November 2024 was a record month. Not just good, not just consistent. Our team set a new closing record and put up numbers that proved exactly why this process was built differently from the start. Here's a look at what we got done.
November's Closings
Seven homes closed in 14 days or less during November. Each one required a different file, a different set of circumstances, and the same disciplined execution from start to finish:
- 719 SE 3rd Street, Boynton Beach, FL 33435: closed in 9 days
- 795 Hardwood Street, Orange Park, FL 32065: closed in 10 days
- 1102 36th Ave W, Bradenton, FL 34205: closed in 14 days
- 1302 10th Ave, DeLand, FL 32724: closed in 9 days
- 2580 SW 6th Ct, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312: closed in 13 days
- 10976 Winter Crest Dr, Riverview, FL 33569: closed in 10 days
The Record: 5 Days in New Port Richey
11712 Leda Lane in New Port Richey closed in 5 days. That's a new record for 14 Days To Close and the fastest closing possible under TRID regulations. The federal TRID rule requires a mandatory 3-business-day waiting period between when a borrower receives their Closing Disclosure and when they can sign. Five days is the absolute floor.
It took a clean file, a fully prepared buyer, a title company that moved immediately, and a lender pipeline built for speed. Every piece had to be in place before the offer was even accepted.
You can see the full track record of fast closings at 14daystoclose.com/orless. These aren't marketing claims. They're recorded transactions, real addresses, real timelines.
Why This Matters for Buyers
A fast close isn't just impressive on paper. It's a competitive advantage in a market where sellers receive multiple offers. When a buyer can credibly close in 10 days instead of 30, that offer reads differently to a motivated seller. Speed, when it's backed by a real process, becomes a negotiating tool. See how our loan delay prevention checklist keeps files moving from day one.