We are a cash home buyer. We are going to tell you, honestly, how to spot the bad ones. Not because it helps us in the short run — it probably doesn't — but because a homeowner who has been burned by a bad cash buyer is a homeowner who (rightly) never trusts one again. And there are real situations where a real cash buyer is the right answer. The industry needs fewer bad actors.
Here is our field guide.
Red flag #1: pressure to sign on the first visit
Any buyer who insists you sign a contract today, at your kitchen table, before you've had a chance to read it or get a second opinion, is not acting in your interest. Legitimate cash buyers are happy for you to take a day to review. A real offer doesn't evaporate overnight.
Common pressure tactics to watch for:
- "This offer is only good until I leave your driveway."
- "If you don't sign now, I can't guarantee this price."
- Bringing someone with them and tag-teaming the conversation.
- Refusing to leave a copy of the contract for you to review.
- Discouraging you from showing the contract to an attorney or family member.
Red flag #2: no local presence
Ask where they are based. Ask for their company's physical address. Ask if you can meet at their office. Out-of-state operators who have never set foot in Pinellas County are not inherently bad people, but they are often wholesalers who need to flip your contract to a real end-buyer to actually close. That introduces risk.
Local buyers close their own deals. You should be able to verify:
- A Florida-registered business name (search sunbiz.org).
- A real Pinellas County address, not just a mailing forwarding service.
- Prior closings on public record — most title companies and investors leave a paper trail.
How to verify a Florida LLC in 60 seconds
Go to sunbiz.org, search the company name, and look at the filing history. A real operating company has a clean history, a Florida agent, and recent annual reports filed. A newly formed LLC with no history is not necessarily bad, but it's worth asking about.
Red flag #3: tiny earnest money
Earnest money — the deposit a buyer makes to show they're serious — is one of the fastest ways to tell a legitimate buyer from a tire-kicker. On a Pinellas property worth $200,000+, an earnest money deposit of $500 or less is a red flag. A real cash buyer will put down 1% or more, held at a reputable title company or escrow agent, and they'll write that into the contract plainly.
Low earnest money means the buyer has almost no consequences for walking away. You want them to have skin in the game.
Red flag #4: "and/or assigns" without explanation
When a contract names the buyer as "John Doe and/or assigns," or has a clause permitting assignment, it means the person signing can sell the contract to a different buyer before closing. That's wholesaling.
Wholesaling is not illegal, and not automatically bad — some wholesalers actually find good end-buyers and close on time. But as the seller, you want to know which of these you're dealing with. Ask:
- "Are you planning to close on this yourself, or assign it to another buyer?"
- "If you assign it, what happens if that buyer backs out?"
- "Can we strike the assignment clause from the contract?"
If they won't strike assignment, that tells you something. If they lie about whether they plan to assign, that tells you a lot more.
Red flag #5: no title company named in the contract
A real cash buyer already has a relationship with a local title company. The contract should name that title company, or at minimum specify that closing will occur at a mutually acceptable, licensed Florida title agent or real estate attorney's office.
If the buyer is vague about where closing will happen, or wants to use "their guy" who isn't a recognizable title company, ask more questions. In Pinellas we regularly close at several reputable firms — any legitimate buyer can name one immediately.
Red flag #6: the number moves at the last minute
A cash buyer who re-trades the price during the inspection period — suddenly finding a major issue that wasn't really a major issue — is one of the most common bad-actor patterns. The maneuver looks like this: they lock you into a contract at a strong price, wait until your options feel limited (maybe days before a tax sale, or after you've told the other buyers no), then come back saying they need to reduce the price by $15,000 because of "unexpected problems."
Real issues found during inspection should be discussed openly and only adjust the price when they're genuinely material. A re-trade for a reason that anyone could have seen on the first walk-through is not negotiating in good faith.
Red flag #7: they won't let you talk to anyone
Legitimate cash buyers encourage you to:
- Talk to a real estate attorney.
- Compare their offer to a second or third opinion.
- Have a family member review the contract.
- Call the title company directly to verify the deal is real.
Bad-actor cash buyers discourage all of these. They'll say it's "too expensive to involve an attorney" or that other buyers "will lowball you and waste your time." These are not the statements of someone working in your interest.
Red flag #8: no clear company history or reviews
In 2026, every legitimate local buyer has some footprint. A website. Google Business reviews. A BBB profile. Past closings recorded at the Pinellas Clerk. Past sellers willing to take a phone call.
Ask the buyer for references — one or two prior sellers who would be willing to talk with you for five minutes about their experience. A serious buyer has them. A wholesaler passing through town does not.
Questions to ask any cash buyer, before you sign anything
- "What is the legal name of the company that will sign the contract, and where is it registered?"
- "What earnest money will you put down, with whom, and when?"
- "Do you intend to close yourself, or assign the contract?"
- "What title company will handle the closing?"
- "How long is your inspection period, and what would cause you to re-trade the price?"
- "Who pays the closing costs?"
- "What happens to the contents I leave in the house?"
- "Can I see a previous contract you closed in Pinellas, with the prior seller's permission?"
- "May I take this to an attorney to review before I sign?"
- "What's your timeline from contract to closing?"
A legitimate buyer answers all 10 clearly and without hesitation. A legitimate buyer is not offended by the questions.
Green flags — what a good cash buyer looks like
- Local, Florida-registered LLC with a real Pinellas presence.
- Clear company history you can verify on sunbiz.org.
- Willingness to leave a copy of the contract for you to review.
- Meaningful earnest money at a reputable title company.
- No assignment clause, or willingness to strike it.
- Named title company in the contract.
- Short, reasonable inspection period (5–10 days is normal).
- Willingness to let you talk to prior sellers.
- Honest answer when a listing might be better for you.
- No pressure tactics. Period.
What we commit to
For the record, here's what we put in writing for every Pinellas seller we work with: we operate as Tampete Homes LLC, registered in Florida with a real local presence. We do not assign contracts without disclosing it and getting your agreement. We put real earnest money at a named Pinellas title company. We pay standard closing costs. We do not re-trade unless there is a genuine, material surprise — and if we do, we explain it in writing. We're happy to be the buyer you check up on.
Got an offer from another buyer?
If you want a second opinion on a cash contract someone else put in front of you — even if it's not ours — send it over. We'll read it honestly and tell you what we see. Doesn't cost you anything.
Have a specific situation? Reach outDealing with a similar situation?
We'll walk your property, give you straight answers on your options, and only make an offer if it's genuinely the right move. No pressure. No obligation.
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