Sell Your Code Violations House Fast in Ohio
In Ohio, open code violations do not automatically void a property sale, but they do attach to the land — meaning a buyer takes title subject to any existing violations, unpermitted work, and associated municipal orders under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 715 and local housing codes enforced through municipal or housing courts. Cities may pursue abatement independently and place the remediation costs as a special assessment lien on the property tax duplicate under ORC 715.261, which survives a sale and follows the new owner just like any other tax lien. Unpermitted work — additions, electrical, plumbing, or structural changes completed without a permit — can trigger a retroactive permit and inspection requirement at closing or post-closing, and in some Ohio jurisdictions inspectors may issue stop-work or correction orders through the local building department with compliance windows as short as 30 days. If a property has been declared condemned or deemed unfit for human habitation under a municipal condemnation order, Ohio law still permits the sale of the property, but the condemnation status must be disclosed to any buyer and the order typically remains in force against the new owner until full remediation is completed and a certificate of occupancy or compliance is issued.
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Three simple steps to sell your the United States home for cash — no repairs, no agents, no stress.
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Code Violations in Ohio — 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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