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Updated about 2 years ago on . Most recent reply
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When does seller financing make sense for the seller?
Hey all, we're looking to sell our home in the Twin Cities Minnesota. We're in a really good area. Looking at listing for the $430-450k range. We owe about $304k & are in probably year 2 of a 30-year loan at 3.125%.
Are there any scenarios where offering seller financing, subject to, makes sense for us?
As in, could we sell off market at a slight premium if we could allow the buyer to take over our financing? And if so, is it possible to get our ~$100-120k equity out in cash through this process?
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Here's another point: Many buyers who request seller-financing promote that they will be paying the seller a monthly payment for the purchase of the property instead of a lump sum and that this helps decrease taxes. You won't have that benefit because you won't pay capital gains tax on the sale of your primary residence. So, you lose a big benefit of seller financing right there.
How would it make sense for you? If you were looking for monthly income rather than a lump sum. If you wanted to act like a bank and get paid interest on your loan to the buyer. That's nothing to shake a stick at, but there's a big headache if the buyer defaults. That being said, I know investors whose strategy is to buy, rehab, and sell subject-to for the monthly cash flow it brings. If the seller stops paying, they reposes and repeat. It's a business strategy, and probably not something you are interested in doing as a one-off.
How would it make sense for you? If you were looking for monthly income rather than a lump sum. If you wanted to act like a bank and get paid interest on your loan to the buyer. That's nothing to shake a stick at, but there's a big headache if the buyer defaults. That being said, I know investors whose strategy is to buy, rehab, and sell subject-to for the monthly cash flow it brings. If the seller stops paying, they reposes and repeat. It's a business strategy, and probably not something you are interested in doing as a one-off.