How To Sell On Lease Option
When you sell on a lease option basis,
you generally get to collect higher rent, and sell at a higher
price. Then, if the buyer doesn't exercise the option you may
be able to keep the deposit and sell the home for even more.
The downside? Bookkeeping can tricky, and many tenants don't
complete the purchase (this can be an advantage actually, but
it does mean more work for you).
There are many potential buyers out there
who can't buy at the moment. This is not always due to a bad
credit score. They may be uncertain if they want to stay in an
area. They may have good credit, but no money for a down payment.
They may work for a good company, and have great opportunities
for advancement, but not yet have a good salary. There are many
reasons that people look for a rent-to-own or lease-option situation.
There are also many ways in which these
deals are structured. The basic concept is that buyers rent the
home, and have an option to buy it at a set price by a set date.
(An option means they have the right, but not the obligation,
to buy.) This gives them time to save money for a down payment,
to increase their income, and to find financing.
Often there is a non-refundable deposit.
It might be $1,000 or $10,000. This is sometimes called an option
fee. It is generally applied towards the purchase price when
the buyer closes the deal. If he decides not to buy the home,
he loses the deposit. As the seller you obviously want to get
a large option fee if you can.
It is also common to apply part of the
rent towards the purchase price. This makes it possible for the
buyer to more easily come up with a sufficient down payment to
get reasonable financing terms. Rent is often higher than normal,
to account for this credit, and as the seller, you benefit from
that higher rent if the buyer doesn't buy.
Another interesting aspect of lease-option
deals is that, unlike with normal rentals, it is common to make
the tenant responsible for maintenance. They are buying the home,
after all. There are many variations in how this is done. The
tenant might be responsible for the first $200 of repairs or
maintenance in any given month, while you have to pay for anything
beyond that (It really wouldn't be fair to ask the tenant to
pay for a new furnace three weeks after he moves in.)
Pricing is normally higher than market.
This is possible because you are making it easier for a buyer
to own a home. It is also because you may be selling the home
to him in two years, so it seems fair that he pay what it is
worth then, which will presumably be higher in most areas. In
other words, if the assumption is that the home will be worth
15% more in two years than it is worth now, that might be the
price at which the buyer can exercise his option - but in the
end this is all negotiable.
A Lease Option Example
Suppose you find a home that needs a little
work. Its market value will be around $200,000 after you clean
it up. You buy it for $180,000, with $18,000 down. Your closing
costs are $5,000, and cleaning costs $2,000. Mortgage payments,
taxes, insurance and a water bill run about $1500 per month,
so holding costs for the first two months (Your target for selling
the home) will be $3,000.
You can't make money just buying and selling
a home like this. At the two-month mark you already have $190,000
into it. ($28,000 of your own cash.) The likely sales price is
$200,000 and a sale's commission and closing costs will eat up
at least $10,000 of that.
Then you find that you can only get about
$1350 per month in rent. Your costs run $1500, and you didn't
get into real estate to lose money. What do you do? (Other than
planning more carefully next time.)
You put an ad in the paper saying, "Beautiful
home. Why throw away your rent when you can rent-to-own? Move
in this week." By the way, "rent-to-own" will
usually get more calls than "lease option." You get
a dozen calls, and arrange to show the home to several couples
at the same time, to get a little competition going.
You find a good young couple who both work,
and have decent credit reports. They agree to rent the home for
$1750 per month on a two year lease with an option to buy the
home at $220,000 at any point during that two years. They pay
a $2,000 option fee, to be applied to the purchase price if they
buy. You also agree to apply $450 of each rent payment towards
the purchase price.
Since it will hopefully be their home,
they agree to pay for the first $150 in repairs and maintenance
each month. You will cover anything larger than that if it comes
up. This means that in all likelihood, you will not have to spend
any time dealing with backed-up toilets and such, as landlords
normally have to do.
Why are they willing to pay higher than
normal rent? First, it is the only way they can buy this house.
Second, since they expect to buy it, and $450 of it goes towards
the purchase price, the other $1300 is actually a bit less than
normal rent.
Why are they willing to pay $220,000 for
the home? Because you are making it easier for them to own a
home. Also, it may be reasonable to assume that if they buy it
in two years, it will already be worth more than that (it is
only 4.9% annual appreciation).
Your profit? Let's look at two possible
scenarios.
First, if they walk away at the end of
the two years, you keep the $2,000 option fee, and you had $6,000
in positive cash flow over the two years. Ignoring any gains
from appreciation or loan pay-down, you made $8,000 on the $28,000
you have invested - not too bad for two years. Now just do another
lease option.
If they do buy the home, you have avoided
the necessity of paying a real estate sale's commission. That
cuts your costs down. Here's how it works out:
Sales price : + $220,000
Initial costs, including closing cleaning
and purchase price: - $190,000
Positive cash flow: + $6,000
Equity gain from loan pay-down: + $3,500
Costs associated with selling: - $3,500
Option fee: + $2,000
Application of option fee and rent credit
to purchase price: - $12,800
Total profit: $25,200
(On a cash investment of $28,000.)
Notice that the buyers have a $12,800
credit towards the down payment ($2,000 fee and the rent credit
- 24 months times $450). Not many buyers would have saved that
much in two years. This is part of the reason that lease options
are so attractive. As for the price, if they had rented for two
years and saved for the down payment, the home might cost $230,000
by the time they were ready to buy.
Copyright Steve Gillman. This article was an excerpt from 69 Ways To Make
Money In Real Estate. Want to know the other 68 ways? Visit http://www.99reports.com/make-money-in-real-estate.html