A late-night call about a broken furnace. A vacant unit eating costs every month. Tenants who pay sometimes, sometimes not. A duplex you inherited from a parent who handled it differently. A cash sale is one option for landlords ready to be done — and we can help you understand whether it fits, without pressuring you into anything.
Or call us: 937-807-4330
Most landlords don't decide to sell on a Tuesday afternoon. The decision builds — sometimes over a single bad year, sometimes over a decade of small frustrations that finally outweigh the income. Here are the patterns most common to these situations.
Rising property taxes, insurance increases, deferred maintenance catching up, a major repair the property reserve can't absorb. A rental that cash-flowed comfortably five years ago may now be breaking even or losing money before you account for your own time.
Non-payment, lease violations, damage, communication that's gone sideways, or a tenant relationship that's no longer functional. We don't pretend to be eviction services — those issues belong to your attorney and the courts — but they're often what brings landlords to the conversation.
You moved for work, family, or retirement, and the Ohio rental that made sense when you lived twenty minutes away now feels impossibly far. Property managers help, but they're another expense, another set of communications, and another layer between you and the property.
Roof replacement, HVAC system at end of life, electrical service upgrade required for code, foundation repair the property has needed for years. The math on putting that capital in versus selling and moving the equity elsewhere often points toward selling.
Some landlords didn't choose to be landlords — they inherited a duplex from a parent, kept a starter home as a rental when they bought their next place, or accumulated a few properties without a clear strategy. When the strategy clarifies, sometimes the answer is to exit.
Even when the income is fine, the calls in the middle of the night, the turnover work between tenants, the constant low-grade hum of "what's going to need attention next" can wear down even experienced landlords. At some point, simpler beats higher-yield.
Selling a rental property in Ohio differs from selling an owner-occupied home in several practical ways. The lease, the tenancy status, and the relationship with current occupants all factor into how the sale unfolds. A vacant rental can typically be sold the same way a regular home is sold — though condition issues common to rentals may affect financed-buyer eligibility. An occupied rental is more complex: the existing lease generally transfers to the new owner, and the buyer steps into the landlord position with whatever rights and obligations the lease and Ohio law create.
Ohio landlord-tenant law sets the framework for rental relationships, including notice requirements, security deposit handling, habitability standards, and the procedural path for tenant disputes. These rules apply throughout a sale and afterward. If your situation involves unresolved tenant matters — past-due rent, lease violations, eviction proceedings already filed or contemplated — those are legal questions for your attorney, not us. We don't and can't represent ourselves as eviction services or tenant-removal specialists; that's not what we do.
For tax purposes, selling a rental can also have implications different from selling a primary residence — depreciation recapture, capital gains treatment, and 1031 exchange options may all come into play depending on how long you've owned the property and what your overall tax picture looks like. Speak with a tax professional or CPA before assuming anything about how the proceeds will land on your return.
Nothing on this page is legal, financial, or tax advice. Landlord-tenant law, rental property taxation, and lease enforcement vary based on circumstances and applicable Ohio law. Speak with a licensed attorney about tenant matters and a tax professional about tax implications before making decisions about your rental property.
A cash sale isn't right for every rental. When it does fit — typically because the property has condition issues, the timeline is tight, or the owner is out of state and ready to be done — here's what tends to be different from a traditional listing.
You don't have to choose between waiting for a lease to end or paying to break it. Some buyers prefer occupied rentals as turnkey investments; some prefer vacant. Either way, the property doesn't need to be empty before we can talk about an offer.
Rental properties often have condition issues that scare off financed buyers — lingering damage from prior tenants, dated systems, deferred capital expenses, or code violations the city is now enforcing. We factor all of that into the offer on day one. No post-inspection price reductions.
You don't need to fly back to Ohio. Closings can be coordinated through a local title company using mail-away documents, remote online notarization, or power of attorney depending on what the title company accepts. Our process is built to accommodate owners in California, Florida, Arizona, or further afield.
Each month the rental sits — vacant or struggling — costs you. A cash sale's compressed closing timeline means fewer months of carrying costs absorbed before you exit. That alone can change the math even when the offer itself isn't your highest possible number.
No commitment to move forward at any stage. The goal is to give you enough information to decide — not to push you toward a yes.
Call Patrick at 937-807-4330 or use the form. Address, rough condition, occupancy status, and what's driving the sale. About 10 minutes. Photos welcome but not required — we know walk-throughs of rentals can be complicated.
If selling makes sense to explore, we email a written cash offer within 24 hours. We show our math — condition factors, occupancy considerations, expected proceeds. Run it past your CPA, your attorney, or anyone else whose opinion matters to you.
If you decide to move forward, closing happens at a local Ohio title company on a schedule that fits your situation — yours and, if applicable, your tenants'. Funds wire on closing day. Cleanout, repairs, and tenant communication going forward shift to the new owner.
The math on a rental property varies significantly by market. A duplex in a faster-appreciating area may be worth holding through a difficult patch; the same property in a slower market may be worth exiting now while the equity is still meaningful. Tenant pools, code enforcement intensity, property tax pressure, and resale liquidity all differ from one Ohio market to another. If you'd like a sense of how rental sales work in your specific market, our city-level pages provide that local context. Landlords with property in Central Ohio can read about our work in Columbus, and landlords in the Miami Valley can read about our work in Dayton.
Outer markets and suburbs sometimes follow different rhythms than the named cities. A duplex or single-family rental in a smaller community may have a tighter buyer pool than the same property in an urban core, which can change the calculation between traditional listing and cash sale. For example, landlords with a property in Tallmadge in Greater Akron can read about how we approach that specific market. And rental property situations sometimes overlap with other situations — a rental that came to you through an estate, for instance, or one tied up in probate. If your rental is also an inherited property, our overview of inherited home situations may be relevant in addition to this page.
Whatever the situation, the right starting point is usually clear math: what is the property actually worth today, what are the carrying costs, what are the tenant or condition complications, and what would walking away free up for you. A cash sale is one path to that exit — sometimes the right one, sometimes not.
Honest answers, with the caveat that we are not attorneys, eviction services, or tax advisors — and every situation is different.
In many situations, yes. Selling a rental with tenants in place is sometimes called selling occupied — the property transfers along with the existing lease, and the buyer steps into the landlord position. Whether this works for your specific property depends on the lease terms, tenant cooperation, the buyer's plans for the property, and what your attorney advises. Our process accommodates occupied Ohio rentals where tenants stay and the rental relationship continues under new ownership. It also works for vacant rentals. Which path fits depends on your situation.
Tenant issues are one of the most common reasons a landlord considers selling. We're not eviction services and don't claim to be — any unresolved legal disputes with tenants typically need to be handled through your attorney and the appropriate Ohio court. What we can do is provide a written cash offer that factors current condition and tenancy status into the price. Some buyers prefer occupied rentals; some prefer vacant. The right approach depends on the specifics of your situation, and we'd want to understand it before giving you a useful answer.
Often yes. Our process is built around out-of-state landlords. Closings can frequently be coordinated through a local Ohio title company using mail-away documents, remote online notarization, or a power of attorney depending on what the title company accepts and your state's notary rules. You typically don't need to fly back to Ohio to close. The specifics depend on the title company and your situation — your attorney can confirm what's appropriate.
Not necessarily. Rental properties often have deferred maintenance, dated systems, lingering damage from prior tenants, or code issues that would scare off financed buyers. Cash buyers typically factor condition into the offer on day one rather than requiring repairs before closing. You don't need to clean out, repair, or paint anything before reaching out — and you don't need to give tenants notice to clear out for showings or inspections in most cases.
Vacant rentals carry costs — mortgage, utilities, insurance, taxes, and the slow depreciation of an unoccupied building — without any rent coming in. Carrying costs on a vacant property are one of the most common reasons selling starts to look like the right answer. A cash sale on a vacant rental can often close quickly since there's no tenant coordination involved. The faster the close, the fewer months of vacancy costs you absorb.
A 10-minute call. Occupied or vacant, in good shape or not, in-state or out-of-state. No pressure, no follow-up calls if the answer is no.