When homeowners look at their dated or cluttered property in places like Polk or Volusia County, they often see a “charming weekend project.” They look at fully renovated houses selling on the MLS for $300,000 and assume their house is worth $260,000 because “it just needs a little TLC.”
As a licensed real estate broker who also buys houses to flip, I have to manage real numbers, not HGTV television fantasies. Labor and material costs in 2026 are at an all-time high.
If your home has major deferred maintenance, here is the raw, unvarnished look at what a professional renovation budget actually looks like this month under the $300k threshold:
The Real Renovation Price Tags
- The 15-Year Insurance Roof Wall: $14,000 – $18,000 (Private insurance carriers are completely non-renewing shingle roofs over 15 years old. If your roof is dated, a retail buyer can’t get a mortgage until this is paid upfront).
- Complete HVAC Mechanical Swap: $7,500 – $9,500 (With 2026 energy compliance standards, a new system is non-negotiable).
- The 4-Point Electrical Upgrade: $8,000 – $12,000 (Insurance companies are blacklisting older panels like Federal Pacific or outdated aluminum wiring).
- Cosmetic Overhaul (Kitchen, Baths, Flooring, Paint): $35,000 – $50,000.
The Math: Retail Hopes vs. Direct Cash Reality
If you try to list a house that needs this work on the MLS for $260,000, financed retail buyers will run away the minute they read the 4-point inspection report.
The Hybrid Solution: We Provide the Clean Break
This is where my dual role protects you. If you have the cash and the time to handle a $70,000 renovation yourself, my brokerage arm will happily list it for you when you’re done.
But if you want to skip the contractors, avoid the 6% commission, and stop the monthly utility bleed, my investment company will buy it directly from you for cash, 100% As-Is, up to $300,000. We close in 7 days and handle the renovation headaches on our own dime.
Contact We Buy Houses Fast in Orlando today to get a real, data-driven look at your property’s direct cash value versus its traditional listing potential.