Most sellers think the highest list price wins.
It doesn’t.
What you’re actually trying to win is the largest net payout deposited into your bank account — after holding costs for months, repairs, agent commissions and the frustrating drip-drip of carrying an unwanted property. That’s capital efficiency. When you realise this, the questions you ask when selling your house will change dramatically.
Truth is, fast sales beat long listings more often than you think.
Here’s why…
When a house sits, money disappears.
That’s it. Every additional week your home spends on the market equals one more mortgage payment, one more utility bill, one more insurance premium and one more piece of your property taxes. None of those expenses are included in a Zillow estimate — but they sure are real.
How about today? Listings are staying on the market longer than they were a few years ago. The national median these days is about 66 days — and remember, that’s the median. Half stay on the market longer than that!
Sell your listing after 60 days and buyers assume something is wrong… even if it’s not.
The result? Sellers either:
If you are a homeowner in Virginia looking for speed and certainty, selling to a buyer such as Tyler 757 Property Solutions can make selling your home without repairs easy. Skip the market wait. No staging required. No open houses. No repair credits deducted at closing.
That’s capital efficiency in action.
Want to know one of the biggest budget killers when selling traditionally?
Repairs.
Many sellers fail to realize how much investment is required prior to listing their property. Paint, floors, roof repairs, plumbing repairs, HVAC maintenance…the list goes on.
In reality the average price for total pre-sale repairs is… $27,451 … and that doesn’t include staging, professional photography or that repair credit you end up giving the buyer after the inspection report comes back.
Here’s the problem: Sellers rarely get that money back. You’re spending $27,000 to potentially net $35,000 more on the sale price… assuming the market cooperates and the buyer doesn’t ask for concessions.
Repairs that rarely pay off include:
When you sell a home as-is, the math of home flipping changes completely. You eliminate your cash investment, months of contractor uncertainty and scheduling delays, and the stress of managing trades who are living in your house with you.
For sellers on a tight budget or short timeline, this changes everything.
Selling fast isn’t always best. However, there are certain circumstances where selling fast completely destroys the traditional approach.
These include:
Price is not the biggest issue for each of these sellers. It’s time, certainty and condition. A traditional listing doesn’t solve any of those.
This is also why cash deals have become so prevalent. NAR data says that from mid-2024 to mid-2025 approximately 26% of buyers purchased their home with cash. That’s nearly 1 in 4 sales.
Run a quick example. Say you list a home at $300,000 traditionally:
Final net? Roughly $260,500 — after about 3 months of waiting.
Now compare a no repairs home sale at $270,000:
Final net? Around $265,000 — in two weeks.
You made more money, faster and with less effort. That’s capital efficiency.
The longer the repair sheet, the more aggressive the quick-sale value. Fewer houses that require $50,000 in foundation repairs will net any more on the open market…ever. (Financed buyers often cannot close on them.)
Cash sales usually close within 7 to 14 days. Traditional sales average between 41 to 60 days. That difference can equal huge savings for you in mortgage payments, taxes and utilities.
If you have a move-in ready home that’s freshly updated in a hot zip code… then you will most likely sell for more if you list traditionally. There are more traditional buyers so the competition drives the price up.
The key is being honest about which bucket your property actually falls into.
Ask yourself these five questions:
If your answers lean toward “no repairs, fast close, low hassle” then a short sale will always be better than a long listing.
Capital efficiency doesn’t matter in the headline number. It matters what shows up in your bank account, how quickly it shows up, and how much stress you avoided getting there.
Selling as is does not make sense for every homeowner. However, if you are a seller who:
…the math usually favors the quick sale. Traditional listings look great on paper, but repairs and concessions erode the bottom line faster than most sellers realize.
The best sellers calculate both figures before pricing. The highest sale price does not usually equal the highest net check.


