Amy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.
Amy Fontinelle Personal Finance ExpertAmy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.
Written By Amy Fontinelle Personal Finance ExpertAmy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.
Amy Fontinelle Personal Finance ExpertAmy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.
Personal Finance Expert Rachel Witkowski Correspondent/EditorRachel Witkowski is an award-winning journalist whose 20-year career spans a wide range of topics in finance, government regulation and congressional reporting. Ms. Witkowski has spent the last decade in Washington, D.C., reporting for publications i.
Rachel Witkowski Correspondent/EditorRachel Witkowski is an award-winning journalist whose 20-year career spans a wide range of topics in finance, government regulation and congressional reporting. Ms. Witkowski has spent the last decade in Washington, D.C., reporting for publications i.
Written By Rachel Witkowski Correspondent/EditorRachel Witkowski is an award-winning journalist whose 20-year career spans a wide range of topics in finance, government regulation and congressional reporting. Ms. Witkowski has spent the last decade in Washington, D.C., reporting for publications i.
Rachel Witkowski Correspondent/EditorRachel Witkowski is an award-winning journalist whose 20-year career spans a wide range of topics in finance, government regulation and congressional reporting. Ms. Witkowski has spent the last decade in Washington, D.C., reporting for publications i.
Correspondent/EditorUpdated: Sep 27, 2021, 10:04am
Editorial Note: We earn a commission from partner links on Forbes Advisor. Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations.
Getty
For the buyer, a land contract is an alternative to getting a mortgage or paying cash to buy a home. For the owner, it’s a way to sell property a bank may not want to finance. It can also be a way for a seller to expand the pool of potential buyers to include people who might not qualify for a traditional or government-backed home loan.
A land contract is a legal agreement where the owner finances the buyer’s purchase of a piece of real estate. Despite its name, a land contract isn’t necessarily an agreement to purchase a vacant parcel (though it can be). It’s often a contract to buy a house plus the land under and around it.
Both parties make compromises under a land contract. The seller won’t get paid in full when the deal closes, like they would if the buyer got a mortgage or paid cash. Instead, they’ll get paid over time—if the buyer makes all the payments. The buyer often unknowingly sacrifices the legal protections they’d get with a rental agreement or mortgage finances.
Land contracts don’t have to be a bad deal for buyers. But they do have a decades-long history of being more advantageous for sellers than buyers and have been used for discriminatory practices. You should be keenly aware of this context if you’re thinking about entering into a land contract.
The laws governing land contracts vary by state, but here’s how a land contract is generally supposed to work.
A buyer and seller draw up a contract that includes the following information:
After both parties sign the contract, the buyer gets an equitable title or a general warranty deed. These documents protect the buyer by allowing them to accumulate equity in the property and by preventing the seller from taking out new loans against the property or selling the property to anyone else. The buyer also gets the right to occupy and improve the property.
It’s important to note that the seller can also be called a vendor, and the buyer can be called the vendee.
The seller holds the legal title until the buyer pays off the property. This, combined with a contract (that may not spell out everything listed above), is why many buyers get fleeced in land contract deals. This is discussed further below. But first, it’s important to understand the types of land contracts.
A land contract may sound similar to a lease with an option to buy (purchase option) or rent-to-own agreement, but it’s not the same thing. A land contract is an agreement to purchase, whereas a lease or rent option is not.
Land contracts can go by many names:
Under a land contract, the buyer does become the owner once the land contract is signed. But the down payment under a land contract works like the nonrefundable option fee paid with a purchase option contract. Most importantly, in any of these arrangements, not having the cash or financing to complete the transaction at the end of the term means the buyer loses a lot of money and has to find another place to live.
Though state law may lay out certain requirements for land contracts, the terms are largely up to the buyer and seller. The buyer in a land contract might assume the seller has all the power, but that’s not true. They may have more money and more resources. But buyers can work toward leveling the playing field by knowing their rights and their options for protecting themselves.
Buyers should ask for certain protections and get them in writing in the contract. They should also seek the assistance of an attorney (preferably one who specializes in real estate) who does not represent the seller. A buyer considering seller financing may not have the money to hire an attorney, of course. Free assistance may be available from a local law clinic, legal aid society or nonprofit housing counseling agency. By not running the contract by a legal expert, you could stand to lose a great deal.
Check out the National Consumer Law Center’s key recommendations for how the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau regulates land contracts nationwide, though it is limited. These suggestions highlight the lack of federal (and often state) consumer protections for these deals. They also offer guidance on how you should seek to protect yourself as a buyer if you want to proceed with a home purchase using a land contract.
If you are considering a land contract, there are a number of steps you can take to better protect yourself during the negotiations process.
Check your rates today with Better Mortgage.
Sometimes the people or companies selling properties via land contract don’t have the buyer’s best interests in mind. Do an online search for “land contract” and the name of your state, and another search for “land contract” and the seller’s name, to look for red flags.
There are many land contract horror stories. To summarize them, the National Consumer Law Center says land contracts “allow investors to avoid responsibility for property upkeep while churning successive would-be homeowners through a property they could not legally rent.”
Land contracts are often marketed to people of color, immigrants and low-income individuals who can’t obtain traditional financing but can potentially set them up to lose money and their home.
How? Land contracts often make it all-too-easy for buyers to lose their money and equity they’ve put into the home. For instance, a land contract with a balloon payment (similar to a balloon mortgage) might be impossible for a buyer with low income to pay off or refinance when the time comes.
Along the way, the buyer could lose the home if they’re late on a single payment. Agreements often favor sellers and make it easy for them to evict or foreclose on buyers. In Ohio, the seller can bring court action against a delinquent buyer after just 40 days. For traditional banks and mortgages, it typically takes more than 90 days of delinquency.
Besides that, the seller might offer a land contract even if they don’t own the property free and clear and are still paying off a mortgage. Whie not illegal, one potential problem is that the lender can require the loan to be immediately paid off in full if the property’s owner changes hands. Another problem is that the seller could stop paying the mortgage while continuing to collect the buyer’s payments.
In Ohio, at least, the buyer is allowed to step in and make the seller’s mortgage payments if the seller stops paying. Those payments then count toward the buyer’s land contract installment payments. But this law assumes the buyer knows what’s going on.
Rather than signing a land contract, a buyer who is short on cash and/or lacking good credit may be better off renting instead of buying, while saving up a down payment and improving their credit. Even without a down payment—or with a down payment as low as 3%—you can qualify for a low-down-payment conventional mortgage and possibly even get down payment assistance.
Another option is seeking a mortgage from a portfolio lender or credit union that offers more flexible underwriting standards. These lenders don’t have to follow the rules that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or the Federal Housing Association (FHA) lay out. They might have an option that would work for you and offer better terms and legal protections than a land contract.
A land contract can mutually benefit the buyer and seller when both parties act in good faith and take the right steps to legally protect themselves. However, since it’s a less common way of selling property, land contracts come with fewer consumer legal protections than a traditional property sale. Whether you’re considering buying or selling a property with a land contract, it’s important to understand the pros and cons before deciding whether to proceed with a deal.
Get Forbes Advisor’s ratings of the best mortgage lenders, advice on where to find the lowest mortgage or refinance rates, and other tips for buying and selling real estate.
Thanks & Welcome to the Forbes Advisor Community!This form is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policyand Terms of Serviceapply.
By providing my email I agree to receive Forbes Advisor promotions, offers and additional Forbes Marketplace services. Please see our Privacy Policy for more information and details on how to opt out.