Detailed answers to the questions Sterling Heights homeowners ask most before requesting a cash offer.
1.How do cash home buyers in Sterling Heights decide what to offer?⌄
Sterling Heights cash buyers base offers on after-repair value (ARV) of comparable Macomb County sales — typically within 0.5 miles of your home — minus estimated repairs and a margin covering holding costs, resale agent fees, and profit. The standard formula is: (ARV × 70–85%) − estimated repairs = your cash offer. Two buyers looking at the same home off Mound Rd. or Schoenherr can come back with very different numbers because they pull different comps and estimate repairs differently. Collect at least two written offers and compare net proceeds — not the headline price.
2.Should I make repairs or clean up before requesting a cash offer in Sterling Heights?⌄
No. The entire reason to sell to a cash buyer is that they buy as-is. Sterling Heights cash buyers expect old roofs, dated kitchens, water in the basement, even active city code violations — that's already priced into the offer. Spending $5,000 on paint and carpet rarely raises the offer by $5,000, because cash buyers underwrite to the worst-case repair scope. You also don't need to clear belongings or haul anything to the curb. Most buyers handle full cleanout after closing at no extra cost.
3.How do I tell a legitimate Sterling Heights cash buyer apart from a wholesaler or scam?⌄
Legitimate buyers (1) provide a written purchase agreement with real earnest money (typically $1,000–$5,000 on a Sterling Heights home) held by a Michigan-licensed title company, (2) close in their own name rather than 'assigning' the contract to a third party, (3) have a verifiable Macomb or Oakland County office or a record of deeds recorded with the Macomb County Register of Deeds, and (4) will put you in contact with prior sellers. Wholesalers push for low earnest money, hide the title company name, and bury 'right to assign' clauses in the contract. A right-to-assign clause means they're trying to flip your contract for a fee — not actually buy your house.
4.What paperwork do I need to sell my Sterling Heights home for cash?⌄
Far less than a traditional sale. You'll need a government-issued photo ID, the deed (or a copy — the title company can pull it from Macomb County records), a recent mortgage statement showing payoff, and documentation for any back property taxes (Macomb County Treasurer), water and sewer balances (Sterling Heights DPW), or recorded liens. For inherited homes, bring the death certificate and Letters of Authority from the Macomb County Probate Court. For tenant-occupied properties, bring the current lease. The title company orders the title commitment, payoff letters, and tax certificates on your behalf.
5.How fast can I actually close on a cash sale in Sterling Heights?⌄
On a clean title with no mortgage, several buyers on this list close in as little as 7 days. The realistic average is 10–14 days — the time the title company needs to pull a commitment, clear minor exceptions, and schedule a notary. Properties with complications — back taxes owed to Macomb County, unreleased mortgages from defunct lenders, probate that hasn't closed at the Macomb County Probate Court, or open Sterling Heights code-enforcement cases — typically push closing to 30–45 days. The buyer doesn't slow you down; the title work does.
6.Are there really no fees or commissions when selling to a cash buyer in Sterling Heights?⌄
Correct. With every reputable buyer on this list, you pay zero agent commissions (no 6% split), zero buyer's-side closing costs, and no inspection or appraisal fees. The accepted cash offer is essentially what you net, minus your mortgage payoff, unpaid Macomb County property taxes, Sterling Heights water/sewer balances, and any recorded liens. If a 'cash buyer' asks you to pay a processing fee, application fee, or upfront retainer, walk away — that's not how the industry works.
7.Can I sell my Sterling Heights rental property while tenants are still living there?⌄
Yes — and you should. Evicting tenants before selling almost always costs more than it adds to the offer. Several buyers on this list specifically target tenant-occupied properties because they're already cash-flowing as rentals. You won't have to coordinate showings, give notice for a parade of strangers, or risk vacancy. Bring the current lease, a rent roll, and the security-deposit ledger to closing; the buyer assumes the lease and the deposit transfers as a credit on the settlement statement.
8.What happens if I owe back taxes, water bills, or have a lien on my Sterling Heights home?⌄
Sterling Heights cash buyers handle this routinely — it's one of the most common situations. The title company pulls payoff figures for Macomb County property taxes, Sterling Heights water and sewer balances, judgment liens, IRS or state tax liens, and any unreleased mortgages. Those amounts come out of your sale proceeds at closing, not out of pocket. As long as the total owed is less than the offer, the sale goes through and the title is cleared at the closing table.
9.What's the difference between a Sterling Heights cash buyer and an iBuyer like Opendoor or Offerpad?⌄
iBuyers are national companies that buy newer, retail-condition homes in narrow price bands using algorithmic valuations. They charge service fees of 5–8%, deduct estimated repairs after inspection, and skip many Sterling Heights properties — anything built before a cutoff year, rentals, multi-family, or homes needing more than light cosmetic work. Local cash buyers, by contrast, buy any condition, charge no service fees, and actually cover all Sterling Heights ZIPs (48310, 48312, 48313, 48314). For most Sterling Heights homeowners, a local cash buyer is the only realistic instant-offer option.
10.Will I get more money selling to a cash buyer or listing with a Sterling Heights Realtor?⌄
If your home is in good condition, in a desirable Sterling Heights submarket (near Dodge Park, Stevenson High, or the Lakeside Mall corridor), and you can wait 30–60 days, a traditional MLS listing almost always nets more — even after the ~6% commission. Cash buyers earn their spread by taking risk: foundation issues, fire damage, evictions, probate delays. If none of those apply, you don't need them. Cash buyers win on distressed condition, distressed timeline, or distressed seller circumstance (divorce, relocation, inheritance, pre-foreclosure).
11.How do I know what a fair cash offer for my Sterling Heights home looks like?⌄
Run the ARV math yourself before calling anyone. Pull three sold comps within 0.5 miles of your Sterling Heights home — similar in square footage, beds, and baths — that closed in renovated condition in the last 6 months. Zillow, Redfin, or the Macomb County GIS site all work. Average those three sale prices to get your ARV. Estimate repairs at $35–$60 per square foot for full cosmetic rehab, more for structural work. A fair offer is roughly: (ARV × 0.75) − repairs. If a buyer comes in significantly below that, ask them to justify the comps and repair scope.
12.Is selling to a cash home buyer in Sterling Heights safe?⌄
It's safe when you transact through a licensed Michigan title company or a real estate attorney — never close in someone's living room with a personal check. Title companies verify the buyer's funds, hold earnest money in escrow, run the title search, prepare the deed, record everything with the Macomb County Register of Deeds, and disburse proceeds to you. As long as you insist on closing at a title company (every buyer on this list does), the transaction is protected by the same legal infrastructure as any traditional sale. The risk isn't the cash-buying model — it's skipping the title company.