What is Owner Financing? A Complete Guide
If you've been turned down by a bank, you're self-employed with hard-to-document income, or you simply want a faster, more flexible path to homeownership — owner financing might be exactly what you've been looking for. In this complete guide, we'll explain everything you need to know about how owner financing works, what documents are involved, what terms to expect, and whether it's the right choice for your situation.
What is Owner Financing?
Owner financing — also called seller financing — is a real estate transaction in which the seller of the property acts as the lender. Instead of applying for a mortgage at a bank or credit union, you make monthly payments directly to the seller. The seller essentially "carries the note," meaning they extend credit to you and collect interest over time, just like a bank would.
This is a powerful alternative for buyers who don't qualify for conventional financing. Banks have rigid underwriting requirements: minimum credit scores, debt-to-income ratios, employment history standards, and strict documentation rules. Owner financing bypasses all of that. The terms of the deal are negotiated directly between the buyer and the seller, giving both parties much more flexibility.
Owner financing has been used in real estate for over a century. It became particularly common after the 2008 financial crisis, when traditional lending tightened dramatically and millions of creditworthy Americans found themselves locked out of homeownership. Today, it remains one of the most effective tools for buyers who need a non-traditional path into a home.
How Owner Financing Works: Step by Step
The process of buying a home with owner financing follows these general steps:
- Find an owner-financed property. Not every seller is willing to finance — but motivated sellers, investors, and sellers who own their properties free and clear (no existing mortgage) are often excellent candidates. Companies like EXPX Estates specialize in offering owner-financed homes.
- Negotiate the terms. You and the seller agree on the purchase price, down payment, interest rate, monthly payment amount, loan term, and balloon payment date. Everything is negotiable, which is one of the biggest advantages over traditional mortgages.
- Sign a promissory note. This is your written promise to repay the loan according to the agreed terms. It functions identically to a bank mortgage note.
- Sign a deed of trust or mortgage. This document secures the loan against the property. If you default, the seller has the right to foreclose or — in the case of a land contract — reclaim the property through forfeiture.
- Close the transaction. A title company or real estate attorney typically handles closing, ensures the deed is properly recorded, and issues title insurance. You receive the keys.
- Make monthly payments. You pay the seller each month according to the promissory note. Many sellers use a third-party loan servicing company to collect payments, maintain records, and provide year-end tax statements.
- Reach the balloon date. Most owner-financed loans include a balloon payment — see below — at which point the remaining balance is due in full. Most buyers refinance with a traditional lender at this point, now that their credit has improved.
The Promissory Note and Deed of Trust Explained
These two documents are the backbone of any owner-financed transaction. It's critical to understand both before you sign.
The promissory note is your IOU. It specifies the loan amount (principal), the interest rate, the monthly payment, the payment due date, any late fees, and the balloon payment date if applicable. It also spells out what happens if you default. A properly drafted promissory note is legally enforceable in Ohio courts — it is a binding contract.
The deed of trust (or mortgage, depending on the state) is a separate document that pledges the property as collateral for the loan. It gives the lender a security interest in the real estate. In most owner-financed transactions in Ohio, a warranty deed transfers title to the buyer at closing, and a deed of trust or mortgage is recorded in the county recorder's office to secure the seller's interest. This protects both parties.
In some cases, particularly in Ohio, the transaction may be structured as a land contract (also called a contract for deed). With a land contract, the seller retains legal title until the final payment is made, while the buyer holds "equitable title." Ohio has specific statutory protections for land contract buyers, which we cover in our guide to owner financing in Ohio.
Important: Always have a licensed Ohio real estate attorney review your promissory note and deed of trust before signing. These are legally binding documents with significant financial consequences.
Typical Owner Financing Terms
While every deal is negotiated individually, here's what you can generally expect in the Ohio owner financing market:
- Interest rate: Typically 8% to 12% annually across the industry. Rates are higher than conventional mortgages because the seller is taking on more risk — there's no bank underwriting the loan. Some sellers, including EXPX Estates, tie the rate to a published benchmark (such as the FRED DCPN3M index plus a statutory markup under ORC 1343.01(B)(4)), updated daily and fixed at contract signing.
- Down payment: Varies widely by seller and property. Some sellers require as little as a few thousand dollars; others ask for 10–20%. At EXPX Estates, our minimum down on 1601 Nevada St is $13,000 on a $110,000 sale price.
- Loan term / amortization: Monthly payments are typically calculated on a 30-year amortization schedule, which keeps payments manageable. Shorter amortizations (15–20 years) produce faster payoff but higher monthly payments and are less common in owner-financed deals.
- Balloon payment: Most owner-financed loans include a balloon payment — the full remaining balance comes due after a set number of years. A 3-year balloon (36 months) is common in tightly structured programs like ours; some sellers use 5 or 7 years. Monthly payments are calculated on the 30-year schedule, but you're expected to refinance with a conventional lender before the balloon date.
- Prepayment: Most owner-financed loans allow prepayment without penalty, meaning you can pay extra toward the principal whenever you want.
Who is Owner Financing For?
Owner financing works best for several specific types of buyers:
Buyers with credit challenges or recent negative events. If you've had a bankruptcy, foreclosure, short sale, collections, or medical debt that crushed your credit score, traditional banks will say no. Owner financing reviews all credit profiles — the seller evaluates your full financial picture, not just a FICO number.
Self-employed buyers. Banks demand two years of tax returns to verify income. Self-employed people often show low taxable income after deductions, even if their actual cash flow is strong. Owner-financed sellers can look at bank statements, contracts, and other evidence of income that banks ignore.
Real estate investors. Investors who already have multiple conventional mortgages may hit lending limits. Owner financing bypasses those limits entirely.
Buyers who need speed. A conventional mortgage closes in 30-60 days, sometimes longer. An owner-financed deal can close in 2-3 weeks because there's no bank underwriting process to wait on.
Buyers in transition. If you're newly divorced, recently changed jobs, or just moved to the country and don't have a U.S. credit history yet, owner financing gives you a path to homeownership while your situation stabilizes.
Advantages of Owner Financing
- No bank approval required. The seller makes the decision, not a faceless underwriting algorithm.
- Faster closing. Skip the 45-day bank process. Many owner-financed deals close in 2-3 weeks.
- Flexible terms. Down payment, interest rate, and payment structure are all negotiable.
- Credit building opportunity. Some sellers report payments to credit bureaus, and once you have a payment history with a conventional refinance lender, your improved credit score could qualify you for a much better rate.
- Equity building from day one. Unlike renting, every payment you make reduces your principal balance and builds your net worth.
- Lower closing costs. Without a bank origination fee, appraisal fee, and various lender charges, closing costs on owner-financed deals can be significantly lower.
Disadvantages and Risks of Owner Financing
Owner financing is not without risks. Here's an honest assessment of the downsides:
- Higher interest rates. Expect to pay 2-5 percentage points more than a conventional mortgage rate. On a $150,000 loan, the difference between 4% and 9% is roughly $350-400 per month — substantial over time.
- Balloon payment risk. If you can't refinance or pay off the balloon when it's due, you could lose the property. This is the biggest risk in owner financing, and it's why you must have a clear credit improvement plan from day one.
- Fewer properties available. Not all sellers will offer owner financing — only those who own free and clear or have specific reasons to carry the loan themselves.
- Due-on-sale clauses. If the seller still has a mortgage on the property, their lender may have a due-on-sale clause that makes the entire seller mortgage due when the property changes hands. Selling with owner financing without disclosing this could be considered mortgage fraud. Always verify the seller owns the property free and clear, or has explicit permission from their lender.
- Seller default risk. If you're buying on a land contract and the seller defaults on their own mortgage (if they have one), the bank can foreclose even though you've been making payments faithfully. Title insurance and proper legal structuring are critical protections.
What Happens at the Balloon Payment Date?
The balloon payment is the lump sum of remaining principal due at the end of the owner-financed loan term. Here's an example based on our 1601 Nevada St offering: you buy a $110,000 home, put $13,000 down and finance $97,000 on a 30-year amortization with a 3-year (36-month) balloon. At an illustrative rate of 10% APR, your monthly payment is approximately $851. After 36 payments you've paid down a portion of principal on the 30-year schedule, and your balloon payment — the remaining balance — is approximately $95,200. (The actual rate is set at contract signing based on the FRED DCPN3M index plus a statutory markup under ORC 1343.01(B)(4).)
At that point, you have several options:
- Refinance with a conventional lender. If you've been making payments on time for 3 years, your credit score has likely improved significantly. You may now qualify for a conventional mortgage at a much lower rate. This is the intended path for most owner-financed buyers.
- Renegotiate with the seller. Most sellers would rather extend the loan than go through the hassle of reclaiming the property. If you've been a reliable payer, many sellers will simply extend the balloon by another few years.
- Sell the property. If the home has appreciated, you can sell it, pay off the balloon, and keep the equity you've built.
- Pay it off. If you have savings or can borrow from family, paying off the balloon eliminates the debt entirely.
Use our mortgage calculator to model different balloon payment scenarios for any purchase price and interest rate.
Legal Protections for Buyers in Ohio
Ohio provides several important legal protections for buyers in owner-financed and land contract transactions. Under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 5313, land contract buyers have the right to receive a recorded memorandum of contract, and sellers must provide a statutory disclosure of the property's condition. Ohio courts have generally interpreted forfeiture laws to require sellers to give buyers adequate notice and opportunity to cure defaults before reclaiming a property — especially when the buyer has built substantial equity. We recommend reviewing our full guide on owner financing in Ohio and consulting with a licensed Ohio real estate attorney before signing any agreement.
Questions to Ask the Seller Before Signing
Before you commit to an owner-financed deal, get clear answers to these questions:
- Do you own this property free and clear, or do you have a mortgage on it?
- Are there any liens, judgments, or back taxes on the property?
- Will you report my payments to the credit bureaus?
- What is your policy if I need to pay late one month?
- Will you use a third-party loan servicer to collect payments?
- What are the exact consequences of default under this contract?
- Can I pay extra principal without penalty?
- Are you willing to extend the balloon if I cannot refinance in time?
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