Selling or Buying a Hurricane Damaged Home

Selling:

  • If the home was damaged, the seller should remove all wet drywall and dry the house out
  • Fill out a seller’s disclosure listing all known damage
  • Don’t cover water stains with paint – no cosmetic coverups
  • Do the necessary repairs and disclose all repairs
  • Get your own mold inspection done
  • Do a pre-listing home inspection to make sure you didn’t miss any repairs
  • Choose licensed Florida contractors to provide estimates and repairs
  • Don’t assume your home will sell only at a discount; many damaged homes are sitting on valuable land and many may even sell at the full market value of the home before it was damaged in the hurricane

Buying:

  • Get both home and mold inspections
  • Choose licensed Florida contractors for estimates and repairs you are considering having done
  • Get it in writing – if the seller wants to sell “as is” – get it in writing what repairs the seller will have done and what potential credits they may give you
  • Ask to see written evidence of the insurance proceeds and when they were disbursed to the seller
  • Make sure the property can be insured!
  • Ask if they have had the home treated for mold and whether they have a mold certification
  • If it looks like there’s no damage from the hurricane, ask if there was damage that was repaired
  • Ask for the seller’s disclosure and be sure to read it very carefully – ask questions about anything that seems vague
  • Know what has been repaired and what hasn’t – if repairs have been done ask what comany did the repairs and be sure to check whether the proper permits for the work were pulled from the local building department
  • If purchasing a condominium (this applies just to hurricane damage, not the new requirements) ask aboiut hurricane-related assessments, hurricane related insurance claims and if there are additional fees ask whether the seller will cover the fees or if the responsibility will be yours as the buyer

End of February 2026 Observations

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Why Do I Use a Letter B Logo?

My initial logo is to remind you to B present and design your life. I’ll B your professional guide. I’m a lifestyle design pro for finding your best nest financially, in your ideal location with the features you need. I scour all properties, including those not actively listed. As a consultative broker, there’s no pressure. I can refer you to the best real estate professionals in any part of the country. Just keep in mind that many agents have been licensed for less than 18 months and may not know what they don’t know. This can create many problems if their depth of experience about what could be a major problem is limited.

New Construction is Now Cheaper Than Existing Homes!

Median Sales Prices by County on the Treasure Coast

As of December 2025:

Martin County: $600,000; St. Lucie County: $395,000; Indian River County: $396,015

The marketplace is trending toward more balance; however, financing, insurance & property taxes are presenting financial hurdles for prospective homebuyers.

Difficult Transactions

It’s actually a really good thing to have a real estate professional direct your transaction, whether selling or buying. They can be the logical, cool headed professional who brings clarity to an emotionally charged, high stress, personal transaction. They should explain the entire real estate contract to you & point out terms & conditions that could cause problems. This helps prevent bottlenecks & they help you by keeping track of all the moving parts.

Paper Trails

A great agent keeps track of all required documentation & discloses things you might not think about yourself. Transparency & clarity are important to completing a successful real estate transaction.

A Resource and Advocate on Call

If you have a great broker, they’ll answer any questions you might have about your situation & help you with any information to enable you to make the best business decisions possible.

Florida Has More than 50,000 Homeowner Associations!

2026 Florida Condos Situation

Florida Senate Bill 4D enacted May 26, 2022 on Building Safety called for MIs (mandated inspections) & SIRS (Structural Integrity Reserve Studies) for condo buildings and the disclosures of those results. Link below is the DBPR’s online database of those condos who have submitted their SIRS.

Condo buildings in Florida that were more than 30 years old (in 2022) faced a December 31, 2024 deadline for a mandatory “milestone inspection.” For condo buildings turning 30 years old between 2022 & 2024, the deadline was December 31, 2025.

https://dbpr-publicrecords.myfloridalicense.com/qpr/single/?appid=14f1ed21-7b21-4272-af14-9eaad7911440&sheet=mcprvJW&opt=ctxmenu&select=clearall

So, as of January 1, 2026, the inspection & reserve study deadline has passed. It required FULL RSERVE FUNDING. There was a 365 day Phase 2 repair clock for any immediate repairs required by Milestone Inspections. That is a non-negotiable. The Florida Legislature has not enacted any further extensions for compliance. These condo associations must now pay for their immediate repairs, as well as future reserves (as indicated by their SIRS.)

If a condo building is out of compliance, the local building officials are now in charge. This is a substantial issue. If a condo building is out of compliance, the local building officials may declare the building as an “UNSAFE STRUCTURE” (“unsafe and unfit for occupation”) which is an IMMEDIATE SAFETY EVACUATION that gives occupants “NOTICE TO VACATE” orders. That means the unit is uninhabitable almost overnight. (House Bill 913.) This can be done without any court proceedings. It’s not like a foreclosure situation where you have time to figure it out. The local building officials can “red tag” a building.

If this happens to your condo building you will have trouble securing insurance for the building. If you do not have insurance, any owners with mortgages will be in default technically. Carriers are refusing to renew policies where they deem there has been no repairs progress on the milestone reports. If your association thought they could buy some time, they were wrong.

If you’re shopping for a condo now, be sure you are using an agent who understands these issues to advise you.

A condo may already be in violation. Associations with 25+ units MUST post their milestone reports online,

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