Seller Financing – Six Safety Tips

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Why offer seller financing when you sell? A higher price, a good return on your money, a faster sale and to sell a property that is otherwise difficult to sell. Some good reasons, but how do you do it safely?
- Get a large downpayment. The most obvious way to be safe, and not always possible.
- Get other security. If they want it with little down, and you like the return you’ll get, make it safe by putting a mortgage on other property the buyer owns, to be released when they’ve paid down the balance to a certain level.
- Check their credit. Have them pay for and bring you a credit report. Bad credit may be okay, but type of bad credit is important. Unpaid hospital bills they’re disputing are not as relevant as unpaid loans.
- Trust your instincts. If you are usually right about people, give some weight to your judgement of their character. I’d trust a man who felt morally obliged to pay his debts over a playboy that happens to have decent income at the moment.
- Consider the whole picture. Suppose a bank will loan 90%, and is okay with you taking back a $5,000 second mortgage, allowing the buyer to get in with what cash he has. If you’re getting $6,000 more than you expected by accomodating the buyer’s needs, where’s the loss? You’re okay if he never pays the $5,000, right?
- Talk to a lawyer. Maybe in your area it takes two years to get a foreclosure on a mortgage through the courts, and only six months to foreclose on a “contract for sale.” Knowing these things can help you sell in the safest way.
Offering seller financing makes it easier to sell, and to get a higher price. Just be safe about it. Have a real estate lawyer review your paperwork, and use the tips here.
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