A cash offer will almost always be lower than a retail listing price. But “lower offer price” is not the same as “lower net proceeds” — especially once you run the full math on commissions, repairs, and carrying costs. Here’s the honest comparison, including the scenarios where each approach wins.
I’m not going to pretend cash offers are always the right answer. I’m a cash buyer — if your home is turnkey and you have time, listing it with a good agent is probably the smarter financial move. But for a large percentage of Southern California sellers, the math is closer than they realize.
The Real Cost of Listing in Southern California
Most sellers focus on the gross sale price and underestimate the transaction costs.
Agent Commissions
The standard is still 5–6% total in Southern California. On a $500,000 sale, that’s $25,000–$30,000 off the top.
Pre-Listing Repairs and Staging
A good listing agent will tell you to fix what needs fixing. For a home in average condition:
- Fresh paint: $3,000–$8,000
- Flooring replacement: $5,000–$15,000
- Kitchen and bathroom cosmetics: $5,000–$20,000
- Deferred maintenance items: varies
For a fair-condition home, pre-listing investment of $15,000–$30,000 is common.
Carrying Costs
Every month the house sits on the market, you’re paying mortgage, property taxes, insurance, and utilities. In SoCal: $3,000–$6,000/month. A 90-day listing period adds $9,000–$18,000 to your cost basis.
Closing Costs
Budget 1–2% of sale price for escrow fees, title insurance, transfer taxes, and any seller concessions.
The Full Math: A $500,000 Home Example
Listing scenario (average condition, 75-day market time):
| Line Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| List price | $500,000 |
| Agent commissions (5.5%) | −$27,500 |
| Pre-listing repairs | −$20,000 |
| Carrying costs (75 days) | −$12,000 |
| Closing costs (1.5%) | −$7,500 |
| Net to seller | $433,000 |
Cash buyer scenario (same home, same ARV):
| Line Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cash offer (75% of ARV) | $375,000 |
| Agent commissions | $0 |
| Repairs | $0 |
| Carrying costs (12 days) | −$1,600 |
| Closing costs (paid by buyer) | $0 |
| Net to seller | $373,400 |
In this example, listing nets about $60,000 more. That’s significant. But notice: the gross price difference is $125,000; the net difference is $60,000. And that’s assuming the listing goes perfectly.
When the Gap Narrows or Reverses
The $60,000 gap assumes the home sells in 75 days with no price reductions, pre-listing repairs come in at estimate, and no buyer financing falls through.
What changes the math:
- Financing fall-through after 30 days under contract: Back to market. Add 30–45 more days of carrying costs plus a stigma discount.
- Home needs $50,000 in repairs before listing: Capital outlay plus 2–3 months before even listing.
- Out-of-state seller, inherited home: Management and carrying costs mount quickly.
- Foreclosure or legal deadline: Time is not optional. A 12-day close has real monetary value.
When Listing Clearly Wins
List if all of these are true:
- Your home is in excellent condition (move-in ready, recently updated)
- You have 90+ days before you need to close
- Your carrying costs are low (paid-off or low-balance mortgage)
- The local market has strong buyer demand and low inventory
The Breakeven Point
Think of it this way: a cash offer needs to be within $X of listing net to make sense, where X is the value of your time, certainty, and avoided friction. For most sellers, that number is $20,000–$50,000. If avoiding 3 months of showings, inspections, and contingency anxiety is worth $30,000 to you, a cash offer $30,000 below listing net is breakeven.
Request a cash offer, get a CMA from a local agent, run both nets side by side. Make the decision with real numbers.
Get a cash offer from SHH Buys Homes — I’ll give you a number within 24 hours. If the listing is clearly better, I’ll tell you that too. Call 626-414-4859.
Also see how much cash buyers actually pay in California and what happens at a cash home closing.
Related Services
Sources & Further Reading
This article cites primary sources from California Code, state and federal agencies, and county offices. All links open official sites.
- California Civil Code § 1102 — Seller Disclosure (TDS) Requirements — California Legislative Information
- Verify a Real Estate License — California DRE eLicensing — California Department of Real Estate
- HUD-Approved Housing Counselors in California — U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development