
28 October 2019 | 30 replies
If you can find them, you can find a funder interested in those notes, earning fees that way, thereby amassing capital with which to eventually buy your own notes to hold or resell or parlay into other assets.

18 April 2019 | 10 replies
Regardless of how you do it the seller would likely end up knowing you're reselling at a higher price.
20 February 2019 | 32 replies
PIP Group relies on the Realtors and a contractor to check each property before they place any bids to protect investors from money pits or areas that are overly difficult to resell.

26 April 2019 | 30 replies
The way to ETHICALLY wholesale is BE LICENSED or CLOSE and THEN RESELL.

3 April 2018 | 18 replies
It is possible, though, that he only owns some properties for a short period of time before he resells them.

1 September 2019 | 8 replies
I wholesale REO properties but we buy it first and then re-sell it.

26 September 2019 | 5 replies
My concern would be that if you had to take the property back, and resell it, then you might?

11 September 2019 | 8 replies
If you are buying this house with this as a feature you need to make sure that is legal with the town as if you try to go resell it a new buyer would have the same concerns.

23 August 2019 | 2 replies
This particular area heavily used FHA loans, so I had to wait the required 90-day FHA Holding Period before I could resell.

18 March 2020 | 61 replies
If you include not breaking the law, then the answer in almost every state, is a resounding NO.That's because most states require a real estate license to market a property that you don't already own - meaning that you're already on the title.I suppose being honest to the point that you clearly tell the seller that you're going to pocket $30,000 of the home's equity (which rightfully belongs to them and a Realtor would get for them) to put this deal together is somewhat of an improvement - but still illegal.The only way to wholesale honestly is to actually buy the house and then resell it for a profit.