At a glance: Highest-rated cash investors in Vermont
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Strongest credentials
1. Fire Cash Buyers
Top pick in Vermont with a flawless rating and the strongest recent activity on the page.View profile -
Top reviewed
2. Mr.Buyer
Strongest verified credentials in Vermont with a 5.0 lifetime rating across 7 years.View profile -
Also great
3. Better House Buyers
Longest-tenured cash investor on the page at 12 years with a strong lifetime rating.View profile
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Top 6 cash investors in Vermont
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Understand your options: Vermont has a thin pool of vetted cash buyers. 6 statewide investors met our credibility standards, with another 2 nationwide operators also active in the market. That gives you 8 vetted options total. Of the 31 companies we identified, only 24% met that credibility bar, and that is just the visible market. About 15.8% of Vermont home sales are investor flips, mostly from buyers who operate through cold calls, direct mail, and door knocking and never show up in a Google search. In a market this thin, the risk is not choosing the wrong vetted company; it is 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 Vermont: The 6 featured companies are the full vetted statewide pool, so there is no drop-off to navigate. Ratings range from 4.5 to 5.0, with review counts between 32 and 66. The top 2 companies carry 5.0 ratings with BBB accreditation and A+ ratings; the bottom 4 lack BBB profiles entirely. Only 33% of credible companies carry a BBB profile. With only 6 options, you can realistically evaluate all of them rather than filtering. Read the reviews, check BBB profiles where they exist, and pay close attention to recent activity: some companies on this page have gone quiet in the past 6 months.
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Take steps to get the best outcome: With 8 vetted buyers across the statewide and nationwide lists, you have enough options to create some competition. 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 are not advertising online, expanding your pool beyond the handful you can find yourself. In a thin market, that extra reach matters. Do not 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 Vermont home sells for about $412,200 on the open market [1]. A cash investor might offer $205k-$290k for the same home (they typically target 70% of after-repair value, minus repair costs). That is the cost of speed, certainty, and selling in any condition. Vermont is a buyer's market right now: 106 days on market and 5 months of supply. The timeline advantage of a cash close is real here. Before you commit, investigate alternatives: Vermont has iBuyer and bridge loan options that may work better depending on your home's condition and timeline, 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 Vermont 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. Fire Cash Buyers
CASH INVESTOR
Active since 2021ACCREDITEDExpert take: Fire Cash Buyers is the #1 cash investor in Vermont out of 6 we evaluated across the state. A perfect 5.0 average rating across 47 reviews over 5 years of verified activity is a consistent customer track record, especially in a market where most companies have little to no public data. Recent reviews are holding at a 5.0 as well, with 6 in the past 6 months, above the local median pace. That steady flow confirms Fire Cash is actively buying here, not coasting on older reviews. The credibility profile rounds it out: BBB accredited with an A+ rating and solid website credibility. Vermont is a thin market with only 6 featured options, but Fire Cash's combination of rating consistency, recent activity, and third-party credentials is stronger than anything else on this page.What stands outReview Score Top 1% in VTBBB Status Accredited, A+Active Since 2021Lifetime Avg Rating 5.0Total Review Count 47Recent Avg Rating 5.0Recent Review Count 6Rating Breakdown5★ 474★ 03★ 02★ 01★ 0Pros
- Perfect customer rating
- Highest-rated buyer in market
- Strong recent buying activity
- 5+ years of verified local activity
- BBB accredited, A+ rated
Cons
- 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
- firecashbuyers.com
- Phone
- (860) 609-3825
- Coverage
- 51 states
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2. Mr.Buyer
VERIFIED CASH INVESTOR
Based in Miami, FLACCREDITEDVERIFIEDExpert take: Mr.Buyer has some of the strongest verified credentials in Vermont. A+ BBB accreditation, solid website credibility, and enhanced screening with our team, meaning they shared additional business details with us directly. The customer data backs it up: 51 reviews over 7 years at a 5.0 lifetime average, with recent feedback also at 5.0. The caveat is activity. Only 1 review in the trailing 6 months, roughly a quarter of their lifetime pace, puts Mr.Buyer well below the local median for recent volume. They told us they specialize in foreclosures and probate situations. The ratings and credentials are both strong, but the thin recent activity means you may wait longer for a response than with the more active names higher on this page.What stands outReview Score Top 25% in VTBBB Status Accredited, A+Active Since 2019Lifetime Avg Rating 5.0Total Review Count 51Recent Avg Rating 5.0Recent Review Count 1Rating Breakdown5★ 514★ 03★ 02★ 01★ 0Pros
- Perfect 5.0 rating across 51 verified reviews
- Highest-rated buyer in market
- Can close in as few as 7 days
- Buys commercial and multi-family properties
- Completed enhanced business screening
Cons
- Limited recent activity, pace has slowed
- Low review volume relative to time in market
- Offer amount
- 50–70% ARV, minus repairs
- Typical closing
- 7–30 days
- Offer types
- Creative financing
- Typically buys
- Single-family homes, Commercial properties, Vacant land, Mixed-use properties, Multi-family homes
- Property condition
- Any condition
- Specialties include
- Foreclosures, Probate
- Seller perks
- 7-day closings
- Website
- mrbuyer.com
- Phone
- (844) 573-5548
- Address
- 382 NE 191st St, Miami, FL 33179, USA
- Coverage
- 51 states
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3. Better House Buyers
CASH INVESTOR
Active since 2014BBB LISTEDExpert take: Better House Buyers has the longest track record on this page, with 12 years in the Vermont market and 32 reviews to show for it. The 4.9 lifetime average is solid, but recent ratings have dipped to 3.7 across 3 reviews over the trailing 6 months. Three reviews is a thin sample, so it is hard to read too much into that number, but it is a shift from the lifetime pattern. Activity is picking up: those 3 recent reviews put Better House ahead of their historical pace, at about 1.5x their lifetime average. The credibility picture is mixed. No BBB accreditation (though they carry an A+ rating from the BBB), along with solid website credibility. A 12-year presence carries weight in a market this young, though the recent rating shift is something to keep in mind before reaching out.What stands outReview Score Average in VTBBB Status Not accredited, A+Active Since 2014Lifetime Avg Rating 4.9Total Review Count 32Recent Avg Rating 3.7Recent Review Count 3Rating Breakdown5★ 314★ 03★ 02★ 01★ 1Pros
- 12+ years in market with sustained activity
- Near-perfect 4.9-star average
Cons
- Low review volume relative to time in market
- 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
- betterhousebuyers.com
- Phone
- (404) 341-4449
- Coverage
- 51 states
- Listed Owner(s)
- Ken Reed
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4. Gokce Capital
CASH INVESTOR
Based in New York, NYUNVERIFIEDExpert take: Gokce Capital has the largest review pool on this page: 66 total reviews spanning 7 years of verified activity. That volume gives you more customer data to work with than any other Vermont-featured company. The catch is that recent activity has slowed considerably, with only 2 reviews over the past 6 months, around 0.42x their earlier pace. Recent scores came in at 3.5 against a 4.5 lifetime average. At 2 reviews, that dip could be noise, but combined with the slowdown it raises questions about current engagement. Third-party credibility is thinner here: no BBB listing on file, though Gokce does maintain solid website credibility. The historical customer data is genuinely useful context, but the cooling activity and absent credentials suggest starting with companies higher on this list if responsiveness matters to your timeline.What stands outReview Score Average in VTBBB Status UnverifiedActive Since 2019Lifetime Avg Rating 4.5Total Review Count 66Recent Avg Rating 3.5Recent Review Count 2Rating Breakdown5★ 584★ 03★ 02★ 11★ 7Read reviews: GooglePros
- Most established buyer in market
- Established presence backed by deep review history
Cons
- Limited recent activity, pace has slowed
- 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
- gokcecapital.com
- Phone
- (917) 444-5985
- Address
- 82 Nassau St #803, New York, NY 10038
- Coverage
- 51 states
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5. We Buy Homes 365
CASH INVESTOR
Based in Louisville, KYUNVERIFIEDExpert take: We Buy Homes 365 sits at #5 on our Vermont list, but their recent activity stands out. With 7 reviews over the latest 6-month stretch, they post the highest recent volume on this page, outpacing the local median. The broader profile is where things get mixed. A 4.5 lifetime average on 64 reviews spanning 4 years is a moderate track record, but recent scores have dropped to 3.3. That is a noticeable shift, and with 7 recent data points it is enough to take seriously. Credibility signals are thin: no BBB profile, limited website transparency, and only 4 years of verified activity. The activity level suggests We Buy Homes 365 is responsive, but the dipping scores and limited credentials put them near the bottom of this list. We would recommend starting with the higher-ranked companies and exploring some statewide options as well.What stands outReview Score Bottom 50% in VTBBB Status UnverifiedActive Since 2022Lifetime Avg Rating 4.5Total Review Count 64Recent Avg Rating 3.3Recent Review Count 7Rating Breakdown5★ 534★ 43★ 12★ 01★ 6Read reviews: GooglePros
- Most active buyer in market
- Strong recent buying activity
Cons
- Limited third-party verification and online presence
- Recent ratings trending below lifetime average
- 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
- webuyhomes365.com
- Phone
- (855) 604-8130
- Address
- 620 S 3rd St Ste 204, Louisville, KY 40202-2445
- Coverage
- 51 states
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6. QuikBuyer
CASH INVESTOR
Based in Phoenix, AZBBB LISTEDExpert take: QuikBuyer has 59 reviews at a 4.9 lifetime rating spanning 7 years, a respectable track record by Vermont standards. The problem is what has happened lately: not a single review over the last 6 months. That complete absence of recent signal makes it impossible to gauge how responsive QuikBuyer is right now or whether they are still actively buying in this market. On the verification side, the profile is thin. QuikBuyer holds an A+ BBB rating but is not accredited, and their website lacks the transparency markers we look for. The lifetime customer feedback is solid enough to land them on this list, but with zero current activity and limited third-party verification, there is not enough evidence to recommend them over the more active, better-credentialed names ranked above. Start with those first.What stands outReview Score Bottom 25% in VTBBB Status Not accredited, A+Active Since 2019Lifetime Avg Rating 4.9Total Review Count 59Recent Avg Rating 0.0Rating Breakdown5★ 584★ 03★ 02★ 01★ 1Read reviews: GooglePros
- 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 and online presence
- 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
- sell.quikbuyer.com
- Phone
- (623) 252-2736
- Address
- 3101 N Central Ave Suite 0168, Phoenix, AZ 85012
- Coverage
- 51 states
Nationwide we buy houses for cash companies available in Vermont
These 2 companies buy homes across all 50 states, including Vermont. They have the largest review histories and longest track records of any cash buyers we evaluate — but they operate through local franchise networks, so your experience depends on the local team handling your deal. See the full nationwide list here.
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BBB LISTED
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ACCREDITED
Alternative ways to sell your house fast in Vermont
Vermont has 1 iBuyer program and 1 bridge loan option. iBuyers make near-instant offers closer to market value but charge service fees and are selective about condition. Bridge loans let you buy your next home before selling — removing the timeline pressure that pushes many sellers toward a cash discount. Both are worth comparing alongside traditional cash offers. Learn more about your options.
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iBuyer5% + repairs
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Bridge Loan2.4% + broker fees
What to know before selling to a cash home buyer company in Vermont
Overview: the cash investor landscape in Vermont
Vermont has high investor activity but very few accountable companies. About 15.8% of home sales here are investor flips, yet three out of four cash buyers have no verifiable track record.
We identified 31 cash buyer companies operating in Vermont. 8 have enough of a verifiable track record to evaluate: 6 statewide operators and 2 nationwide companies also active in the market. The other 23 don't have enough public information for anyone to independently assess them.
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Our analysis focuses on the statewide operators. The 6 on our featured list are the full credible statewide pool. All 6 passed our evaluation standards, and there is no overflow here.
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The companies at the top are solid but not dominant by national standards. Fire Cash Buyers, ranked #1, carries a 5.0 customer rating across 47 reviews with consistent recent activity. Mr.Buyer, ranked #2, has the strongest credentials on the page, with a 5.0 rating and enhanced screening. Neither has the review volume you see in larger markets, but both are credible by any measure.
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Below the credible pool, the picture changes fast. That gap, 8 credible companies out of 33 total, reflects a broader pattern in cash buying. Most activity here flows 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 Vermont runs well above the national average, with investor flips making up a notably large share of the market.
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About 15.8% of home sales in Vermont involve an investor buying a property to renovate and resell, compared to 9.6% nationally. That puts Vermont in the top 10% of markets we track for flip activity. Overall flip volume has surged 96% year-over-year. That is a separate category from distressed and bank-owned sales, so it is a clean measure of how active investors are here.
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Sales involving financially distressed sellers account for about 0.9% of the market, lower than about 4 out of 5 markets nationally, and up 61% year-over-year. Bank-owned property sales are essentially nonexistent. The investor character here is heavily flip-driven: speculative activity is expanding fast while distress-related sales remain low. That means most of the cash buyer activity is coming from investors chasing renovation margins, not responding to seller hardship.
Vermont is a buyer's market where homes take significantly longer to sell than the national average.
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Here's how Vermont compares to national benchmarks right now:
- 106 days median time on market vs. 52 nationally [1]
- 5 months of housing supply vs. 3 nationally
- Median home price of $412,200 vs. $437,193 nationally
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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 is useful for understanding what the traditional sale path looks like in Vermont right now. For sellers dealing with property condition issues, timeline pressure, or financial distress, the gap between a quick cash close and a multi-month listing process is wider in a market where homes sit for over 3 months on average.
You have a small but evaluable set of options. The top-ranked companies are credible and the statewide operators expand your pool to 8 vetted choices, but quality varies more here than in markets with larger pools.
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A typical cash close here runs 7-30 days, compared to roughly 5 months from listing to close on the open market given the 106-day average time on market. In a slow market like Vermont, that timeline gap is significant.
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The tradeoff is price. Cash investors pay well below full market value. That is the cost of speed and certainty. Whether that tradeoff makes sense depends entirely on your situation: your timeline, your home's condition, and how much flexibility you have. With investor flip activity surging in this market, there is clearly demand for properties here, which means you have some leverage if you shop around.
Ready to see what's out there? Compare cash offers from top-ranked buyers in Vermont →
How much do Vermont cash home buyer companies actually pay?
Cash investors in Vermont typically offer 50–70% of a home's after-repair value, minus repair costs. In real terms, if you were selling a home for $412,000 (median sale price in Vermont [1]), cash investor offers would likely be in the range of $240k–$310k. In other words, you're trading somewhere between $105k–$175k 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) | $412,000 | $412,000 |
| Repair costs | −$40,000 | −$80,000 |
| Holding costs | −$10,000 | −$15,000 |
| Transaction costs | −$15,000 | −$20,000 |
| Investor profit margin | −$40,000 | −$60,000 |
| Your offer | ~$307,000 (75% ARV) | ~$237,000 (58% 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. Vermont has a limited pool of vetted cash buyers — 6 statewide operators plus 2 nationwide — 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 2–4 months, and you can cover carrying costs in the meantime. In a slower market, traditional sales can take longer and involve more price negotiation — which is part of what makes the speed of a cash offer appealing.
Should you sell to a Vermont we buy houses for cash company?
Selling to a cash investor is the fastest exit in Vermont, but the discount is steep even in a slow market. On a $412,200 home, cash offers land $122k-$207k below the median sale price. Homes sit 106 days on average, so listing is far from painless. But sellers who list still come out ahead in most cases. Talk to an agent first.
The right path depends on your timeline, your home's condition, and how much equity you are willing to trade for certainty. Here is how the options break down in Vermont right now.
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Sell to a cash investor if speed or simplicity is the priority. On a $412,200 home, cash offers typically land between $205k-$290k, a $122k-$207k gap versus the median sale price. In our own data, 73% of sellers who explored both paths sold for more through an agent, with a median gain of $65,000. Cash makes the most sense when your situation makes that gap worth it: two mortgages, a home that needs major work, or a deadline that makes months of market time a non-starter.
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List on the open market if you can absorb the timeline. Listing nets more, but in Vermont the timeline is the real cost. Homes sit 106 days on average, with 5 months of supply [1]. Carrying costs run about ~$1,050/month, and agent commissions add ~$23k. Factor in 4-5 months of carrying and your actual net could be $40k-$60k below the sale price. Still more than a cash offer for most homes, but the gap is narrower than the sticker price suggests.
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Consider an iBuyer or bridge loan if you want speed without the full discount. Vermont has iBuyer and bridge loan programs that offer a middle path. Bridge loans let you buy your next home before selling, removing the timeline pressure that pushes many sellers toward cash. Both are worth comparing alongside traditional cash offers.
How to spot a cash home buyer scam
Of the 31 companies buying homes for cash in Vermont, three out of four don't have a verifiable track record. That does not make them scams, but it means a seller doing their own research online has very little to work with. In a market with widespread distrust of 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 are 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 your state's Secretary of State office 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 is the deal you are 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, and in a market where only 8 out of 33 companies have a verifiable track record, those filters matter more than usual.
| Agency | File a complaint | Phone |
|---|---|---|
| Vermont Attorney General | ago.vermont.gov | 800-649-2424 |
| FTC | reportfraud.ftc.gov | — |
More cash investor markets in VT
We're currently building out our guides for cities in Vermont.
Please check back soon!
Why trust us
Data and sources
We identified 33 cash home buyer companies in Vermont. 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 31 cash property investors we identified in Vermont, 8 had enough data to get scored by our model. The other 23 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.

