
“To them it’s not about the sale, it’s about trying to help families move on. They treated me like I was their only client, and I had that one-on-one attention.”Read more
Charlisa Boyd
Sold to Opendoor in Raleigh, NC
Get an instant offer, choose your close date, skip repairs.

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“To them it’s not about the sale, it’s about trying to help families move on. They treated me like I was their only client, and I had that one-on-one attention.”Read more
Charlisa Boyd
Sold to Opendoor in Raleigh, NC

“Opendoor’s offer came in right near our appraisal, but we never had to list the house or do showings. For the kind of value Opendoor gives you, it’s just a no-brainer.”Read more
Adam Leon
Sold to Opendoor in Phoenix, AZ
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Home Sale CalculatorSelling to Opendoor:
Traditional listing:
Average 40 days on market plus 30-45 days to close with a licensed attorney (required in SC). You must hire and coordinate a closing attorney. With 62% of Charleston homes selling below asking price, buyers are negotiating. SC deed stamps (0.37%) are paid by the seller - on a $550K sale that is approximately $2,035. Coastal flood insurance and inspection complexities can also delay or derail buyer financing.
Mount Pleasant - avg $1,002,314 (2025). Most prestigious Charleston suburb; top-rated schools, Shem Creek dining district, limited buildable land driving strong appreciation.
Charleston Peninsula - avg $697,150. Historic downtown and waterfront; premium pricing for walkable, historic district, and harbor-view properties.
James Island - avg $627,106. Coastal island community just west of downtown; highly desirable, limited new inventory, strong owner-occupancy rate.
West Ashley - avg ~$520,000. Established suburban area west of the Ashley River; mix of older neighborhoods and newer development; convenient to downtown and hospital corridor.
Hanahan - avg $425,911. Berkeley County suburb adjacent to North Charleston; family-friendly, 67% homeownership rate, strong community character.
Summerville - avg $403,237. Fast-growing Dorchester County suburb (+4.31% YoY); master-planned communities, Volvo plant proximity, excellent family amenities.
North Charleston - avg $375,415. Adjacent to Charleston proper (+5.97% YoY); Boeing facility, Joint Base, and port employment; most affordable major city in the metro.
Goose Creek - avg $364,561. Berkeley County; Naval Weapons Station-adjacent; strong military and civilian buyer base; high homeownership rate (65%).
Charleston sellers need: the SC Residential Property Condition Disclosure Statement (required under SC Code Title 27, Chapter 50 - must be delivered before contract signing), your deed, title documents (the closing attorney will order the title search), a property survey (particularly important in coastal Charleston where property boundaries and flood zones matter), HOA governing documents and resale certificate (if applicable), mortgage payoff statement, recent utility bills, and permits for any additions or renovations. South Carolina also requires a licensed real estate attorney to handle the closing - the attorney prepares or reviews all closing documents, coordinates the title search, and supervises fund disbursement and deed recording. Learn more about how to sell your house at our complete guide.
South Carolina sellers pay deed stamps (transfer tax) at closing. The rate is $1.85 per $500 of sale price - equal to 0.37% of the sale price - and is customarily paid by the seller. On a $550,000 Charleston home sale, the seller pays approximately $2,035 in deed stamps. The tax is split between the state ($1.30 per $500) and the county ($0.55 per $500).
Total seller closing costs in Charleston typically run 7-9% of sale price: agent commissions (5-6%), attorney fees ($500-$1,500), deed stamps (0.37%), title search fees, and property tax proration. At Charleston's $550K median sale price, total seller costs run approximately $38,500-$49,500. Coastal flood insurance costs do not directly affect closing costs but may affect buyer financing timelines and negotiation leverage. Use Opendoor's home sale calculator to estimate your specific net proceeds.
Net proceeds are the amount you walk away with after every cost is subtracted. Here is the formula:
Net proceeds = sale price - mortgage payoff - closing costs - commissions - repairs/concessions
Using Charleston's median sale price of $550,000 as an example: if you owe $320,000 on your mortgage, pay 5.5% agent commissions ($30,250), attorney fees ($1,200), deed stamps ($2,035), title fees ($900), property tax proration ($2,500), and recording fees ($200), your estimated net proceeds would be approximately $192,915. Use our home sale calculator to run the numbers for your specific situation.
Charleston has an active cash buyer market driven by military PCS relocations from Joint Base Charleston, estate sales in the historic Peninsula and coastal neighborhoods, and investor activity across Berkeley, Charleston, and Dorchester counties. Military relocation generates consistent buyer demand - Joint Base Charleston serves over 79,000 military members, civilians, dependents, and retirees - creating year-round transaction activity regardless of season.
Opendoor provides a competitive, data-driven cash offer for Charleston homes with a flexible 14-60+ day closing timeline. In a coastal market where flood insurance costs, inspection findings, and buyer financing complexity can derail traditional sales, an Opendoor cash offer provides a known net proceeds figure from day one. In South Carolina, Opendoor also coordinates the required attorney closing process - you do not need to find or hire your own closing attorney.
Selling a home in Charleston involves South Carolina-specific requirements - most importantly, state law mandates a licensed real estate attorney at every closing. Sellers must also complete the SC Property Condition Disclosure before contract, and pay deed stamps (0.37%) at closing. Opendoor simplifies the entire process: receive a cash offer, choose your closing date, and Opendoor coordinates the full attorney-supervised closing. No listings, no showings, no uncertainty.
Opendoor makes selling your Charleston home simple - no listings, no showings, and no buyer financing contingencies. Learn more about how a cash offer works.
Opendoor's service fee is competitive with traditional agent commissions. You avoid the cost of repairs, staging, showings, and months of market uncertainty. Because South Carolina requires a licensed attorney at every closing, Opendoor coordinates the attorney-supervised closing process on your behalf - you do not need to hire or manage your own closing attorney.
Charleston's housing market is balanced as of 2025-2026. With approximately 3.5 months of supply and 62% of homes selling below original asking price, the market has moderated from the intense seller's market of 2021-2022 - but strong in-migration and a diversified employment base continue to support prices. The metro home value is approximately $430,000, up 4.8% year-over-year.
The economic story is compelling: Boeing's 787 Dreamliner facility in North Charleston, MUSC anchoring the healthcare and research sector, Joint Base Charleston generating consistent military relocation demand, and a growing manufacturing and technology sector with Volvo and Google all create sustained buyer activity across the metro's three counties.
For sellers, the main friction in Charleston is twofold: South Carolina's attorney-required closing process, which adds coordination steps that title-state sellers do not face, and the complexity of coastal insurance and inspection issues that can complicate buyer financing. Opendoor removes both friction points - your transaction closes on your schedule with Opendoor handling all attorney coordination.
Charleston's housing market is balanced as of 2025-2026. The metro median home value is approximately $430,000, up approximately 4.8% year-over-year, and the median sale price is approximately $550,000. The city proper (Peninsula and adjacent neighborhoods) commands a premium with a median of $697,150 per NeighborhoodScout. Inventory has risen - active listings were up over 16% year-over-year in 2024 - and approximately 3.5 months of supply reflects a balanced market. Homes average approximately 40 days on market and sell near 97% of list price.
The shift from Charleston's peak seller's market is pronounced in some submarkets but not others. Mount Pleasant continues to command premium values above $1,000,000 (NeighborhoodScout 2025), driven by top-rated schools and limited buildable land. The suburban Summerville corridor (+4.31% YoY) and North Charleston (+5.97% YoY) have seen stronger appreciation than the city core as buyers seek relative affordability. Coastal flood risk and rising insurance premiums are increasingly factored into buyer decisions for Peninsula, James Island, and other low-lying areas.
Charleston's economy has transformed over the past two decades from a predominantly military and port-dependent market to a diversified industrial and healthcare hub. Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) is the state's premier academic medical center and supports over 50,000 jobs statewide with its main campus anchoring Charleston's healthcare corridor. Roper St. Francis Healthcare and Trident Health System add significant additional healthcare employment across the metro.
Boeing's 787 Dreamliner final assembly facility in North Charleston employs approximately 7,000 workers and contractors, representing the most significant private manufacturing investment in South Carolina history. Volvo Cars' plant in Berkeley County adds over 1,500 direct manufacturing jobs. Joint Base Charleston - combining the Naval Weapons Station and the Air Force installation - serves over 79,000 military members, civilians, dependents, and retirees, creating a constant stream of relocation-driven real estate transactions on both the buy and sell sides. The Port of Charleston - consistently among the top container ports in the US - supports thousands of logistics and distribution jobs across the region.
Charleston's balanced market requires sellers to approach pricing with discipline. The buyers are there - low unemployment, strong corporate relocation, military PCS demand, and continued in-migration from colder and more expensive coastal metros all sustain active buyer pools. But with 3.5 months of inventory and 62% of homes selling below asking price, correctly priced homes sell while overpriced listings sit.
South Carolina's attorney-required closing process is a meaningful friction point compared to title-state markets. You must hire and coordinate with a licensed attorney, adding cost ($500-$1,500 in attorney fees) and scheduling complexity. Additionally, Charleston's coastal properties can face inspection and insurance complications that add time and uncertainty to buyer financing. Opendoor eliminates both friction points - a cash offer, no financing contingencies, and Opendoor handling all attorney coordination mean Charleston sellers close on a predictable schedule with certainty on net proceeds.