Seller Disclosure Reference
Seller Disclosure Laws in Hawaii
Hawaii requires a Seller's Real Property Disclosure Statement covering all material facts in the seller's knowledge, with specific items including flooding, lava zones, structural conditions, and association governance. Delivery is required within 10 days of accepted offer.
What Hawaii requires
Hawaii requires a Seller's Real Property Disclosure Statement covering all material facts in the seller's knowledge, with specific items including flooding, lava zones, structural conditions, and association governance. Delivery is required within 10 days of accepted offer.
Haw. Rev. Stat. § 508D Apply in Hawaii (and most states)
- Federal lead paint disclosure (Title X) applies in every state for homes built before 1978 — required regardless of state law.
- Disclose any property defect that materially affects health or safety, even in caveat emptor states.
- Avoid affirmatively misrepresenting any condition — fraudulent concealment exposes sellers to liability everywhere.
- When in doubt, disclose in writing. Documented disclosures are the seller's best defense against post-closing claims.
- Estate sales, foreclosure sales, and certain involuntary transfers are often exempt from form requirements but still subject to fraud principles.
Common questions
Does Hawaii require a seller disclosure form?
Yes. Hawaii requires the Seller's Real Property Disclosure Statement for sales of residential property covered by Haw. Rev. Stat. § 508D.
Who regulates real estate sales in Hawaii?
The Hawaii Real Estate Commission regulates licensed real estate activity in Hawaii. Their official site (https://cca.hawaii.gov/reb/) is the most reliable source for current rules.
Does this disclosure law apply if I sell to a cash buyer or investor?
In most states, yes — the form requirement is triggered by the type of property (residential 1-4 units), not the type of buyer. Some states exempt sales to investors specifically, and some sales (foreclosure, REO, estate) are exempt regardless of buyer type. Verify with the state Real Estate Commission link on this page.
What happens if I don't fill out the form, or fill it out incorrectly?
Consequences vary by state. Common penalties include: buyer rescission rights for a defined window after receiving the form (or never receiving it), monetary damages for known concealed defects, and in extreme cases, fraud claims that survive closing. The safest practice is full, written, factual disclosure of everything you know.
Are foreclosure or estate sales exempt from disclosure requirements?
Most states exempt foreclosures, court-ordered sales, and transfers between co-owners or family members from the form requirement. The exemption usually does not extend to fraud claims — sellers who actively conceal known defects can still be liable. Confirm exemption status with the state Real Estate Commission.
Do I have to disclose deaths or crimes that occurred on the property?
This varies dramatically by state. Some states (California) require disclosure of deaths within 3 years; others (Texas) explicitly state that deaths from natural causes, suicide, or accident are not material facts. Disclose if asked directly — most states penalize affirmative misrepresentation more than non-disclosure.
Verify with Hawaii
The most reliable source for current Hawaii disclosure rules is the Hawaii Real Estate Commission.
Visit Hawaii Real Estate Commission →Selling for cash in Hawaii? Skip the paperwork stress.
We buy as-is, handle all disclosures with the title company, and close in 7 days. No commissions, no repairs.