Sell Land As-Is for Cash

    Sell land as-is for cash. LandCash reviews overgrown, inherited, vacant, rural, back-tax, landlocked, wetland, and no-perc parcels without agent fees.

    Selling land as-is means you are not trying to turn an imperfect parcel into a perfect retail listing before you know whether a serious buyer exists. That can matter when the land is overgrown, inherited, tax-burdened, has no perc test, has wetlands, lacks road frontage, or needs title cleanup.

    • No cleanup required before review
    • No survey or appraisal required to ask for an offer
    • Useful for overgrown, wooded, wetland, or no-perc parcels
    • Can include inherited land, back taxes, or title questions
    • Direct cash buyer review
    • Clear comparison against listing traditionally

    As-is does not mean no diligence

    • we still review title, taxes, access, and owner information
    • zoning, utilities, perc, wetlands, and road frontage can change value
    • some issues can be handled through closing; others affect the offer
    • the point is to price the real parcel instead of pretending it is perfect

    When as-is is usually smarter than fixing first

    • cleanup or testing may cost more than it adds to value
    • you are not sure the parcel has a retail buyer pool
    • the main issues are title, taxes, access, or marketability rather than appearance
    • you want a real cash number before spending more money

    Where LandCash buys land

    LandCash is a direct cash land buyer for Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, Washington DC, and New Jersey. We review vacant lots, inherited land, rural acreage, land with back taxes or liens, and parcels that need a buyer who understands title, access, zoning, utilities, and county-level land demand.

    Quick answers

    Can I sell land as-is without a survey?

    Yes. A parcel number, county, address if available, acreage, and owner information are usually enough to start the review.

    Does as-is land sell for less?

    Sometimes. The offer depends on the actual issues, market demand, and closing risk. The benefit is avoiding upfront costs and months of guessing.

    What to send before you ask for an offer

    The fastest way to get a useful land offer is to share the county, parcel number or address, owner name on record, rough acreage, and anything you already know about road access, utilities, zoning, taxes, liens, probate, or old title issues. You do not need a survey or formal appraisal before requesting a review. If you have a deed, tax bill, prior listing, plat, perc result, HOA letter, or county notice, those details can help separate easy parcels from ones that need more underwriting.

    A good cash-offer review should explain the tradeoff clearly. Listing may make sense when the parcel is clean, buildable, well-located, and you have time to wait for a retail buyer. A direct sale may make more sense when the property is inherited, rural, vacant, landlocked, tax-burdened, hard to finance, or simply costing you time and money without a clear plan.

    Start with the seller problem you are trying to solve

    The right path depends on why the land has not sold yet. Some sellers need speed, some need a cash buyer, some need help with inherited or rural property, and some want to sell land without a realtor. Use these guides to compare the tradeoffs before requesting an offer.