Selling your home without a real estate agent — also known as FSBO (For Sale By Owner) — can save you tens of thousands in commission fees. But Florida has specific legal requirements, and the process is more demanding than most sellers expect. Here is everything you need to know before going it alone.
Florida does not require a real estate agent to sell a home. However, you will need to handle every aspect of the transaction yourself, including pricing, marketing, legal disclosures, contract negotiation, and closing coordination.
Pricing is the most critical decision in any home sale. FSBO sellers frequently overprice — which leads to extended days on market and eventual price cuts — or underprice, leaving money on the table. Use these tools to establish a realistic range:
Florida law imposes significant disclosure obligations on sellers under the landmark Johnson v. Davis (1985) ruling. You must disclose any fact that materially affects the value of the property and is not readily observable — regardless of whether the buyer asks. Failing to disclose is not just an ethical breach; it can expose you to rescission of the sale and significant monetary damages years after closing.
Required disclosures typically include:
Without MLS access, FSBO sellers are at a structural disadvantage. The MLS drives the majority of qualified buyer traffic. Your options:
Florida FSBO sellers typically use the FR/BAR contract (Florida Realtors/Florida Bar approved form) or a real-estate-attorney-drafted contract. Never rely on a generic purchase agreement found online — Florida has specific contingency, escrow, and closing requirements that generic forms omit.
Key contract elements to understand:
Florida is an attorney state for some but not all closings — title companies commonly handle residential closings. You will need a licensed title company or real estate attorney to conduct the title search, issue title insurance, and coordinate the closing. Budget for your share of closing costs, which typically include title insurance (seller pays the owner's policy in most Florida counties), document stamp taxes ($0.70 per $100 of purchase price on the deed), and prorated property taxes.
Advantages
Disadvantages
FSBO works best when you have the time, patience, and confidence to handle the legal and logistical complexity, your home is move-in ready and priced correctly, and the local market is hot enough that buyer demand will find your listing regardless of MLS placement.
FSBO is a poor fit when your home needs significant repairs, when you're facing time pressure (relocation, foreclosure, divorce, probate), or when the complexity of the transaction exceeds your comfort level. In these situations, the commission savings often evaporate through extended carrying costs, pricing mistakes, or a failed transaction.
If your goal is to avoid agent commissions and close quickly, a direct cash buyer achieves both objectives without the complexity of FSBO. You skip the MLS, the showings, the inspection negotiations, the financing contingency risk, and the 30 to 45-day traditional closing timeline. Cash buyers like We Help Florida Sellers purchase homes in any condition, with no commissions or fees, and can close in as few as 7 days.
The trade-off is a below-retail purchase price — but when you factor in repair costs, carrying costs, agent commissions, and the risk of a failed sale, the net proceeds are often comparable. If you want to compare, request a no-obligation cash offer and use it as a benchmark against your FSBO price expectations.
Selling FSBO in Florida is legally possible and financially attractive on paper — but the process is more demanding than most sellers anticipate. Before committing to months of effort, get a cash offer as a data point. You may find the difference is smaller than expected, and the simplicity is worth far more.
Skip the FSBO Hassle
No listings, no showings, no negotiations. We make you a fair cash offer in 24 hours and close on your schedule — anywhere in Florida.