Cash Buyer vs iBuyer (Opendoor, Offerpad)
Local Cash Buyer vs Opendoor / Offerpad
iBuyers vs local cash buyers β fees, conditions, and the surprises sellers don't see coming.
iBuyers like Opendoor and Offerpad opened up a new way to sell a house β algorithmic offers, online process, fast close. They’re a real option, especially for cookie-cutter homes in active markets. But they’re not always the best fit, particularly for distressed properties, unusual situations, or specific Chicagoland sub-markets. Here’s the honest comparison.
Side-by-Side: Local Cash Buyer vs iBuyer
| Factor | iBuyer (Opendoor / Offerpad) | Dover Funds (Local) |
|---|---|---|
| Service fee | 5-13% of offer (varies) | $0 β none |
| Closing costs | 1-2% added on top | We cover them |
| Repair credits at inspection | Common β often surprise deductions | None β offer is final |
| Property condition limits | Strict β homes built post-1930, no major foundation/roof issues, no HOA restrictions, narrow age + size windows | None β we buy any condition |
| Distressed properties | Often won’t make an offer | Yes β our specialty |
| Tenant-occupied properties | Usually won’t buy | Yes β including problem tenants |
| Inherited / probate properties | Often complicated | Yes β we structure around it |
| Foreclosure / pre-foreclosure | Won’t help on tight timelines | Yes β close before sale date |
| Local market knowledge | Algorithm β limited | We live here, we know the streets |
| Negotiation flexibility | Limited β algorithmic | Real conversation, real flexibility |
When an iBuyer Makes Sense
- Move-in ready home in a major suburban market
- Standard floor plan, no unusual features
- Recent build (post-1990 ideal)
- No tenants, no probate, no distress
- You want a fully online experience and don’t need to talk to anyone
When a Local Cash Buyer Makes Sense
- The property has issues iBuyers reject β older home, unique floor plan, deferred maintenance
- You’re in a distressed situation with deadline pressure
- You want to know who you’re selling to β local people, not an algorithm
- You want negotiation flexibility on price, timeline, or terms
- The property is in an underserved market (south-Cook, Lake County affordable, distressed Kane areas) where iBuyers often won’t operate
- You’d rather avoid the surprise repair credit at the end of a deal
The Hidden Costs of an iBuyer Offer
iBuyers advertise their offers as “convenient” but the math after fees often surprises sellers. A $360,000 Opendoor offer typically nets the seller $310,000-$325,000 after the service fee (5-13%), closing costs (1-2%), and repair credits negotiated after the inspection. A Dover Funds offer is what we say it is β no service fee, no closing costs deducted, no repair credit surprises.
Get a Local Cash Offer in 48 Hours
Get an offer from us. Get an offer from Opendoor or Offerpad. Compare them apples-to-apples after fees and credits. Pick what’s better. Call 224-220-3245 or fill out the form.
Get Your Free Cash Offer in 48 Hours
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