Everything sellers need to know about property disclosure obligations in Kentucky — including required forms, deadlines, and penalties.
Start Managing Your ListingKentucky requires sellers of residential property to provide a disclosure of property condition covering major systems, structural elements, and known defects.
Required Form: Seller's Disclosure of Property Condition
Before acceptance of offer by buyer
Buyer may rescind contract; seller liable for damages from knowing failure to disclose material defects
Managing disclosures is one of the most important — and most stressful — parts of selling your home. Show & Disclose gives Kentucky sellers a professional platform to:
Click a city below for local market details and FSBO tips.
Median home price: $250,000 · Seller-managed listing guide
Median home price: $290,000 · Seller-managed listing guide
Kentucky requires sellers of residential property to provide a disclosure of property condition covering major systems, structural elements, and known defects.
The standard form is: Seller's Disclosure of Property Condition. Your real estate attorney or state real estate commission can provide the current version.
Buyer may rescind contract; seller liable for damages from knowing failure to disclose material defects
Before acceptance of offer by buyer
Yes. Seller-managed listings (FSBO) are legal in Kentucky. You'll need to handle disclosures, showings, and negotiations yourself — or use tools like Show & Disclose to manage the process professionally.