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Updated over 3 years ago on . Most recent reply
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How do you structure your rent-to-own agreements?
I'm a new investor and because I'm self-employed, I can't get a loan for properties in my local market unless I can put down 20%. I've turned to looking for rent-to-own properties. I'm not quite familiar with the exact process myself, only reading a little bit on the subject here and there but I thought I had enough information to get started. I just got off the phone with a seller who was interested in a lease agreement but his idea of how it's done was different to mine and now I'm wondering if I'm wrong. I wanted to ask the experts to see what's considered "normal" in the rent-to-own space.
My view: (numbers were not exact and meant as an example) Current rent was $1,400/month. We'd do a tenancy agreement at $1,400/month with $1,000/month going towards my future downpayment and the $400 being his to keep. We'd also sign a option to buy agreement at whatever price was negotiated and in 2-5 years, I'd take my "downpayment" to the bank and get a fixed mortgage for 25-30 years. I have two family members who are doing this exact thing and had one seller who wanted to rent-to-own using this method (She was asking way above the normal amount though)
His view: We sign both agreements like normal but no money from the tenancy agreement goes towards the downpayment ($1,400/month.) That's his to keep. The option to buy agreement comes with a monthly of $1,000 which is what goes towards my future downpayment.
As you can see, the numbers work out to be totally different. That would be $16,800 in lost capital a year. The deal barely worked as it stood and losing an extra $30,000-$40,000 on it killed it completely. Am I wrong with how to structure a rent-to-own?