03/18/2026
Today I showed clients a few homes in North Phoenix, and one of them really stood out.
It was a short sale, priced at about $195,000.
A lot of buyers hear “short sale” and immediately assume it is either a great deal or too risky to touch.
The truth is, it can be an opportunity — but only if you understand what you are really looking at.
A short sale means the seller owes more on the mortgage than the property is likely to sell for, so even if a buyer makes an offer, the bank still needs to approve the deal.
That means:
• the process can take longer
• the bank may move slowly
• the deal may not feel as clean as a regular transaction
• and the buyer needs patience and judgment
This particular property was messy.
It looked like the previous tenants left in a hurry.
There were still a lot of personal items inside, and even bags of frozen groceries left near the entrance.
The home clearly looked unmanaged for a while, and the first impression was rough.
But once you look past the mess, the property still has some underlying value.
Why?
• the price is around $195,000
• the flooring had been upgraded
• the kitchen had already been updated
• with proper clean-out and deep cleaning, it would not look nearly as bad
Now, it does come with a real downside:
• the monthly HOA is close to $400
So a property like this is not just about whether it looks ugly today.
It is about whether the purchase price, HOA, clean-up cost, and future resale or rental logic still make sense together.
Most regular buyers will get scared off by the condition.
But buyers with an investor mindset may see it differently.
Sometimes the right question is not:
“Why is this house such a mess?”
It is:
“At this price, with these upgrades already in place, is this a salvageable opportunity?”
That is a very different conversation.
If you are looking in North Phoenix and want help understanding whether a short sale is worth considering, I’d be happy to help you break it down.