Creative
Financing - Ten Ways
Do all
the creative financing techniques you hear about
really work? Yes, actually. They probably have
all worked somewhere for someone at least once.
The point isn't if they will all work for you.
The point is to know what is possible, so you
can find your own creative ways to invest in real
estate. Here are ten methods to get you thinking.
1.
Rehab Hard Money lenders. You can ask around
or find these online. They specialize in short-term
loans at high interest. You typically use this
type of financing for a "fix and flip."
You can often get the money fast, and if you make
$30,000 on a project, who cares if you paid $10,000
interest in six months.
2.
No-doc and low-doc loans. No (or low)
documentation of your income or credit required.
Again, you can find banks that do these online
now. The catch is that you will only be able to
borrow up to 80% of the purchase price or property
value. If you have 10% in cash, you might be able
to borrow the other 10% from a friend or the seller.
3.
Seller-carried second mortgages. Sometimes
a bank will loan you 90%, and allow the seller
to take back a second mortgage from you for 5%,
leaving you needing only 5% for a downpayment.
4.
Land contract. Called "contract
for sale" or other names as well, this just
means the seller lets you make payments, and delivers
the title upon payment in full. I sold a rental
this way for $1,000 down, because I wanted the
9% interest, and the higher price I got this way.
5.
Credit cards. If a seller will take $10,000
down on a fixer-upper that you expect to make
$20,000 on, why not use credit cards? This is
a true 0-down deal for you, and if you turn the
project in six months, you will have paid $900
in interest on an 18% credit card. Don't let $900
get in the way of making $20,000.
6.
Retirement accounts. The laws get pretty
complex in this area, but you can check with a
tax attorney to see how you might borrow from
your own retirement account to finance real estate
investments.
7.
Friends and family. Keep it all business
if you use this source, but loaning you money
at 7% isn't a gift if their money is getting 2%
in the bank.
8.
Note buyers. The seller needs cash. He
raises the price, and sells to you for $100,000
with no money down, taking back two mortgages
from you for $90,000 and $10,000. He arranged
(or you did) for a note buyer to pay him $80,000
cash for the first mortgage at closing, getting
him the cash he wanted. You pay two payments now,
one to each note holder.
9.
Get a loan on other property. Interestingly,
if you take out a home equity loan for a vacation,
and then forget to use it for that, you can use
it for the downpayment on an investment property,
without violating the rules of the bank that gives
you the primary mortgage. In other words, you
got in with no cash of your own.
10.
Partnerships. For bigger projects, you
could arrange for five investors to each put money
into a partnership, with your share being the
management responsibility instead of cash.
About
the Author: Steve Gillman has invested in real
estate for years. To learn more, and to see a
photo of a beautiful house he and his wife bought
for $17,500, visit http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com