A house fire in Wilmington — kitchen blaze, electrical short in an old Forest Hills bungalow, lightning-strike, smoke damage from a neighbor — leaves you with two crises stacked on top of each other: figuring out where to live and figuring out what to do with the home. We buy fire-damaged properties as-is. No restoration work needed, no insurance claim wrangling, no contractor bids. Cash, 14-day close, and the property becomes our problem.
Selling a fire-damaged home in Cape Fear
Fire damage in coastal Carolina homes ranges from “bad day” to “total loss.” We’ve bought everything from minor smoke-damaged kitchens in Mayfaire to fully gutted shells in Castle Hayne. The decision tree always boils down to: do you have the cash, time, and patience to restore — or do you want out, fast, with cash in hand?
Most Wilmington homeowners reach out to us within 30 days of the fire. Their insurance has paid out (or is about to), they’ve gotten one or two restoration estimates that came in higher than the insurance check, and they’ve realized the project is going to take 6–9 months and a contractor they don’t know. Meanwhile they’re paying rent on a temporary place AND mortgage on the damaged home. The math gets brutal fast.
What “as-is” actually means: We buy the property in its current condition, smoke and structural damage included. You don’t have to clean, demo, dispose, or repair anything. We handle remediation post-closing, which our contractors are set up to do efficiently. You walk away with cash and never deal with the contractors yourself.
How NC handles disclosure for fire-damaged property
Material defect disclosure is required
NC’s Residential Property Disclosure Act (NCGS 47E) requires sellers to disclose known material defects, including fire damage. With us, this is a non-issue: we know about the damage and price accordingly. With a traditional listing, the disclosure scares many retail buyers off.
Insurance claim status
Whether your claim is open, closed, paid, or denied affects how we structure the deal. We can buy with claim proceeds intact (most flexible), with a partial claim assigned to us (sometimes), or with the claim already closed and check cashed (cleanest from your side).
Mortgage company involvement
If your loan is current and the insurance check is over $40,000, your mortgage company is usually a co-payee on the check. They want to release funds in stages tied to repair completion. That can complicate things if you’re trying to sell instead of repair — we work around it at closing.
Permitting and code
If repairs were started but not completed (gutted but not rebuilt), there may be open permits with the City of Wilmington Building Inspection or New Hanover County. We close those out post-purchase so they don’t slow your sale.
Common fire-damage scenarios we buy in
Smoke damage only
Walls, ceilings, HVAC ductwork, and contents impacted but structure intact. We typically pay 75–85% of unaffected market value depending on extent.
Partial structural damage
Kitchen fire, single-room burn, contained damage. Some demo and rebuild required. We price based on the scope of work needed.
Major structural damage
Multiple rooms affected, roof or framing compromised. Often requires partial demolition before rebuild. We work with our coastal builders to scope it.
Total loss / shell
Home was condemned or is structurally unsafe. We buy the lot value plus whatever’s salvageable. Common in older Wilmington stock with electrical fires.
Mid-restoration
Demo done, framing back, but funds ran out before completion. We buy and finish — common when contractors disappear or insurance falls short.
With insurance proceeds intact
If you’ve collected insurance and want to sell rather than rebuild, we structure to maximize your net. You keep the check, we buy at as-is value, your total recovery often beats restoration economics.
The insurance claim trap
Many Wilmington homeowners try to repair after a fire because the insurance check looks like it covers it. Three things usually go sideways:
- The check undershoots reality. Insurance estimates are based on standardized cost data (Xactimate). Real Wilmington contractor pricing in 2026 is running 15–35% higher, especially with post-Helene reconstruction demand still affecting labor and materials in coastal NC.
- Code upgrades aren’t covered fully. When you rebuild a 1965 Wilmington home, the work has to meet current code (electrical, plumbing, ventilation, hurricane straps). Most policies have a small “ordinance and law” rider but it rarely covers the full delta.
- Hidden damage emerges in demo. Smoke gets into wall cavities, mold blooms in saturated insulation, structural members charred behind drywall. Each discovery is a change order, and most policies cap supplemental claims.
The cleaner alternative: Take the insurance check, sell us the damaged property at as-is value, walk away with cash plus the check. Total recovery often exceeds what restoration would have netted you, and your timeline is 14 days instead of 9 months. We’ve put this math in front of dozens of Wilmington homeowners — most of the time, selling wins.
Why a cash sale beats restoration for most fire-damaged homes
Restoring and reselling
- 6–9 months of project management you didn’t sign up for
- Contractor risk: bids, change orders, schedule slips
- Mortgage company controls draws on insurance proceeds
- Permitting through City of Wilmington Building Inspection
- Disclosure of fire history still required at resale
- Often nets less than as-is sale + insurance check combined
Cash sale to Tidal Offers
- Close in 14 days, walk away with cash
- No contractor management, no change orders
- You keep your insurance proceeds (we don’t take them)
- We handle remediation, permitting, code upgrades
- Disclosure done, off your plate forever
- Total recovery often exceeds restoration math
What we look at when we make an offer on a fire-damaged home
This is the most thorough diligence we do, because the math is more complex than a clean home. Typical pieces:
- Fire report from Wilmington Fire Department or NHC Fire Marshal. Establishes cause, scope, and whether the structure is condemned. We pull this at the courthouse if you don’t have it.
- Insurance documentation. Your adjuster’s scope, paid amount, claim status. Helps us understand what’s already been compensated.
- Walk-through (in PPE). We bring N95s and good lights. Takes about 90 minutes for most homes.
- Restoration cost estimate from our contractors. What it’ll actually cost us to make it habitable or buildable.
- As-renovated comps. What the home will sell for once restored — drives our offer math.
- Open permits and code issues with the City of Wilmington / New Hanover County.
Frequently asked questions about selling a fire-damaged home in Wilmington
Will you buy a home that’s been condemned by the city?
Yes. Condemnation makes traditional listing nearly impossible (no FHA/VA financing, limited cash buyer pool). We buy condemned property routinely. The City of Wilmington Building Inspection condemnation order transfers with the property — we handle resolution post-closing.
Can I keep my insurance settlement check?
Usually yes. If your loan is paid off, the check is yours and our offer is for the as-is property. If you have a mortgage, the lender may be a co-payee — we work that out at closing. Generally we structure deals so you keep maximum insurance recovery.
What if the claim is still open?
We can buy with the claim open. The most common path: you assign your claim rights to us at closing, we manage the rest of the claim, and you walk with the agreed cash amount. Or we wait for the claim to close before closing on the property — your call.
What if I haven’t filed an insurance claim yet?
You should — even if you plan to sell to us. The check is yours to keep, and our offer for the as-is property is independent. Filing the claim and selling can run in parallel; we can close before or after the claim resolves.
Will you buy if the fire was caused by something I did?
Cause doesn’t affect our offer. Cooking fire, electrical, lightning, vandalism — we don’t care. The property is the property. Insurance may decline a claim based on cause, but our cash purchase doesn’t depend on insurance.
Do I need to clean up before you walk through?
No. We bring our own PPE. We’ve walked through homes with active soot, water damage, and demolition debris. Don’t put yourself at risk cleaning before our visit.
What about mold or water damage from the fire response?
Both are common after a fire (water from suppression, mold from saturated materials sitting). We assume both at the time of offer. You don’t need to test or remediate — we’ll do it.