How to Get a Lease is the First Step in a Lease Option Deal
One question that comes up early in lease option student training is how to get a lease when putting together a sandwich lease option deal. When you are trying to figure out how to get a lease, you need to start by looking for motivated sellers. Yesterday, I posted a bog about buying short sales. That's one of many ways to find motivated sellers. And there are many others.
In this blog, I'll answer the question how to get a lease by explaining how to use craigslist and scouring neighborhoods to find motivated sellers that you can bring into a sandwich lease deal.
How to Get a Lease Using Craigslist to Find Motivated Sellers
Craigslist has nine subcategories under the main category of Housing. When working at how to get a lease, you want to be active in 'apts / housing' and 'real estate for sale'. The apts / housing subcategory is where you find landlords advertising houses for rent. This isn't intuitive because you're looking for motivated sellers, but they exist in this subcategory. How to get a lease in this category involves looking for key words in the advertisement indicating the owner is having trouble finding tenants. Common indicators are words like 'rent reduced', 'no deposit required', 'second month free', etc.
When lease option students begin using this technique, a second question I often get is assuming they figure how to get a lease, how will they possibly rent it for more than the current owner is asking for? What you need to remember is with the lease option, you are going after a different audience. The second part of the sandwich lease are people that want to buy a house but can't qualify for a traditional loan. These are not people that want to rent - more about this in another blog. Right now we're concerned with how to get a lease.
The second category on craigslist is 'real estate for sale'. Discovering how to get a lease in this category involves the same technique, looking for key words in the advertising indicating they are motivated to sell. Words like 'price reduced', 'NEED TO MOVE', 'ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED', etc. Notice how some of the ad headlines are in all capital letters. These are people doing everything they can think of to grab your attention. The other clue you are looking for are owner financed houses. These people are more sophisticated sellers and will understand what you are trying to do with a sandwich lease.
The next step in how to get a lease is nothing more than starting to make phone calls to these people and explaining your proposition. However, there are many ways to find motivated seller when you are trying to figure out how to get a lease. Another is scouring neighborhoods for abandoned houses.
How to Get a Lease Scouring Neighborhoods for Motivated Sellers
The picture I selected is a little over the top when it comes to learning how to get a lease by looking for abandoned houses but I wanted to grab your attention. How to get a lease for abandoned house is going to involve properties in better shape than this one. But you'll be looking for places needing minor repairs, the landscaping is in bad shape, and there are old notices tacked to the front door. Places that people can move into with minimal repair but that are clearly abandoned.
Once you find an abandoned house, the next step in how to get a lease is finding the owner. This is done by searching the public tax records. Most counties now have these online. You need to Google something like 'Oakland County tax records'.
I hope this blog helps you find a couple of more ways about how to get a lease that you can turn into a profitable sandwich lease.
Also, take advantage of my Free Book Offer and Video Training for finding motivated sellers and to help you find more ways about how to get a lease. There is valuable content in all of these resources I'm providing to you free. By taking advantage of them, your chances of learning the best ways of how to get a lease improve greatly.
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