001-858-304-5437 if your timeline is urgent or you want to talk through the situation.
Offer review
Review a California cash offer
Use this before accepting a cash offer. Compare speed, certainty, repairs, fees, price, concessions, closing timing, and what you might net if you listed instead.
Short answer
How do I request california cash offer review?
Use this before accepting a cash offer. Compare speed, certainty, repairs, fees, price, concessions, closing timing, and what you might net if you listed instead.
What to include
Details that make the follow-up more useful
How the request is used
What a useful real estate follow-up should cover
A good response should not feel like a generic sales call. It should connect to the page you were reading, the market you entered, your goal, and the timeline you selected. If you are selling, the follow-up should help clarify value range, likely buyer demand, preparation work, disclosure concerns, net proceeds, and whether your timing is realistic. If you are buying, it should help clarify budget, cash-to-close, financing strength, offer strategy, inspection risk, insurance, and which markets fit your constraints.
For high-stakes situations such as probate, inherited property, divorce, tenant-occupied homes, fire-zone insurance, unpermitted work, liens, cash offers, relocation timing, or affordability pressure, the first conversation should separate what can be answered from public information from what needs document review or a licensed professional. That protects the visitor and keeps the next step useful.
Example requests
Examples of requests that lead to better answers
“I own a 3-bed home in San Diego, may sell within 90 days, have an older roof, and want to know whether to repair before listing.”
“I am pre-approved up to $850k, looking in Sacramento and Elk Grove, and want to understand cash-to-close and offer strength.”
“I am comparing Irvine and Anaheim, need a market report by property type, and want to know whether sellers are negotiating.”
“I received a cash offer, but I need to compare fees, repairs, closing date, certainty, and likely net proceeds if I list.”
Primary sources to verify
- California Department of Real Estate escrow, agency, consumer guidance, licensing
- California Housing Finance Agency first-time buyers, down payment assistance, loan programs
- California Franchise Tax Board taxes, capital gains, withholding
- Internal Revenue Service capital gains exclusion, tax reporting, 1031 exchange