Sell Your Code Violations House Fast in California
In California, open code violations and unpermitted work do not automatically void a sale, but they do run with the land under California Health and Safety Code Section 17980 and related provisions — meaning the new owner inherits the obligation to cure them unless the parties negotiate otherwise in the purchase agreement. Sellers are required under California Civil Code Section 1102 to disclose known material defects and permit issues on the Transfer Disclosure Statement, and failing to do so can expose them to post-closing liability even after the deed records. If a local municipality has performed abatement work — clearing hazardous conditions, boarding up a structure, or demolishing an unsafe addition — those costs are typically recorded as special assessment liens against the property through the county's tax rolls, and they survive the sale until paid in full at or before closing. A property carrying a condemned or 'substandard' designation under Health and Safety Code Section 17920.3 can still be sold, but conventional lenders will almost always decline to fund the purchase, which is precisely why cash buyers are often the only practical exit for owners in that situation.
- Cash offer within 24 hours
- Close in 7 days or on your schedule
- Buy as-is — no repairs required
- We pay all closing costs
- No agents, no commissions
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No obligation · Closes in 7 days · $0 fees
24 hrs
Cash Offer
7 Days
Close
0
Repairs Needed
$0
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How It Works
Three simple steps to sell your the United States home for cash — no repairs, no agents, no stress.
Tell Us About Your Property
Fill out our short form or call us. Takes 2 minutes. No obligation.
Receive Your Cash Offer
We'll present a fair, no-obligation cash offer within 24 hours.
Close On Your Schedule
Pick your closing date. We handle all paperwork. You get cash.
Code Violations in California — FAQ
No. We buy as-is with open code violations. We handle all city and county resolution after closing at our own expense.
We still buy condemned properties. A condemnation order limits who can occupy the home, but it doesn't prevent a sale. We've bought many condemned homes.
Not with us. Open permits are our problem after closing. We price accordingly and handle them ourselves.
We look at the cost to cure the violations and price based on the home's condition after those repairs. We'll walk you through our reasoning.
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