Duluth Georgia, We Buy Houses in 7 Days or Less!

Are you thinking of hiring a real estate agent to sell your Duluth home quickly?

Selling a house is usually a expensive and complicated process. That’s why real estate agents make such big commissions (often thousands and sometimes tens of thousands of dollars) on a single home sale. And most successful agents in Duluth, Georgia usually have 5, 20 or 20 houses listed at any given time knowing that these houses will probably sell within the next 3 to 6 months or longer. Since most of the good agents have so many listings, it’s rare that they will spend the time, money and personal attention needed to sell your house quickly. If you don’t have much equity in your home, your home selling options are even more limited. You may have to write a big check at closing in order to sell your Duluth house and cover any negative equity, closing costs, taxes, etc in addition to your agent’s large commission check.

There is a better way to sell your Duluth house faster, easier and more conveniently than ever before!

If you don’t want to sell your Duluth house for sale by owner or through a real estate agent, there is a much better solution… Sell your home to us in 7 days or less! We buy houses in Duluth Georgia in 7 days or less and we want to buy your house! We are not real estate agents who want to list and sell your house for a commission. We are local professional home buyers who want to buy your Duluth house and can do so quickly, often in 7 days or less with no commissions to pay. We buy houses from people just like you, in neighborhoods just like yours, in any area, condition or price range in Duluth, Georgia and the surrounding areas such as Sugar Hill, Buford, Cumming and Dacula, Georgia. We buy houses in other towns and cities across Georgia such as Atlanta, Augusta, Macon, Savannah, Valdosta, Gainesville and Athens. We buy newer houses, older houses, pretty houses and even ugly houses that need major repairs. We specialize in finding creative solutions to ugly real estate problems and situations that real estate agents and other traditional and professional home buyers just won’t touch. We can pay you all cash, take over your monthly mortgage payments or lease-option your house immediately! We’ll handle all of the paperwork, make all the arrangements and can close within a few days if necessary. You’ll get a quick sale with no hassles so you can put your home selling worries behind you once and for all.

Do you want to sell your Duluth, Georgia home in 7 days or less?

We”>http://www.we-buy-houses-atlanta-georgia.com”>We buy houses in Duluth Georgia in 7 days or less and we want to buy your house fast! To find out if your Duluth home qualifies for one of our fast home purchase programs, please take a moment to complete our Online Seller Questionnaire at www.we-buy-houses-atlanta-georgia.comwww.we-buy-houses-atlanta-georgia.com. Tell us all about your Duluth house for sale and we will get back to you about buying your house ASAP. If your Duluth home qualifies for one of our fast home purchase programs, one of our local professional home buyers will schedule an appointment to come out and inspect your property, take some photos and make you one or more offers to purchase your home on the spot! Selling your Duluth, Georgia home has never been faster, easier or more convenient!

To sell your house fast in Atlanta Georgia please complete our Home Seller Questionnaire.


Watch the video related to houses

Meet a man on a mission determined to make cheap, affordable housing for the common man in an Earth-friendly way. Dan Phillips, Huntsville, TX. www.phoenixcommotion.com. (#1017, 2/24/07)

Help answer the question about houses

How do I find out about houses for sale in a neighborhood I'm interested in?
I'm looking to purchase a house in a specific part of the neighborhood. I've walked by there several times and went to all the open houses I could find, but I didn't find anything I'm interested in. Besides constantly walking though the neighborhood looking for open houses and for sale signs, how can I find out when a new house has become available in the area without having to hire anyone? I browse through newspapers occasionally but I rarely find any houses I'm interested in listed there. I've also tried the internet but I'm kind of at a loss as to which sites would be helpful in this matter. I would really appreciate some advice.
Please don't suggest contacting a realtor – I've had 2 realtors working for me in the past 2 years and they have not helped me find anything I wasn't capable of finding myself, so I'm interested in methods where I could be the one looking instead of having a realtor do it for me.

About Author

One of the largest network of home buyers are right here your Atlanta backyard. We Buy houses all over the United States, but few people know that we are based out of Atlanta, Ga. So if you are trying to sell your house fast, we may be your home selling solution.

Recent Post



18 Responses to “Duluth Georgia, We Buy Houses in 7 Days or Less!”

  1. Anonymous says:

    Great story!!!

  2. Those houses are gorgeous.
    Great vid

  3. gregory_s19 says:

    Well here is the dirt of it.. you really need to have a hill of some size so that you can dig back into it.. you can't just dig a hole and jump into it.. that would be a grave.. so instead of a grave you need a cave.. a big enough cave to build a house in.. and of course you need to re-inforce the roof of the cave or else it could become a big grave.. and since most hills are rocky, diging a cave is not something you can do with a pick and shovel..you can dig a grave with a pick and shovel..but a cave requires moving a lot of dirt.. and it ain't easy.. yes it is economical and helpful to the environment.. and perhaps more people should do it.. but when they get all the dirty details… they decide that it is more desirable to build a house on top of the ground than it is to go in a hole.. and thats just about the whole dirty explanation..

  4. 4X3 H3R0 says:

    if they are short spikes they are to keep the birds away from the house….(3 in long) sounds cruel but bird poop will rot a hole in the house

    if they are long spikes it sounds like a old lightening rod

  5. Lola says:

    There are actually potentially several factors that affect household cleanliness, regardless of how many hours you spend working on it.

    First, how many people and pets are in your house and what are their ages? The more people and pets per square foot, the messier the house is going to get faster and be harder to keep clean.

    How are the people in the house about cleaning up after themselves as they go along? Even if you have, say, 3 people and no pets, if the people leave their things trailing through the house, get out everything in the kitchen every time they eat, leave dirty dishes, crumbs and open containers out, throw trash AT the can instead of putting it in the can, etc., etc., etc. – your house will never be clean no matter how much time you spend cleaning it. ONE personal slob can ruin it for everyone else in the house.

    How much organization do you have in place so that everything has a place it belongs? The more things that have to be "kept" out in plain sight, in stacks or piles, on counters, etc. the messier your house will look and the harder it will be to clean. If you want a house that appears clean most of the time and is relatively easy to clean you have to be brutal on clutter!

    Do pets and people track in debris from outside making floors a perpetual mess? Getting GOOD high-quality outdoor mats and indoor floor mats can save you hours of work per week trying to keep floors clean.

    My biggest home cleaning proactive trick is to outthink the mess. I look at what mess is giving me the most trouble and then figure out how I can short-circuit it – what can I do before hand to keep it from happening. I'm doing this constantly – looking at the next thing that bugs me most. This is a "forever" practice, I've been doing it for years. There's always some next thing that needs to be improved.

    The two most recent changes I made were, first, moving my daughter's toys and stuff all into a bedroom rather than in a "playroom" that was the first room when you walked in the front door. While I hate having her stuff in our shared bedroom (which is very large), it does more for my peace of mind to walk into a clean room when I come in the front door.

    Second, I put a larg-ish baker's rack in that front room (which I turned into my office since I'm in school full time). That is the dump-it spot for everyone's backpacks, keys, wallets, papers, mail, etc. Of the four of us here, 3 carry backpacks, 2 or us share a set of keys, 3 of us get mail, one has bike gear that gets dropped (helmet, gloves, etc., etc.) and I have one adult "slob" who leaves his stuff all over the house. Now, most of the stuff lands where it belongs, if it doesn't I can ride someone's hide to move it, and I have a clearly-defined grounds for getting PO'd if my "slob" leaves a trail through the house.

    If you set up good proactive measures for keeping it straight, it shouldn't take 30 hrs to clean every week. A house can be completely cleaned (as in toilets, floors, dusting, etc.) in 4-6 hours a week by one person. It's all the mess cleanup that takes so much time – picking up dirty laundry, taking out trash, unburying the furniture, etc. If everyone in the house were working together and all you had to do was cleaning – you could get EVERYTHING done in 4-6 hours, with the possible exception of laundry and seasonal tasks like cleaning light fixtures or washing exterior windows.

    One last factor, believe it or not, I THINK, is a person's inner peacefulness. This may seem weirder than weird, but when the people in the home are "ordered" inside, they seem to instinctively keep their environment ordered as well. That doesn't mean they are naturally organized, just that a peaceful inside produces a peaceful outside. Harmony in, harmony out.

  6. lost says:

    Set a lower asking price than the others (that doesn't mean you have to accept a ridiculously low offer).

    Stage it correctly … someone's already mentioned this. Google "tips on staging a home" or watch the TV show "Designed to Sell".

    Ask the realtor to have an open house.

    Put ads in the paper and free classifieds.

    Advertise it different ways … to business people, families, retirees, etc. Each group is looking for something different. Example: In a retirement living newsletter put an ad that emphasizes the easy floorplan and quiet neighborhood. Put another ad in the classifieds or in your church bulletin about how great the schools are and the friendly neighbors.

    Ask your realtor for other tips.

    Make sure it's listed online, in more than one place if possible. You can even put a classified in the Real Estate section on eBay!

    Repaint the outside a unique color (but not like neon or anything) to make it stand out.

    Make sure it needs NO work. Are the floors new? Cabinets? Appliances?

    Landscaping! Curb appeal is more important than we think it is.

  7. how do they get around local building codes?

  8. Chris Ryan says:

    If you know what base you are going to you can look at this site and see the floor plans on some of the housing. You will be eligible for a two bedroom.

    https://onestop.army.mil/

    Keep in mind some of those pictures are out of date and lots of new housing has been built on some of the bases. You will sign in to housing expect a waiting list. It can be anywhere from a few weeks to almost a year.

  9. to lamMeredithK: thats a real good question

  10. I’m not sure what I think about his reusing roofing tiles but everything else is great.

    I read a piece on him in the NY Times a couple days ago keep it going Dan!

  11. Dan, you ROCK!!! This is fantastic!!!

  12. sportzy922 says:

    …the "little" birds will flock in most anywhere… the thing to remember… the size of the entrance "hole" will most always determine the size of the bird looking for a home… Martins like the Hotel lifestyle… multi levels and lots of rooms all in one BIG building on a post about 10 ft. off the ground (and they eat bugs, bugs, bugs… "Google" up bird houses and check it out.

  13. Praise the Lord for this man! Giving people hope and sense of worth is a precious gift. And what a beautiful home!

  14. omg why would you want to flip a house? that would make a mess!

  15. Oh I saw this on TV and it was very good! Great idea.

  16. What a guy! That’s what it’s all about, giving back, teaching and inspiring people. If only we could all embrace these ideas the world would be a much better place. The homes shown here are cosy and made with love and care. I wish I owned one because it’s like a breath of fresh air after seeing all the mass produced, uniform, overpriced shoe boxes that most of us will have to opt for. Go for it dude – full steam ahead!! :)

  17. SARAH Owen says:

    I'm assuming that your talking about lintels over doors and windows. You can lower the ceiling height, or raise the window height to the ceiling.
    Cheap houses around here have 7ft ceilings with just the header around the outside walls and the windows go right up to the ceiling.
    Hope this helps

Leave a Reply