
“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 about Charlisa Boyd
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 about Charlisa Boyd
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 about Adam Leon
Adam Leon
Sold to Opendoor in Phoenix, AZ
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Home Sale CalculatorSelling to Opendoor:
Traditional listing:
In Burlington, homes took a median of 71 days to sell over the past 90 days, with about 6% selling within 30 days and roughly 33.2 months of supply (Opendoor market data, May 2026). The median sale price is about $295,000. North Carolina closings are conducted by a licensed attorney, and the state's low excise (transfer) tax (0.2%, paid by the seller) plus its flat state income tax factor into your net. The main cost comparison is Opendoor's service fee versus agent commissions (5-6%), carrying costs during the listing period, and the uncertainty of a financing-contingent sale.
Opendoor buys Burlington homes in a wide range of situations, including:
- Storm-, flood-, or water-damaged homes
- Facing foreclosure or behind on payments
- Inherited or probate homes
- Rental properties with tenants in place
- Homes that need repairs, sold as-is
You can sell as-is with no repairs or showings, and choose a close date that works for you.
Burlington sellers typically need: the NCGS 47E Residential Property and Owner's Association Disclosure Statement, your current deed, the most recent mortgage payoff statement, the excise tax form for the register of deeds, HOA or condo documents and a statement of dues where applicable, and the title work your closing attorney prepares. Because North Carolina is an attorney-closing state, a licensed NC attorney runs the closing, the title is examined and insured, and the deed is recorded with the county Register of Deeds. See our guide on how to sell your house fast for the full checklist.
North Carolina's distinctive closing costs are modest: the state excise (transfer) tax is just $1.00 per $500 of value (0.2%), normally paid by the seller, and closings run through a licensed NC attorney. The larger seller costs are agent commissions, attorney and title fees, and prorated property taxes (North Carolina property taxes are paid within the fiscal year). NC also has a flat state income tax, so factor any taxable gain into your planning.
Total seller closing costs in Burlington typically run 6-8% of the sale price: agent commissions (5-6%), the state excise tax (0.2%), attorney and title fees (~1%), and prorated property taxes. On the current $295,000 median sale price, total seller costs commonly land around $17,700-$23,600. Use Opendoor's home sale calculator to estimate your specific net proceeds.
Net proceeds are what you keep after every cost is subtracted. The formula is:
Net proceeds = sale price - mortgage payoff - closing costs - commissions - excise tax - repairs/concessions
Using Burlington's $295,000 median sale price as an example: if you owe $162,000 on your mortgage, pay 5.5% agent commissions ($16,225), the state excise tax (about $590 at $1 per $500), attorney and title fees (~$2,950), and minor concessions ($1,000), your estimated net proceeds would be approximately $112,235. North Carolina has a flat state income tax, and any taxable gain is taxed as ordinary income. Use our home sale calculator to run your own numbers.
Burlington has an active cash buyer market, driven by relocation demand, investor activity, and homeowners who need to move on a fixed timeline. The difference between Opendoor and a typical 'We Buy Houses' investor is the offer itself: investors often target 50-70% of market value, while Opendoor aims for a competitive, data-driven offer much closer to market value, with the adjustments itemized so you see exactly what changed.
With Burlington homes taking a median of 71 days to sell and only about 6% selling within 30 days, an Opendoor cash offer gives you a defined net proceeds figure from day one, with a flexible 14 to 60+ day close. No listings, no showings, and no financing contingencies. Sell your Burlington house fast for cash on your schedule.
Selling a home in Burlington involves North Carolina-specific steps including the NCGS 47E disclosure, the seller-paid 0.2% excise tax, and an attorney-conducted closing, in a market where the typical home takes about 2.4 months to sell. Opendoor simplifies the process - receive a cash offer, choose your closing date, and Opendoor coordinates the attorney closing. No listings, no showings, no uncertainty.
Burlington market at a glance (Opendoor market data, May 2026): Median sale price $295,000 | YoY change: +3.5% | Median days on market: 71 | Months of supply: ~33.2 | Sale-to-list: 100.0%.
Over the trailing 28 days, Burlington saw about 85 new listings, 79 homes sold, and 10 delistings, with roughly 2,820 homes active on the market. Of homes that sold in the last 90 days, about 0.4% closed within 7 days, 0.4% within 14 days, and 6% within 30 days, with a median of 71 days.
Figures are computed from Opendoor's first-party MLS data for homes in Burlington, North Carolina, as of May 2026.
From Opendoor first-party MLS data for Burlington, NC (through May 2026). Month-over-month (MoM) change is calculated on the median sale price.
| Month | Homes sold | Median sale price | MoM change | Median days on market | Sale-to-list |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 2025 | 92 | $264,500 | — | 60 | 99.4% |
| Jun 2025 | 82 | $307,500 | +16.3% | 62 | 98.9% |
| Jul 2025 | 101 | $295,000 | -4.1% | 62 | 99.1% |
| Aug 2025 | 91 | $275,000 | -6.8% | 70 | 98.7% |
| Sep 2025 | 89 | $295,000 | +7.3% | 82 | 100.0% |
| Oct 2025 | 86 | $255,500 | -13.4% | 64 | 99.4% |
| Nov 2025 | 77 | $295,000 | +15.5% | 69 | 98.7% |
| Dec 2025 | 81 | $275,000 | -6.8% | 91 | 97.7% |
| Jan 2026 | 64 | $312,000 | +13.5% | 78 | 97.6% |
| Feb 2026 | 62 | $274,500 | -12.0% | 90 | 99.7% |
| Mar 2026 | 64 | $257,250 | -6.3% | 66 | 99.7% |
| Apr 2026 | 95 | $315,914 | +22.8% | 80 | 100.0% |
| May 2026 | 80 | $285,500 | -9.6% | 49 | 100.0% |
Median days on market and sale price by Burlington ZIP code, Opendoor MLS data (last 6 months, ZIP codes with 25+ closed sales), sorted fastest first.
| ZIP code | Median days on market | Median sale price | Homes sold (6 mo) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 27215 | 67 | $325,000 | 243 |
| 27217 | 81 | $258,750 | 202 |
New listings versus homes sold each month, Opendoor MLS data for Burlington through May 2026. A sold-to-new ratio below 100% means inventory is building.
| Month | New listings | Homes sold | Sold-to-new ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| May 2025 | 167 | 92 | 55% |
| Jun 2025 | 124 | 82 | 66% |
| Jul 2025 | 123 | 101 | 82% |
| Aug 2025 | 133 | 91 | 68% |
| Sep 2025 | 128 | 89 | 70% |
| Oct 2025 | 97 | 86 | 89% |
| Nov 2025 | 95 | 77 | 81% |
| Dec 2025 | 66 | 81 | 123% |
| Jan 2026 | 90 | 64 | 71% |
| Feb 2026 | 80 | 62 | 78% |
| Mar 2026 | 128 | 64 | 50% |
| Apr 2026 | 140 | 95 | 68% |
| May 2026 | 135 | 80 | 59% |
Burlington is an Alamance County city in the Piedmont between Greensboro and Durham, with a population of about 57,300 (2020 Census). It is the headquarters of Labcorp - among the county's largest employers - alongside the Cone Health/Alamance Regional medical system, nearby Elon University, and manufacturers including Glen Raven and Honda Aero, with a deep textile heritage and I-40/I-85 logistics access. As a Piedmont city it faces severe thunderstorms and tornadoes (North Carolina averages about 31 tornadoes a year, and the April 2011 outbreak was the state's deadliest). North Carolina's flat state income tax, attorney-conducted closings, and low 0.2% excise tax shape seller net proceeds.
Burlington sellers face a market that rewards pricing discipline: a median 71 days on market and about 33.2 months of supply mean buyers have negotiating room, and roughly 18% of listings end up cutting price. North Carolina's seller closing costs are relatively low (a 0.2% excise tax plus attorney and title fees), but budget for prorated property taxes. For sellers who value certainty over chasing the highest possible price, a direct cash sale to Opendoor provides a defined net proceeds figure from day one without the multi-month timeline of a traditional listing.