most sellers find that the gap between the two options is much smaller than they assumed — and the cash side wins more often than they'd expect once repairs, commissions, and holding costs are honest in the calculation.

Want a written cash offer to compare against an agent's CMA? Call OfferLink at 407-930-9801. We make offers across Florida within 24 hours — and you're under no obligation to accept.