Key Florida Case Law: Johnson v. Davis (1985) 480 So. 2d 625 — Florida's Supreme Court established that sellers must disclose all material defects, even when selling “as-is.” This ruling fundamentally shapes every as-is sale in Florida.
“As-is” is one of the most misunderstood terms in Florida real estate. Many sellers believe it means “no disclosures required” or “buyer takes all the risk.” Neither is true. Understanding what as-is actually means — legally and practically — is essential before you list your home.
In Florida real estate, “as-is” means the seller is marketing the property in its current physical condition and is not agreeing to make any repairs as part of the sale. The seller is not warranting the condition of the property, and the price reflects the property as it currently stands.
What as-is does not mean:
The 1985 Florida Supreme Court ruling in Johnson v. Davis is the most important legal concept every Florida home seller must understand. In that case, the Davises purchased a home from the Johnsons. After the sale, the Davises discovered the roof — which the Johnsons had known was defective — leaked badly. The Johnsons had concealed the defect.
The Florida Supreme Court ruled: sellers of residential property have a legal duty to disclose facts that:
This duty applies even in as-is sales. The as-is clause shifts the repair obligation to the buyer — it does not eliminate the seller's duty to disclose known material defects.
Florida law (and the standard FR/BAR As-Is Residential Contract) requires disclosure of all known material defects. In practice, this includes:
The Florida Realtors/Florida Bar As-Is Residential Contract is the most commonly used as-is contract form. Under this contract, the buyer retains the right to conduct inspections during an inspection period (typically 10 to 15 days). The key difference from a standard contract: in the as-is contract, the buyer can terminate the contract for any reason during the inspection period and receive their deposit back.
This means an as-is sale does not guarantee the buyer won't walk away. In competitive markets, buyers routinely use the inspection contingency period to negotiate price reductions even after seeing the as-is listing. Be prepared for re-negotiation, especially on properties with deferred maintenance.
Pricing an as-is property requires honesty about the discount buyers expect. The discount varies significantly based on:
When selling as-is, the buyer type matters enormously. A buyer using conventional financing will have their lender order an appraisal — and the appraiser may flag issues that require correction before the loan funds. An FHA or VA buyer faces even stricter property condition requirements.
Cash buyers like We Help Florida Sellers have no lender to satisfy. We purchase properties in any condition — with any known defects — and our offer is not contingent on appraisal or inspection. This eliminates the most common reasons as-is sales collapse.
Myth: As-is means I don't have to disclose anything
Reality: False. You must still disclose all known material defects under Johnson v. Davis. Non-disclosure can lead to rescission and damages.
Myth: The buyer can't inspect the property
Reality: False. Under the FR/BAR As-Is contract, the buyer has a full inspection period (typically 10-15 days) and can terminate for any reason.
Myth: As-is protects me from all legal liability
Reality: False. Active fraud or concealment of known defects remains actionable regardless of as-is language in the contract.
Myth: I'll get the same price whether the home needs repairs or not
Reality: False. Buyers and appraisers account for condition. Significant deferred maintenance will always be reflected in the purchase price.
Selling as-is is the right choice when the cost of repairs exceeds the value they would add at sale, when you need to close quickly and don't have time for a renovation, when you're dealing with an inherited property in unknown condition, or when you simply don't want the stress of managing contractors and showings.
For most sellers in these situations, a direct cash offer is the cleanest path. You know the price, you know the timeline, and you know the deal won't fall apart over an inspection. For a free, no-obligation cash offer on your Florida home in any condition, call us at 954-998-3540.
True As-Is Purchase — No Conditions
We buy Florida homes in any condition — no appraisal, no financing contingency, no re-negotiation after inspection. Get a genuine as-is cash offer in 24 hours.