One number, one date, and both parties can move forward
In most divorces the house is the largest shared asset and the biggest point of friction. Months of showings, staging, and price-drop debates keep two people tied together long after they've decided not to be. A direct sale replaces all of it with a single verifiable offer and a settlement date the attorneys can put in the agreement.
A neutral number both attorneys can work with
Our offer comes with the math shown: renovated comparable values, repair estimates, and our margin. That transparency matters in a divorce, where each side's counsel needs to verify the sale price was fair market for the property's condition. We'll provide documentation directly to both attorneys on request.
Proceeds split at the settlement table
The title company disburses according to the signed separation agreement or court order — each party's share goes directly to them. Neither spouse has to trust the other to forward a check.
When one spouse still lives in the house
We can schedule closing around a move-out date, or structure a short post-settlement occupancy so the resident spouse has time to relocate after the sale funds. What we can't do is buy a house with only one owner's signature — both names on the deed must sign, or a court order must authorize the sale.
Frequently asked
My ex won't cooperate. Can you still buy the house?
Not without their signature or a court order. If you're at an impasse, your attorney can seek an order compelling sale — our offer can serve as the evidence of a ready buyer.
Can the sale close before the divorce is final?
Yes, if both parties sign. Many couples sell during the separation period and hold proceeds in escrow pending the final decree.
Who pays the mortgage until closing?
That's between you and your agreement — but a fast closing shrinks the number of payments in dispute, which is often the point.
Where we can help
Ready for a number you can actually plan around?
One walkthrough. One transparent offer. A closing date you choose.