At a glance: Highest-rated cash home buyers in Rochester
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Top reviewed
1. Brett Buys Roc Houses
Top-ranked in Rochester with 117 reviews, a 9-year track record, and accelerating momentum.View profile -
Most active
2. Nelson House Buyers
Sharpest momentum spike in Rochester, running at roughly 4.6x its historical review pace.View profile -
Most established
3. Helping Homes REI
Strong lifetime ratings across 76 reviews but no recent activity to confirm current operations.View profile
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Top 3 cash investors in Rochester, NY
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Understand your options: Rochester has a thin pool of vetted cash buyers. Only 3 local investors met our credibility standards, with another 6 statewide New York operators also active in this market. That gives you 9 vetted options total. Of the 42 companies we identified, only about 21% met that credibility bar. About 5.1% of Rochester-area home sales are investor flips, mostly from buyers who operate through cold calls, direct mail, and door knocking rather than a website. In a market this thin, the risk isn't choosing the wrong vetted company; it's going outside the vetted list entirely. Stick to verifiable track records, and know how to spot a scam.
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Know what "good" looks like in Rochester: The 3 featured companies are the full vetted local pool, so there's no drop-off to navigate here. Ratings range from 4.8 to 4.9 with 39-117 reviews each. The top-ranked company carries 117 reviews with accelerating momentum; the other 2 range from active-but-dipping to fully inactive in recent months. Only 1 of the 3 carries a BBB accreditation. With 3 options, you can realistically evaluate all of them. Read the reviews, check the BBB profile where it exists, and pay close attention to recent activity.
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Take steps to get the best outcome: With 12 vetted buyers between local and statewide lists, you have more options than a first look suggests. Reach out to at least 2-3, get a written offer from each with a clear timeline and no obligation, and compare on price, closing speed, repair deductions, and move-out flexibility. An offers marketplace like Clever Offers can help you surface buyers who aren't advertising online, expanding your pool beyond the handful you can find yourself. Don't commit on the spot. Any company worth working with gives you time to decide.
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Make sure this is the right path for you: Not everyone should sell to an investor. The median Rochester home sells for about $240,000 on the open market [1], and right now it's a seller's market. Homes are selling above asking price in a median of 15 days with just 1 month of supply. A cash investor might offer $120,000-$144,000 for the same home (they typically target 70% of after-repair value, minus repair costs). That's a steep discount in a market where your home would likely sell fast on the open market anyway. Before you commit, investigate alternatives: Rochester has an iBuyer option that may work better depending on your home's condition, and you can always talk to a local agent about what your home would realistically fetch.
- Every company on this page is scored on a 0–100 scale based on four factors: customer satisfaction, credibility, recent activity, and track record.
- Higher scores mean stronger evidence — more verified reviews, longer operating histories, more third-party credentials — not a verdict on who's "good" or "bad."
- A lower score means the evidence is thinner, not that the company is doing something wrong. The #1 company in Rochester isn't necessarily the "best" cash buyer in the market — it's the one where our data gives us the most confidence.
- Companies with limited public data aren't ranked lower — they're excluded entirely. We'd rather show you fewer options we can back up than a longer list we can't.
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1. Brett Buys Roc Houses
CASH INVESTOR
Central Business DistrictACCREDITEDExpert take: Brett Buys Roc Houses is the #1 cash investor in Rochester out of 3 we evaluated, and the data backs up the ranking. A 4.8 average rating across 117 reviews over 9 years of verified activity is a deep, consistent customer track record by any standard. Recent reviews are even stronger: an 18-review stretch over the past 6 months coming in at a perfect 5.0 average, running at roughly ~2.2x their lifetime pace. That acceleration paired with rising quality is a genuinely encouraging signal. The credibility picture is solid as well: BBB accredited with an A+ rating and excellent website transparency. Rochester is a smaller market with only 3 featured options and 6 statewide operators rounding out the list, but Brett Buys Roc Houses would hold up well in much larger, more competitive markets we cover.What stands outReview Score Top 1% in NYBBB Status Accredited, A+Active Since 2017Lifetime Avg Rating 4.8Total Review Count 117Recent Avg Rating 5.0Recent Review Count 18Rating Breakdown5★ 1124★ 03★ 02★ 11★ 4Pros
- Most active buyer in Rochester recently
- Top-reviewed buyer in market
- Strong customer satisfaction evidence, top 10% in NY
- Established presence backed by deep review history
- BBB accredited, A+ rated
Cons
- Nothing significant
- Offer amount
- 50–70% ARV, minus repairs
- Typical closing
- 7–30 days
- Offer types
- Cash offers
- Typically buys
- Any property
- Property condition
- Any condition
- Website
- brettbuysrochouses.com
- Phone
- (585) 299-9709
- Address
- 350 East Ave Suite 5, Rochester, NY 14604
- Coverage
- 2 cities in NY
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2. Nelson House Buyers
CASH INVESTOR
East AvenueUNVERIFIEDExpert take: Nelson House Buyers has the sharpest momentum spike on the Rochester page. Recent review volume is running at roughly ~4.6x their lifetime pace, with 10 reviews in the past 6 months. For a company that historically averaged low volume, that's a notable acceleration. The lifetime numbers are respectable: a 4.8 average rating across 39 reviews over 9 years. The caveat is the recent quality trend. That 6-month rating has dipped to 4.6, below the lifetime average. It's a small sample, so it could be noise, but it's worth flagging. Credibility signals are thinner here: no BBB profile on file and limited website transparency. The activity surge is real and the lifetime rating is solid, but with a recent quality dip and fewer third-party credentials, starting with the #1 option above may give you more confidence.What stands outReview Score Average in NYBBB Status UnverifiedActive Since 2017Lifetime Avg Rating 4.8Total Review Count 39Recent Avg Rating 4.6Recent Review Count 10Rating Breakdown5★ 374★ 03★ 02★ 01★ 2Read reviews: GooglePros
- Most active buyer in market
- Accelerating buying pace vs. historical average
- 5+ years of verified local activity
Cons
- Limited third-party verification and online presence
- Low review volume relative to time in market
- Offer amount
- 50–70% ARV, minus repairs
- Typical closing
- 7–30 days
- Offer types
- Cash offers
- Typically buys
- Any property
- Property condition
- Any condition
- Website
- nelsonhousebuyers.com
- Phone
- (585) 209-3144
- Address
- 340 Rutgers St., Rochester, New York, 14607
- Coverage
- Local
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3. Helping Homes REI
CASH INVESTOR
Cobbs HillBBB LISTEDExpert take: Helping Homes REI carries a 4.9 average rating across 76 reviews over 7 years, which is a solid customer track record on paper. The problem is activity: zero reviews in the past 6 months. That's a full stop on momentum, and there's simply not enough recent signal to know whether Helping Homes REI is actively buying homes right now or has stepped back from this market. The broader profile has some positives: excellent website transparency, a BBB listing with an A+ rating (though not accredited), and 7 years of operating history. But with no recent activity to evaluate and cooling momentum, we'd recommend starting with the 2 companies ranked above and reaching out to some statewide buyers as well to expand your options.What stands outReview Score Bottom 50% in NYBBB Status Not accredited, A+Active Since 2019Lifetime Avg Rating 4.9Total Review Count 76Recent Avg Rating 0.0Rating Breakdown5★ 744★ 03★ 02★ 01★ 2Read reviews: GooglePros
- Highest-rated buyer in market
- Near-perfect 4.9-star average
- 5+ years of verified local activity
Cons
- No verified reviews in the past 6 months
- Limited third-party verification on file
- Offer amount
- 50–70% ARV, minus repairs
- Typical closing
- 7–30 days
- Offer types
- Cash offers
- Typically buys
- Any property
- Property condition
- Any condition
- Website
- helpinghomesrei.com
- Phone
- (585) 294-4658
- Address
- 2815 Monroe Ave #203, Rochester, NY 14618
- Coverage
- Statewide in NY
- Listed Owner(s)
- Chris Lawrence
Companies that buy houses for cash across NY
We identified 6 statewide cash investors active in Rochester. These companies buy across multiple cities in NY, which means broader reach but less local specialization. Getting offers from statewide buyers alongside local ones is a good way to widen your pool and create more competition for your deal. See full list of NY statewide cash home buyers here.
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ACCREDITED
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ACCREDITEDVERIFIED
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BBB LISTED
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UNVERIFIED
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UNVERIFIED
Alternative ways to sell your house fast in Rochester
Rochester has 1 iBuyer program. iBuyers make near-instant offers closer to market value but charge service fees and are selective about condition. If your home qualifies, an iBuyer offer is worth comparing alongside traditional cash offers. Learn more about your options.
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iBuyer5% + repairs
What to know before selling to a cash home buyer company in Rochester, NY
Overview: the cash investor landscape in Rochester
Rochester has one of the highest rates of distressed and bank-owned home sales in the country, but most of the cash buyer activity here flows through companies with no verifiable track record.
We identified 41 cash buyer companies in the Rochester area. 12 have enough of a verifiable track record to evaluate, split between 3 local operators and 6 statewide companies also active in this market. The other 29 don't have enough public information for anyone to independently assess them.
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Our analysis focuses on the local operators. The 3 on our featured list are the full credible local pool. Brett Buys Roc Houses, ranked #1, carries a 4.8 rating across 117 verified reviews with accelerating momentum. Nelson House Buyers, ranked #2, has surged to roughly 4.6x its lifetime review pace in recent months.
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Below the credible pool, the picture changes fast: limited reviews, unverifiable history, no third-party credentials. That gap (33 out of 42 companies) reflects a broader pattern in cash buying. Most of the activity happens through direct mail, door-knocking, and wholesaling networks rather than companies with searchable online reputations. Scams are a real risk in cash home buying, and the less visible the company, the harder it is to hold them accountable.
Cash buyer activity in Rochester runs well below the national average for renovation flips, but the distressed and bank-owned activity is among the highest of any market we track.
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About 5.1% of home sales in Rochester involve an investor buying a property to renovate and resell, compared to 9.6% nationally. That puts Rochester in the bottom 20% for flip activity. Flip volume is also down about 21% year-over-year.
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The more telling signal is distressed activity. About 9.2% of all home sales here involve sellers under financial pressure, nearly 5x the national rate of 2.0%. Bank-owned property sales run at 9.0%, more than 3x the national average. The character of cash buyer activity in Rochester is fundamentally different from markets where investors are chasing renovation margins. Here, the activity is overwhelmingly driven by properties in financial distress or bank ownership cycling through to new buyers.
Rochester is a strong seller's market by every standard metric. Homes move fast, sellers have leverage, and the traditional sale path is working well here.
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Here's how Rochester compares to national benchmarks right now:
- 15 days median time on market vs. 52 nationally [1]
- 1 month of housing supply vs. 3 nationally
- Virtually no listings have taken a price cut, compared to 16.2% nationally
- Homes are selling above asking price
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So does that mean you should sell to a cash investor? Not necessarily. Market conditions are context, not a reason to act. But it's useful for understanding what the traditional sale path looks like in Rochester right now. In a market this fast, the gap between a cash offer and what the open market will deliver is likely wider than in slower markets.
Your options are more limited than in larger markets, but Brett Buys Roc Houses is strong enough to be worth a conversation, and the real question is whether your situation calls for a cash sale at all.
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In a market where homes sell above asking in under a month, the tradeoff between speed and price is steep. A cash close here runs 7-30 days, but the traditional path is already fast. That tradeoff makes sense when property condition, financial pressure, or title complications make a traditional sale impractical, not as a convenience shortcut.
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Cash investors pay well below full market value. Whether that tradeoff makes sense depends on your timeline, your home's condition, and how much flexibility you have. Given how much unvetted investor activity is happening in this area, be especially careful with unsolicited outreach. How selling a house actually works may look different from what you'd expect in a market this fast.
Ready to see what's out there? Compare cash offers from top-ranked buyers in Rochester -->
How much do Rochester cash home buyers actually pay?
Cash investors in Rochester, NY typically offer 50–70% of a home's after-repair value, minus repair costs. In real terms, if you were selling a home for $240,000 (median sale price in Rochester, NY [1]), cash investor offers would likely be in the range of $140k–$180k. In other words, you're trading somewhere between $65k–$105k in equity for a fast, certain sale with no repairs, showings, or buyer financing.
Here's roughly where the other 30–50% goes:
| Low estimate | High estimate | |
|---|---|---|
| After-repair value (ARV) | $240,000 | $240,000 |
| Repair costs | −$25,000 | −$50,000 |
| Holding costs | −$5,000 | −$10,000 |
| Transaction costs | −$10,000 | −$10,000 |
| Investor profit margin | −$25,000 | −$35,000 |
| Your offer | ~$175,000 (73% ARV) | ~$135,000 (56% ARV) |
In other words, the 50–70% ARV minus repairs isn't all profit. Most of the gap is made up of costs the investor absorbs so you don't have to. The discount is the price of speed and certainty.
Your actual number will depend on condition (move-in-ready homes get a higher percentage of ARV than full renovations), the investor's business model, and competition. Rochester, NY has a limited pool of vetted cash buyers — 3 local operators plus 6 statewide — which limits your ability to comparison-shop. Getting multiple offers matters even more when options are scarce.
Our own data suggests that sellers who explored both paths typically net 20–40% more listing with an agent — though the full cost of a traditional sale narrows that gap more than most people expect. Of course, that assumes your home is in sellable condition, you can wait a month or two, and you can cover carrying costs in the meantime. In a seller's market like this one, a well-priced listing may move quickly — which makes the traditional path more competitive than usual.
Should you sell to a cash investor in Rochester?
Most Rochester sellers don't need a cash investor. Homes sell above asking in under a month, so the open market is the stronger path for almost everyone. On a $240,000 home, cash offers land $70k-$120k below the median sale price. If listing truly isn't an option, get competing bids from the thin pool of vetted buyers.
Rochester's market conditions make this decision simpler than most. The gap between a cash offer and listing is wide, the market is fast, and there aren't many alternatives in between.
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Sell to a cash investor if your situation makes listing impractical. On a $240,000 home, cash investors typically offer $120k-$170k -- a $70k-$120k gap versus the median sale price. Across our own data, sellers who explored both paths netted 40% more through an agent at the median. The cases where it makes sense: inherited property you can't maintain, homes needing major structural work, active tenants, or financial pressure that makes a 2-4 week close worth more than maximizing price.
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List on the open market if you can. The math is strongly in your favor. Rochester's numbers make listing straightforward: 15 days on market, 1 month of supply, homes selling above asking, and virtually no listings taking a price cut [1]. Carrying costs run about ~$600/month, and the odds of selling at or above asking are high. Agent commissions add roughly ~$13k. In a market this fast, the carrying costs and concessions that narrow the equity gap in slower markets barely apply.
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Consider an iBuyer if you want speed without the full cash-investor discount. Rochester has 3 vetted local buyers and 6 statewide operators, plus 1 iBuyer program that may offer a middle path. Comparing across all options is the only way to know where you stand.
How to spot a cash home buyer scam
Of the 42 companies buying homes for cash in Rochester, roughly 4 out of 5 don't have a verifiable track record. Only about 21% passed our credibility screening. That doesn't make them scams, but it means a seller doing their own research online has very little to work with. When 1 in 3 Americans already distrust real estate investors, the warning signs below are the next best filter.
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They push for a same-day signature. Legitimate buyers give you time to review an offer with an attorney or a trusted advisor. If someone says the offer "expires today," they're trying to keep you from shopping around.
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They can't show proof of funds. A real cash buyer can produce a bank statement or proof of funds letter before you sign anything. If they dodge that request, they may not actually have the money to close.
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You can't find them online. Look up the company name with the New York Secretary of State and search for reviews on Google and the BBB. No registered entity, no reviews, no address beyond a P.O. box: slow down.
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They want money from you. Cash buyers profit from the gap between their purchase price and the home's value. They have no reason to charge you processing fees, appraisal deposits, or "earnest money."
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They're not the actual buyer. Some operators lock your home under contract and then sell that contract to someone else for a fee, without ever planning to close themselves. This is called wholesaling. It may be legal in your state, but you should know if that's the deal you're signing.
The markers are straightforward: reviews you can actually read, a registered business entity, proof of funds provided upfront, and a written offer with a clear closing timeline. The companies on our featured list passed these checks. For anyone not on that list, the same standards apply. In a thin market with fewer vetted options, being careful with unsolicited outreach matters even more.
| Agency | File a complaint | Phone |
|---|---|---|
| New York Attorney General | ag.ny.gov | 800-771-7755 |
| NY Department of State (Division of Licensing) | dos.ny.gov | — |
| FTC | reportfraud.ftc.gov | — |
More cash investor markets in NY
Why trust us
Data and sources
We identified 42 cash home buyer companies in Rochester. We started with public business directories and review platforms, then narrowed the list to companies actively marketing cash offers to local homeowners.
We then collected data from third-party sources for each company — customer ratings, review volume, business credentials, and how long they've been operating. We reviewed company websites for additional information and key credibility signals. And we reached out to companies directly to verify operating status and key business details (this process is ongoing).
We use a mix of public and proprietary sources for local and state market data:
- Review and directory platforms: Company profiles on BBB, Google Business Profiles, Yelp, Trustpilot, and other major platforms — ratings, review counts, and business credentials.
- Public records: U.S. Census Bureau housing data, county property records, and state business registries.
- Clever Market Pulse: Local home prices, days on market, inventory levels, and sale-to-list ratios — pulled from Realtor.com, Redfin, Zillow, and Census data, updated monthly.
- Clever Market Heat Index: A 0–100 score for each housing market based on supply, demand, and pricing trends.
- Investor activity data: Public transaction records tracking cash buyer patterns — flip rates, distressed sales, and bank-owned property volume — at the local level.
How we score companies
Every company gets an overall score out of 100. The overall score reflects a combination of individual scores across four key categories. Each category's influence on the overall score is weighted in accordance with its relative importance and/or the depth and reliability of the data feeding into it. We are continually improving our source data and ranking methodologies. Here are the four categories we currently use to rank cash home buyer companies:
- Customer satisfaction: Based on verified reviews — average ratings, total volume, and how recent they are. A company with 200 reviews at 4.8 tells us more than one with three reviews at 5.0. We adjust for thin review histories so small sample sizes don't inflate scores.
- Credibility: How much we can verify about the company from independent sources — BBB standing, registered business status, website transparency, and whether they've been vetted by Clever. The more we can confirm, the higher the score.
- Recent activity: What the last six months look like — new reviews, consistent quality, and signs the company is actively buying homes right now. A strong score here means they're likely to respond if you reach out.
- Track record: How long the company has been operating and how steady they've been. Eight years of consistent activity scores higher than eight years on paper with most reviews from a single year.
Of the 41 cash property investors we identified in Rochester, 12 had enough data to get scored by our model. The other 29 didn't — so they're not ranked. Our featured list highlights the top-scoring cash investors from the group that met the minimum credibility threshold.
What the scores mean
A higher score means stronger evidence, not necessarily a better company. A lower-ranked company could be great to work with — we just don't have as much verifiable data to go on, so don't feel confident in recommending them.
You can see what's behind each cash buyer company's score in the profiles on this page. We update rankings regularly as new reviews come in and conditions change.
If your company is featured on this page, you can claim your profile here.

