Seasonal Strategy
June through November presents unique challenges for Florida home sellers. Here is what you need to know and why cash buyers have a distinct advantage.
Florida's Atlantic hurricane season officially runs from June 1 through November 30 each year. This six-month stretch covers half the calendar and historically accounts for the slowest real estate activity in the state.
The peak danger period is August through October, when water temperatures are highest and atmospheric conditions most favorable for hurricane development. During these months, Florida homeowners, buyers, and real estate professionals all operate with one eye on the weather forecast.
But here is what many sellers do not realize: you do not have to pause your sale during hurricane season. In fact, there are strategic advantages to selling during this period - if you approach it correctly. Fewer sellers list during summer, which means less competition. And certain buyer types - especially cash buyers - remain active year-round regardless of weather forecasts.
The key is understanding how hurricane season affects the transaction process and positioning your sale to minimize risk.
Insurance is the biggest complication for home sales during hurricane season. Here is what happens:
Binding restrictions: When a named storm enters the Gulf of Mexico or approaches Florida's coast, insurance companies stop issuing new policies. This is called a "binding restriction" and it means buyers cannot obtain homeowner's insurance - which means they cannot close on a mortgage.
A typical binding restriction activates when a tropical storm or hurricane is within 5-7 days of potential Florida landfall. The restriction stays in place until the storm passes and the insurer lifts it - which can take days to weeks after the storm, even if your area was unaffected.
Impact on closing: If a buyer needs a new insurance policy to close (which most financed buyers do), a binding restriction can delay closing by days or weeks. Multiple storms in a season can create repeated delays that stretch a transaction out for months.
Policy cancellations: Some insurers cancel or non-renew policies after storms, leaving sellers scrambling to maintain coverage during the listing period. If your insurance lapses while you are listed, you have a problem - most mortgage lenders require continuous coverage.
Premium spikes: Post-storm premium increases can change a buyer's qualification. A buyer pre-approved in May at $4,000/year insurance may no longer qualify in September at $7,000/year if premiums spike after a storm event.
Florida law requires sellers to disclose all known material defects - including hurricane damage, whether repaired or not. This is especially important during and after hurricane season.
You must disclose:
Failing to disclose known hurricane damage is fraud under Florida law, regardless of whether the sale is as-is. The seller's disclosure obligation exists independently of the contract terms.
Practical tip: keep documentation of all storm damage and repairs. Dated photos, contractor invoices, permit records, and insurance claim numbers make the disclosure process straightforward and build buyer confidence.
Traditional buyers (those using mortgages) become significantly more cautious during hurricane season. This manifests in several ways:
Fewer showings: Buyer foot traffic drops 15-30% during peak hurricane months compared to spring selling season. Families with children focus on back-to-school. Out-of-state buyers postpone relocation trips until after storm season.
Lowball offers: Buyers who are active during hurricane season know they have less competition and negotiate more aggressively. Expect offers 3-8% below what you would receive in spring or early summer.
Extended contingency periods: Buyers request longer inspection and financing contingencies to account for potential storm delays. A 30-day contingency may become 45-60 days.
Cold feet after storms: Even if your property was not damaged, a nearby hurricane can cause buyers to reconsider purchasing in Florida entirely. It is not uncommon for buyers to cancel contracts after watching storm coverage on national news.
After a significant storm event, lenders implement their own restrictions beyond insurance binding:
This is where cash buyers provide the greatest advantage over traditional sales. Cash transactions eliminate virtually every hurricane-season complication:
No insurance binding required to close. Cash buyers do not need a lender, which means they do not need an insurance policy in place before closing. The buyer obtains insurance after purchase on their own timeline. Binding restrictions that freeze financed transactions have zero impact on cash closings.
No lender re-inspections. Without a mortgage lender in the transaction, there are no lender-required re-inspections, no disaster area freezes, and no appraisal concerns.
No financing contingencies. Cash offers do not include financing contingencies. The buyer has the money. Period. There is no risk of a lender pulling approval because of a storm event.
Fast closing before storms hit. When a storm is approaching, a cash buyer can close in as little as 3-5 days if needed. This means you can sell your property and receive funds before a hurricane makes landfall - transferring all storm risk to the buyer.
Post-storm purchases. Cash buyers actively purchase properties after hurricane damage. If your home sustains damage during a storm and you do not want to deal with repairs and insurance claims, a cash buyer will purchase the property as-is, damaged, with pending insurance claims.
If you need to sell between June and November, here is how to position yourself for success:
Yes, but financed transactions will freeze due to insurance binding restrictions. Cash sales can still close because they do not require lender approval or new insurance policies to complete.
You must disclose the damage to potential buyers. Any existing contract may be renegotiated or canceled depending on the damage. Cash buyers often purchase hurricane-damaged properties as-is.
Yes. Insurers are slower to issue new policies and impose binding restrictions during active weather events. This is one of the primary reasons financed sales stall during hurricane season.