Sell Your House With Code Violations in McLennan County, TX
You got a notice. Maybe the buyer walked. Maybe the city is threatening fines. Whatever brought you here, the situation feels harder than it needs to be. We buy houses with active code violations, failed inspections, condemned designations, and unpermitted additions throughout McLennan County. No repairs required.
We are Colby and Callie with Hippie Home Buyers, a family-owned company based in Howe, Texas. We buy homes across McLennan County with active code violations, failed inspections, unpermitted work, and condemned status. No repairs before closing. No remediation on your end. We handle everything after we close.
For the full details on Texas code violations and your options as a seller, read our complete guide: Selling a House With Code Violations in Texas.
What You Will Find on This Page
- My Waco House Failed Inspection and the Buyer Walked. What Are My Options?
- Common Code Violation Issues in McLennan County
- What Happens If I Ignore the Code Violation Notice?
- The City of Waco Has Condemned My Property. Can I Still Sell It?
- McLennan County Cities We Serve
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Get Your Cash Offer
- McLennan County Code Violations Resources
My Waco House Failed Inspection and the Buyer Walked. What Are My Options?
When a buyer’s lender orders an inspection and violations come back, the deal almost always falls apart. Lenders financing conventional, FHA, or VA loans will not fund the purchase of a home with active code violations or serious structural issues. The buyer does not have a choice: their lender pulls the financing, and you are left holding the property again.
Repair, Relist, and Hope
You can repair the violations, relist, and hope the next buyer sticks around. For minor issues this can work, but for foundation problems, electrical rewires, or significant structural work in Waco, the cost and timeline can be substantial. And there is no guarantee the next financed buyer will not walk too.
Sell As-Is to a Cash Buyer
A cash buyer sidesteps the lender entirely. No inspection contingencies, no appraisal requirements, no second failed deal. We make an offer based on the current condition of the property, you choose the closing date, and the violations become our problem after closing.
The Honest Trade-Off
A cash offer will be lower than a fully repaired retail sale. We account for the cost of bringing the property up to code and the risk involved. What you get in return is certainty. No contractors, no re-inspections, no wondering if the next buyer will stick around. You close and move on.
Common Code Violation Issues in McLennan County
McLennan County has a specific combination of soil conditions, aging housing stock, and decades of informal home improvement that creates recurring violation patterns we see throughout the area.
Foundation Movement From Clay Soil
This is the most common issue we see throughout Waco and the surrounding area. McLennan County sits on expansive clay soil that swells when wet and contracts in drought. Over time, that movement causes slabs to shift, doors and windows to stick, and visible cracks to appear inside and out. Foundation violations are among the most expensive to remediate, which is why so many homeowners find themselves stuck.
Aging Electrical Systems
Pre-1970 homes, particularly in East Waco and South Waco, often have knob-and-tube wiring, undersized panels, or aluminum branch circuit wiring that no longer meets code. These properties frequently fail inspection and cannot be financed until the electrical is brought up to current standards.
Roofing Violations
Wind damage, missing shingles, and deteriorated flashing are common across the county. When a roof reaches a point where it no longer provides adequate weatherproofing, it typically triggers a code notice or fails inspection outright.
Unpermitted Additions and Garage Conversions
Many established Waco neighborhoods have homes where previous owners converted garages, added rooms, or enclosed porches without pulling permits. These additions do not appear in county records, create insurance complications, and almost always surface during a sale.
Plumbing Issues in Older Housing Stock
Cast iron drain lines, galvanized supply pipes, and deteriorated water heaters in older homes create both habitability and code compliance problems. These are common in McLennan County’s mid-century housing stock and rarely cheap to fix.
Violations Do Not Have to Stop Your Sale
We buy McLennan County homes with active citations, failed inspections, and condemned status. Call us today for a real number.
✆ Call (903) 436-7381 Get a Cash Offer OnlineWhat Happens If I Ignore the Code Violation Notice?
Ignoring a code violation notice from the City of Waco does not make the problem go away. It almost always makes it worse and more expensive. Here is how it typically escalates.
Fines Accumulate
The City of Waco Code Compliance Division can issue daily fines once a violation is documented and unaddressed. Those fines can add up quickly over weeks and months, and they create liens against the property that must be resolved at closing.
Abatement Proceedings Begin
If fines do not produce action, the city can move toward abatement, where the municipality arranges for repairs or demolition and bills the property owner. This often results in a lien placed against the property for the city’s costs.
Condemned Designation
A property deemed unsafe for occupancy can be condemned. At that point, anyone living there must vacate and the restrictions on the property become significantly more limiting. A condemned designation does not prevent a cash sale, but it complicates nearly everything else.
The Property Gets Worse
Time works against you with code violations. A roof that needed repair becomes a roof that has caused interior water damage. A foundation issue that needed piers becomes a foundation issue that has cracked the slab. The longer violations sit unaddressed, the lower your eventual sale price will be.
If you received a notice and cannot afford to fix it, the time to act is now, before fines and conditions compound further. We can make an offer quickly and close before the situation gets worse.
The City of Waco Has Condemned My Property. Can I Still Sell It?
Yes. A condemned designation means the property has been deemed unsafe for occupancy. It does not mean the property cannot be sold.
What it does mean is that conventional buyers with lender financing are out of the picture. No lender will finance a condemned property. But a cash buyer operates outside that system entirely.
We buy condemned properties in Waco and throughout McLennan County. You do not need to remediate anything before we close. Once we purchase the property, we handle all repairs, remediation, and dealings with the city. That becomes our job, not yours. You walk away clean.
McLennan County Cities We Serve
We buy homes with code violations throughout McLennan County. Here is what we see most in each major market.
Waco
Priority MarketWaco has the most active code enforcement environment in McLennan County. The City of Waco Code Compliance Division is responsive and consistent about documented violations. Foundation issues from the area’s clay soil affect properties throughout the city, from older neighborhoods near Baylor to mid-century homes in South Waco and East Waco.
We are active buyers throughout Waco and can move quickly if a compliance deadline is driving your timeline. Call us and we will tell you honestly whether there is enough time to close before the situation escalates.
Hewitt
Priority MarketHewitt‘s older sections have a meaningful number of unpermitted additions and garage conversions from prior decades. These properties sell fine to cash buyers but create complications with financed buyers during inspection. If your Hewitt home has unpermitted work that has killed a deal, we can make you an offer as-is.
We buy Hewitt homes in any condition and can close on your timeline. No permits required before closing, no repairs, no cleanup.
Robinson
Priority MarketRobinson‘s established neighborhoods have older homes with aging systems. Electrical panels, original plumbing, and roofing in many Robinson properties are approaching or past the end of useful life. These homes can look fine on the outside and still fail inspection when a buyer’s lender takes a closer look.
We buy Robinson homes as-is regardless of condition or violation status. If your property has failed inspection or has issues that have prevented a traditional sale, call us and we will give you a straight answer about what we can offer.
Bellmead, Lacy-Lakeview, McGregor, China Spring, Moody, and Lorena
Serving All McLennan CountySmaller cities and unincorporated areas in McLennan County may not have the same formal code enforcement infrastructure as Waco, but the financing barrier is identical. If a property has visible structural issues, electrical problems, or fails inspection, a financed buyer will walk regardless of whether the city has issued a formal notice.
We buy homes throughout McLennan County in any condition. Call us at (903) 436-7381 and we will give you an honest number regardless of where your property is located.
Frequently Asked Questions About Code Violations in McLennan County
Ready for a Clear Way Forward? Let’s Talk.
If your McLennan County home has code violations, a failed inspection, or a condemned notice, you have a clear path out. No repairs, no commissions, no fees. We close in seven days or on your timeline.
We are local, we are fast, and we buy houses other buyers will not touch.
For the full details on Texas code enforcement law and your options as a seller, read: Selling a House With Code Violations in Texas
McLennan County Code Violations Resources
- City of Waco Code Compliance Division
The department that handles code violation notices, inspections, and abatement proceedings within Waco city limits. Contact for information on active violations and compliance timelines
- City of Waco Inspection Services
Handles building permits, inspections, and code compliance for construction and renovation work in Waco, including retroactive permitting for unpermitted additions
- McLennan Central Appraisal District
Look up property records, verify square footage on file, and check for any tax liens or discrepancies from unpermitted additions
- Texas State Law Library — Building Codes Guide
Covers Texas laws that adopt residential and commercial building codes, including local code requirements and how municipalities enforce compliance
- Texas Property Code — Chapter 92
Official Texas statutes outlining owner rights and responsibilities related to habitability, repairs, and code compliance for residential properties