Need to Sell a House With Code Violations in Grayson County? We Buy It As-Is

Code violations don’t have to mean you’re stuck. Whether you’ve got an active notice from the City of Sherman, a failed inspection in Denison, foundation issues flagged by a buyer, or a property the city has tagged, we can still make you a cash offer. You don’t fix anything. We handle all of it after closing.
We’re Colby and Callie with Hippie Home Buyers. We’re based in Howe, right here in Grayson County, and we buy houses in any condition, code violations, failed inspections, unpermitted work, and all. If you want the full legal details on what code violations mean for a Texas home sale, we’ve put together a complete guide: Selling a House With Code Violations in Texas.
What You'll Learn:
- → Why Code Violations Make a Traditional Sale Nearly Impossible
- → Common Code Violation Issues We See in Grayson County
- → Code Enforcement in Grayson County: What to Know
- → We Buy Condemned and Violation-Tagged Properties Too
- → City Callouts for Grayson County Homeowners
- → Frequently Asked Questions
- → Ready to Sell Regardless of Condition? Get Your Cash Offer Today
Why Code Violations Make a Traditional Sale Nearly Impossible
If you’ve tried listing a house with code violations, or even just an inspection that came back with serious issues on inspection, you already know how this goes. You find a buyer, they get an inspection, the report comes back, and suddenly you’re either funding $40,000 in repairs or watching the deal fall apart.
The problem isn’t just buyers walking away. It’s the financing.
Most conventional lenders, FHA, VA, and many conventional loan programs won’t finance a home with active code violations or certain failing conditions. That means even motivated buyers who want the house can’t buy it through traditional financing. Your buyer pool shrinks to cash buyers and investors, and most of them lowball aggressively because they know you have limited options.
You end up in a situation where you can’t sell without fixing it, can’t afford to fix it, and can’t get a fair price even if you do. That’s the trap. We’re the exit.
Common Code Violation Issues We See in Grayson County
Foundation Problems From North Texas Clay Soil
This is the big one in Grayson County. North Texas clay soil expands when it gets wet and contracts when it dries, and it does both dramatically. Over years of seasonal cycles, that movement causes foundation shifting, cracking, and settling, which show up as sloping floors, sticking doors and windows, and visible cracks in walls and ceilings.
Foundation repair in North Texas is expensive, commonly $10,000 to $30,000 or more, depending on severity, and it’s one of the most common reasons buyers walk and lenders decline. If your Sherman or Denison home has foundation issues that an inspector or the city has flagged, you’re not alone, and you’re not out of options.
Aging Electrical Systems in Older Homes
A significant portion of Sherman and Denison’s housing stock was built before 1970. Many of those homes still have original electrical systems, aluminum wiring, outdated panels, and ungrounded outlets, all of which fail modern safety standards. These issues routinely come up in inspections and can trigger code enforcement action, particularly in owner-occupied or rental properties that have been reported.
Electrical upgrades aren’t cheap, and they’re not optional for a traditional sale. We buy these homes without requiring any electrical work.
Roofing Violations
Roof condition is one of the most commonly cited issues in Grayson County code enforcement. A roof that’s past its useful life, visibly deteriorating, or showing active leak damage can result in a violation notice, and it will absolutely kill a financed sale the moment it shows up on an inspection report. We factor roof condition into our offer and take it from there.
Unpermitted Additions and Garage Conversions
Grayson County saw many DIY additions and garage conversions over the years, finished garages, added rooms, enclosed porches, often done without permits. When these show up in a title search or inspection, they create real problems for traditional buyers who need financing. Unpermitted work can require demolition or retroactive permitting, neither of which is cheap or fast. We buy homes with unpermitted work as-is.
Code Enforcement in Grayson County: What to Know
Sherman has the most active code enforcement department in the county. As the county seat and largest city, Sherman regularly enforces building codes, property maintenance standards, and zoning requirements. If you’ve received a violation notice from the City of Sherman, there’s typically a compliance deadline attached. If you can’t meet it, the city can begin abatement proceedings or impose fines. Selling before that deadline is often the cleanest exit.
Denison has a similarly active enforcement environment, particularly in older historic neighborhoods where aging infrastructure is common. Denison’s historic character means many beautiful older homes with serious system issues beneath the surface, electrical, plumbing, and structural problems that have accumulated over decades.
Smaller towns — Whitesboro, Gunter, Tom Bean, and Bells generally have less aggressive enforcement, but minimum property standards still apply. Properties in smaller Grayson County communities with significant issues can still be difficult or impossible to sell through traditional channels, even without an active violation notice.
We Buy Condemned and Violation-Tagged Properties Too
Even if the city has formally condemned your property or posted a notice, we can still evaluate it and make an offer. A condemned designation doesn’t mean the property has no value; it means it can’t be occupied in its current condition. For a cash buyer who plans to remediate and renovate, that’s a starting point, not a dead end.
If you’re dealing with a condemned property in Sherman or Denison, call us before assuming you have no options. The situation is almost always more workable than it feels.
City Callouts for Grayson County Homeowners
Sherman
Sherman’s code enforcement is active and has real teeth; fines, abatement orders, and escalating notices are all on the table if violations go unaddressed. If you’ve received a notice from the City of Sherman and the repair costs exceed what you can afford, selling as-is to a cash buyer is often the most practical path. We know Sherman well; we buy there regularly, and we can move fast if a compliance deadline is driving your timeline.
Denison
Denison’s older housing stock, particularly in the historic neighborhoods near downtown, tends to accumulate issues over time. Buyers fall in love with the character and then get cold feet when the inspection comes back. If you’ve been through that cycle once or twice and you’re done trying to sell conventionally, we’re a straightforward alternative. We buy Denison homes in any condition, including historic charm and code violations.
Smaller Grayson County Towns
If your property is in Whitesboro, Gunter, Tom Bean, Howe, or one of the smaller communities in the county, you may not have an active code enforcement notice, but your house is still hard to sell. Buyers using financing can’t get loans approved on properties with significant issues, regardless of whether the city has formally flagged them. We buy in smaller Grayson County towns the same way we buy in Sherman and Denison, as-is, for cash, no repairs required.
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Frequently Asked Questions — Code Violations and Home Sales in Grayson County
Can I sell a house with an active code violation notice in Texas?
Yes. You can sell a property with an active code violation notice in Texas; there’s no law preventing the sale. The challenge is that most buyers using conventional financing can’t purchase a home with active violations, which limits your buyer pool to cash buyers. We regularly buy houses with active violation notices. The violation transfers with the property, and we handle remediation after closing. If there’s a compliance deadline, let us know upfront so we can work toward closing before it becomes a bigger issue.
What if I can't afford to fix the violations before selling?
That’s exactly the situation we’re built for. You don’t need to fix anything before selling to us. We assess the property in its current condition, factor the repair and remediation costs into our offer, and take care of everything after closing. The trade-off is that our offer reflects those costs; it will be lower than what the house would sell for fully repaired. But for most homeowners in this situation, the certainty and speed of a cash sale is worth more than waiting on repairs they can’t fund.
Will foundation problems prevent me from selling?
Not with us. Foundation issues are one of the most common reasons traditional sales fall apart in Grayson County, but they don’t affect our ability to buy. Colby will walk the property, honestly assess the foundation condition, and make an offer that reflects the scope of repairs. We’ve bought homes with significant foundation issues in Sherman and Denison, and we know what that work actually costs.
My house has unpermitted additions. Is that a problem?
Not for us. Unpermitted additions, finished garages, added rooms, and enclosed porches are common in Grayson County homes that have been updated informally over the years. They create real problems for financed buyers, but they don’t affect a cash sale. We buy homes with unpermitted work as-is. You don’t need to pull retroactive permits or tear anything out before closing.
How do you determine the offer price on a house with violations?
We start with what the house would be worth in good condition, based on comparable sales in the area, and then work backward from the cost of repairs and remediation needed to get it there. We explain the math when we present the offer, so you’re not guessing how we arrived at the number. If you think our repair estimate is off, tell us; we’d rather have that conversation than lose a deal over a misunderstanding.
Ready to Sell Regardless of Condition? Get Your Cash Offer Today
You don’t have to keep carrying a property that’s become a burden. Whether it’s an active violation notice, a failed inspection, foundation issues, or a house that’s just too far gone to sell the traditional way, we can make you an offer.
No repairs. No remediation on your end. No judgment about how it got here. Just a straightforward cash offer and a closing date that works for you.
Call or text Colby: (903) 436-7381 Email: hippie@hippiehomebuyers.com Or get a cash offer online →
We’re local, we know Grayson County, and we buy houses other buyers won’t touch.
For the full details on Texas code enforcement law, what violations mean for your title, and your legal options as a seller, read our complete guide: Selling a House With Code Violations in Texas
Ready to Sell Regardless of Condition? Get Your Cash Offer Today
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Additional Resources for Grayson County Landlords Selling Rental Property
If you're a landlord in Grayson County considering selling a tenant-occupied property, these trusted local and state resources provide additional information on your legal obligations, tenant rights, and the selling process:
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Grayson County – The Landlord/Tenant Relationship Guide
Official Grayson County resource covering lease agreements, eviction procedures, security deposits, and notice requirements for local landlords and tenants. -
Grayson County Justice of the Peace – Precinct 1
The Grayson County court that handles eviction filings, small claims, and landlord-tenant disputes. Includes forms, filing instructions, and contact information in Sherman. -
Grayson Central Appraisal District – Property Search & Tax Info
Look up current property values, tax rates, and exemption information for rental properties in Grayson County. Useful for landlords evaluating whether to keep or sell. -
Texas Property Code – Chapter 92: Residential Tenancies
Official Texas statutes governing landlord-tenant relationships, including security deposit transfers, lease obligations, and tenant protections when a property changes ownership. -
Texas State Law Library – Landlord/Tenant Law Guide
Comprehensive legal resource covering lease termination, eviction procedures, security deposit rules, and links to tenant assistance organizations across Texas. -
Texas Law Help – When Rental Property Changes Ownership
Free legal information explaining what happens to existing leases, security deposits, and tenant rights when a landlord sells a rental property in Texas. -
Texas Attorney General – Renter's Rights
Official state resource outlining tenant protections including quiet enjoyment, landlord access requirements, security deposit obligations, and eviction procedures. -
TREC – Seller's Disclosure Notice
The Texas Real Estate Commission's required disclosure form for residential property sales, including information sellers must provide about the property's condition and occupancy status.