Somewhere between the last water heater call and this morning, you decided you are finished. Fair enough. A rental with a tenant in it sells on different rules: the lease rides along with the deed, the showings happen in someone's home, and the tax bill has a surprise in it that most owners meet in April. We sell these for a living, and we will walk you out clean, with your tenant treated like a person the whole way.
None of this is a reason to wait. It is the actual shape of the job, laid out so nothing ambushes you at the closing table, or after it. This is not a brochure of homes for sale. It is the briefing we wish every rental owner got before the sign went up.
A fixed-term lease does not end because the deed changed hands. The buyer steps into your shoes as landlord, same rent, same end date, same rules. A month-to-month arrangement gives everyone more room, with proper written notice. Which one you have decides which buyers can even look at your property, so we start there, with the actual document.
Your tenant will figure it out the first time a photographer shows up. Telling them first, in plain words, with what it means for them spelled out, costs you nothing and buys you everything: cooperative showings, a tidy home in the photos, and no one blindsided. A resentful tenant can cost a sale more than any repair on the list.
An investor may prefer the tenant stays: the rent ledger is part of what they are buying, and nobody moves. An owner-occupant needs the home empty at closing, which means timing the sale to the lease or negotiating an early exit. These are different prices, different timelines, and different paperwork, and choosing the lane early is most of the strategy.
Your state sets the minimum notice for entry, and the lease may set more. Beyond the legal floor there is the human one: agreed showing windows, no surprise lockbox visits, and a tenant who knows the schedule. Some owners offer a small rent credit during the listing weeks. It is optional, and it is often the best marketing money in the whole sale.
Sometimes the cleanest path is a negotiated early move-out: a written agreement, a fair amount for moving costs, money handed over at the walkthrough once the home is empty and broom clean. Done right it is a deal both sides choose. It is never pressure, never a workaround for notice the law requires, and we will tell you plainly when it is not the right tool.
Serious buyers of tenanted property pay for order: the signed lease, a clean rent roll, where the security deposit sits and how it transfers at closing, maintenance records, and an estoppel letter where the tenant confirms the lease terms in writing. An afternoon assembling this file routinely earns back more than it costs, because messy files read as risk.
A sample rental bought for $180,000 fifteen years ago, selling today for $320,000. Illustration only: every line moves with your numbers, your state, and your tax situation, and this is exactly the conversation to have with a CPA before you list, not after you close.
| Sale price | $320,000 |
| Selling costs, commission and closing | about $25,000 |
| Original purchase price | $180,000 |
| Depreciation deducted over 15 years of renting | about $85,000 |
| Taxable gain, sale minus costs minus your adjusted basis | about $200,000 |
| Tax on the depreciation recapture portion, up to 25 percent | about $21,000 |
| Federal capital gains on the rest, at 15 percent | about $17,000 |
| Set aside in this example, before state tax | about $38,000 |
That is the line that surprises people. Every year you rented, depreciation lowered your tax bill, whether or not you remember claiming it. At the sale, the IRS taxes that portion back at up to 25 percent, on top of capital gains on the rest. The primary-residence exclusion most homeowners count on does not apply to a pure rental.
Two honest outs exist. A 1031 exchange can defer the whole bill if you roll into another investment property under strict clocks, 45 days to identify and 180 to close, but that is a tool for staying in the game, and you are trying to leave it. And if you once lived in the home yourself, part of the exclusion may still be available. Either way, the winning move is the same: know this number before the sign goes in the yard, and let it shape the price you accept.
No lecture about why you are selling, and no pitch to talk you into keeping it. These are the three doors most owners walk in through, and each one has a clean way out.
Fifteen years of water heaters, turnovers, and holiday-week emergencies, and you are simply finished. We will price it both ways, tenanted for an investor and vacant for an owner-occupant, and show you what each path pays and when, so being done does not mean being careless.
Taxes, insurance, and repair bills climbed while the rent could not keep up, and the spreadsheet finally said what you suspected. We will give you the honest read on price and the honest read on the tax bill together, because a sale that looks good before taxes can look different after.
Some owners stay awake over what the sale does to the person living there. Selling to an investor with the lease intact means the rent ledger changes hands and nobody packs a box. It narrows the buyer pool and we will tell you what that trade costs, but it is a real option, and sometimes it is worth it.
A rental is a business, and the person living in it is not inventory. We sell the one without forgetting the other.
The fee we quote is the fee you pay, in writing, before any work starts. No add-ons for the estoppel chase, the second round of investor questions, or the closing that moved a week.
If holding the property six more months genuinely nets you more, we will say so and show the math, even though it delays our fee. If the tenanted price is lower than the vacant one, you will hear that too, with numbers, not vibes.
Call the number at the top and a human who knows your file picks up. Landlord questions, tenant questions, tax-timing questions you think are too basic. They never are, and answering them is the job.
One conversation: your lease, your rent roll, your timeline, and the two prices your property can sell for. If the answer turns out to be hold it another year, we will be the ones who tell you.
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