Zero Down Owner Financing: How It Works in the Industry (and What We Offer at EXPX Estates)
Note on our current terms: The property available at EXPX Estates — 1601 Nevada St, Toledo OH 43605 — requires a $13,000 minimum down payment. This article explains zero down owner financing as it exists in the broader owner-financing industry and explores why we chose to require a modest down payment instead. If you want to skip ahead to our specific offer, jump to "Our Approach" below.
Zero down payment owner financing is real — it happens in the Ohio market regularly and is entirely legal under private seller financing arrangements. But "real in the industry" and "available at every property" are two different things. This guide explains both: how zero-down deals work across the broader owner-financing world, what the honest math and tradeoffs look like, and why EXPX Estates chose a $13,000 minimum down instead of zero for our Toledo property.
What Is Zero Down Owner Financing?
In owner financing (also called seller financing), the property seller acts as the lender rather than a bank. The buyer makes monthly payments directly to the seller, and the seller holds a lien or deed interest until the loan is paid off or refinanced. Because no bank is involved, there is no standard underwriting checklist — the seller sets the terms, including whether they require any down payment at all.
Zero down owner financing means the seller agrees to finance 100% of the purchase price. No bank, no regulator, and no government agency limits how a private seller can structure their deal. If a seller decides they're willing to carry the full amount, that is entirely within their rights. This flexibility is one of the most powerful features of owner financing — and it's why the structure appeals to buyers who don't have a large down payment saved.
In Ohio, owner-financed transactions are commonly structured as Land Installment Contracts under ORC Chapter 5313, which governs the rights and obligations of both parties — including payment schedules, default cures, and the buyer's path to deed transfer.
Yes, Zero Down Owner Financing Is Real — Here's Why Sellers Do It
Seller motivations matter enormously when it comes to zero-down deals. Here are the most common scenarios where sellers accept no down payment:
Motivated sellers who need cash flow, not a lump sum. An elderly landlord who has owned a property free and clear for 20 years may prefer steady monthly income over a large one-time payment — especially if that lump sum would come with a significant capital gains tax bill. Carrying a loan at 10% or higher gives them dependable, tax-favorable income for years. The down payment matters less than the income stream.
Inherited properties. When heirs inherit a property, they often want to sell quickly without the hassle of listing, showing, and waiting for a conventional buyer. An owner-financed buyer who can close in two weeks — even with no down payment — may be more appealing than a conventional sale that could fall through due to appraisal or financing contingencies.
Hard-to-sell properties. A property with deferred maintenance, a challenging condition, or in a softening neighborhood may sit unsold for months while the seller's carrying costs (taxes, insurance, upkeep) accumulate. An owner-financed buyer who will take the property in its current condition and begin making payments immediately may be worth more in real terms than a conventional buyer who never materializes.
Sellers who want to maximize total yield. A seller who offers zero down at a higher interest rate may actually earn more total dollars over the life of the loan than a seller who takes 10% down at a lower rate. When carrying more principal at a premium rate, the math often works in the seller's favor over a multi-year horizon.
The Honest Tradeoffs: Higher Rate, Higher Risk
Zero down is not free. The absence of a down payment is compensated by a higher interest rate — and over the life of the loan, that difference is meaningful. This is an honest tradeoff, not a trick, and it's important to go in with eyes open.
When you put 0% down, the seller is financing 100% of the purchase price. If you default early, they have no equity cushion — they'd need to pursue forfeiture or foreclosure, resell the property, and hope to recoup their full principal. That is real risk, and sellers charge a real premium for it. A zero-down owner-financed deal will typically carry an interest rate 1.5 to 2.5 percentage points higher than a deal with 10-15% down.
Scenario A: Industry Zero-Down Example — $110,000 Home, 0% Down
This illustrates how a typical zero-down deal might be structured in the broader owner-financing market. These are not EXPX Estates terms.
The higher rate reflects the seller's additional risk. Compared to a deal with a down payment, the buyer pays more each month and carries a higher balloon balance at refinance time. The tradeoff: if you genuinely don't have a down payment saved, owning with a higher rate is still likely better than renting indefinitely with nothing to show for it — as long as your income is strong enough to sustain the payment.
Our Approach at EXPX Estates: $13,000 Minimum Down
EXPX Estates chose not to offer zero-down financing at our Toledo property. Here is why — and why we think a modest minimum down actually benefits buyers as much as it protects us.
Why We Require a $13,000 Minimum Down Payment
The owner financing minimum down payment question comes down to alignment of incentives. When a buyer puts $13,000 into a transaction on day one, several things happen that make the deal work better for both parties:
- Lower monthly payment. With $13,000 down, the financed balance drops from $110,000 to $97,000. That means a lower monthly payment and more room to breathe each month.
- Better rate. Because the seller's risk is reduced, a buyer with $13,000 down can negotiate a lower interest rate than a zero-down buyer — resulting in substantial savings over the loan term.
- Immediate equity. From day one, you own 11.8% of the home's value. That equity cushion protects you if property values soften and makes refinancing significantly easier when the balloon comes due.
- Signals financial readiness. The ability to save $13,000 is a reliable indicator that the buyer can sustain homeownership. It demonstrates budget discipline, income stability, and a genuine commitment to the property. Sellers who offer owner financing without any minimum are taking a larger bet on the buyer's follow-through.
- Smaller balloon to refinance. A lower loan balance means a smaller balloon payment at 36 months, which translates to easier conventional refinancing qualification when the time comes.
Why sellers require down payments is ultimately the same reason lenders do: skin in the game reduces default risk, and reduced default risk reduces the rate both parties need to feel comfortable proceeding. The $13,000 minimum is not a gatekeeping measure — it's a structure that gives the transaction the best chance of a successful outcome for everyone involved.
Scenario B: Our Offer — 1601 Nevada St, Toledo OH — $13,000 Down
These are the actual terms available at EXPX Estates. Rate is set at contract signing based on the FRED DCPN3M index plus statutory markup per ORC 1343.01(B)(4); 10% is used here as a realistic illustrative figure.
At ~$851/month, the payment is significantly lower than the zero-down scenario above — and you enter the transaction with immediate equity. The 3-year balloon gives you a defined timeline to improve your credit profile and refinance into a conventional mortgage at whatever the prevailing rate is in 2029. Our credit guide walks through the steps to prepare for that refinance from day one.
How Equity Builds From Day One
A common misconception is that a small down payment means slow equity growth. In reality, equity builds from three sources — all of which work from the moment you close:
Instant equity from the down payment. Your $13,000 down payment is $13,000 in equity immediately. You own a 11.8% stake in a $110,000 asset before you make a single monthly payment.
Amortization (principal paydown). Every monthly payment includes both interest and principal. On a $97,000 loan at 10% with 30-year amortization, your first payment of ~$851 includes about $808 in interest and $43 in principal. Over 36 months of payments, you pay down approximately $1,600-1,800 in additional principal — modest on a 30-year schedule, but cumulative.
Appreciation. Ohio home values have historically appreciated 3-5% annually in most markets. A $110,000 home that appreciates 4% per year is worth approximately $123,600 after 3 years. That $13,600 increase in value belongs to you, the buyer. Combined with your down payment equity, you could have $26,000-28,000 in equity at balloon time — giving you a strong refinance position.
Understanding the 3-Year Balloon
Our Land Installment Contract includes a balloon payment due at month 36. This means the loan balance — approximately $95,200 at the 10% illustrative rate — becomes due in full at that point. Most buyers address this through a conventional refinance: after 36 months of on-time payments and (typically) improved credit, qualifying for a bank mortgage at a competitive rate becomes much more achievable.
The 3-year window is not a trap — it's a defined path. From the day you sign the contract, you know exactly when you need to refinance and approximately what balance you'll need to refinance. That clarity lets you work backward: if your credit score needs to improve from 580 to 620, you have 36 months to make that happen through on-time payments and responsible credit use. Our credit guide outlines exactly how to build a refinance-ready profile during your contract term.
Risk Management: What Happens If You Hit a Rough Patch?
Owner financing gives buyers more flexibility than conventional mortgages — and that flexibility extends to how payment issues are handled. Here's how to protect yourself:
- Build an emergency fund before closing. Accumulate 3-6 months of housing payments in a separate savings account. This is your protection against job loss, medical bills, or unexpected repairs.
- Buy below your means. If your budget can stretch to $1,100/month, signing for an $851/month payment leaves meaningful margin.
- Communicate early. If you're going to be late on a payment, reach out before it's due — not after. Sellers who know you're navigating a temporary hardship are far more likely to work with you than sellers who receive silence and assume the worst.
- Make extra principal payments when you can. Even an additional $50-100/month toward principal accelerates equity building and reduces your balloon balance — making the eventual refinance easier.
Preparing a Strong Application
Whether you're applying with us or researching owner financing more broadly, income and employment stability are the primary qualification factors when the down payment is modest. Here's what to bring to any owner-financing application:
- 2 most recent pay stubs (or 3 months of bank statements if self-employed)
- 2 most recent W-2s or 1099s
- Employment verification letter stating your position, start date, and salary
- 12-24 months of on-time rent payment history — a landlord reference letter or bank statements showing recurring rent payments
- Brief explanation letter if you have negative credit events
- Utility bills at your current address confirming residency stability
Income guideline for our offer: Your gross monthly income should be at least 3x the monthly payment. For our ~$851/month payment, that means a demonstrable gross monthly income of at least $2,550 — though we look at the full picture, not just a single ratio. More income margin is always better for your own financial health.
See our credit guide for a full walkthrough of how we evaluate applications and what you can do right now to improve your profile before applying.
What Makes 1601 Nevada St a Good Fit for Owner Financing
Not every property is suited to a land installment contract. 1601 Nevada St was specifically structured for this type of sale:
- Owned free and clear — no underlying mortgage means no due-on-sale risk and maximum flexibility on terms
- Priced at $110,000, within realistic refinance range for Toledo-area buyers after 36 months
- Structured under ORC Chapter 5313, which gives buyers statutory protections including a cure period before forfeiture can proceed
- Rate set at contract signing using a transparent index (FRED DCPN3M) plus Ohio statutory markup — no hidden pricing
Browse the full property details and run your own payment scenarios at our Toledo listings page.
Conclusion: Zero Down Is Possible in the Industry — Here's What We Chose Instead
Zero down owner financing is real and it is used regularly across Ohio and the broader U.S. market. For the right seller — motivated, free-and-clear, prioritizing income over lump-sum proceeds — financing 100% of the purchase price can make excellent business sense. For the right buyer — strong income, stable employment, no access to savings yet — zero down can be the difference between homeownership and indefinite renting.
But at EXPX Estates, we chose a different structure for our Toledo property. A $13,000 minimum down lowers your monthly payment, secures a better rate, gives you immediate equity, and makes your 36-month path to refinancing significantly more realistic. It is not a barrier to homeownership — it is a structure designed to give the transaction the best chance of working out well for both sides.
If you have $13,000 and stable income, the property at 1601 Nevada St may be exactly the right fit. If you're still building toward that number, our credit and savings guide can help you get there with a concrete plan.
Ready to Apply for 1601 Nevada St?
$13,000 down · $97,000 financed · ~$851/mo (at 10% illustrative) · 3-year balloon · Land Installment Contract under ORC Ch. 5313
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