Landlord math changes. Insurance premiums climb, Strafford County property taxes reassess, regulations tighten, and the roof you deferred in year three is due in year eight. When the spreadsheet that once said "hold" starts saying "sell," speed matters — every additional month of a marginal rental is money and attention you're not getting back. A direct cash sale converts the asset to capital in days, without evictions, renovations, or vacancy risk. In a county of about 132,575 people where the typical home runs $363,000, situations like this are more common than anyone admits out loud.
The occupied-property problem, solved by the right buyer
Try listing an occupied rental in Strafford County and you'll meet every obstacle at once: tenants who decline showings or "forget" appointments, photos you can't stage, buyers' lenders who want the unit vacant, and — if you try to empty it first — the cost, delay, and legal exposure of ending a tenancy just to sell. Months of vacancy while you renovate for a retail buyer completes the loss.
Investor buyers invert all of it. Tenants in place aren't an obstacle — they're day-one revenue. The lease transfers, the deposits transfer, the tenant often never experiences more than a single walkthrough and a new address for the rent check. What made your property hard to list is exactly what makes it easy to sell to the right buyer.
Direct sale vs. listing a rental: the operator's math
A retail listing wants your rental vacant, renovated, and staged — three expensive things that destroy its value as an operating asset in the meantime. An investor purchase wants it exactly as it runs today. When you account for the vacancy, renovation spend, and months of market time the retail path requires, the direct sale usually wins on net proceeds and always wins on certainty.
- Tenants stay — lease and deposits transfer at closing
- Sell exactly as-is: no repairs, no cleaning, no staging, no showings
- No agent commissions, no closing-cost surprises — the offer you accept is the number you get
- Local buyers who already know your market — not a national call center
Strafford County by the numbers
At a median household income near $89,000, Strafford County has the kind of steady, working market where investment buyers stay active in every season — good news when your timeline is measured in days. Because Strafford County is part of a metro area, the buyer pool here is deep: our network typically includes multiple active purchasers competing for NH properties, and competition is what pushes offers up. The typical home in Strafford County is worth about $363,000, right in line with the New Hampshire county median — so local buyers here know exactly what fair pricing looks like.
New Hampshire landlord exit notes
A sale doesn't void a lease — in New Hampshire, as everywhere, the tenancy transfers with the property and the new owner inherits its terms, which is exactly what investor buyers expect. Security deposits transfer at closing, tenants get notified of the new owner, and your obligations end at the closing table. New Hampshire's transfer tax is steep at 1.5% total ($0.75 per $100 on each side) — split between buyer and seller. Also worth a conversation with your CPA: depreciation recapture and capital gains on investment property have planning options (including 1031 exchanges) that reward deciding your exit before you close. (General information, not tax or legal advice.)
You've run the numbers a hundred times at midnight. Run one more: get a real cash offer for your Strafford County rental as it operates today — tenants, repairs list, and all — and see what exiting actually pays. The offer is free and obligates you to nothing.
Get My Cash Offer