Rent to Own / Owner financing

November 20, 2008

Just recently I talked to a home repairman. He was telling me how he’d worked for a builder for over 10 years and how he had an “agreement” to purchase a home from his boss. They’d agreed on a price ($23,000) and on an amount that would come out of his paycheck every month. But that was it. Nothing in writing, no mention of interest. The home was in bad repair and the employee spent long hours and money renovating the home. The builder refused to do any repairs as he told the employee that as a home “owner”, it was the employee’s responsibility. Fast forward 10 years. The employee had come into some money and wanted to pay off the home and get a deed. He had enough money to pay off the principle and enough left over to pay interest of 8%. The builder refused the payoff, stating that as the home was worth more now, he wanted an additional $20,000 but that if the employee wanted, he could continue paying monthly. Needless to say, that employee is no longer working for the builder and no longer living in the house he’d called home for over 10 years.

Many people with poor credit feel that a “rent to own” option will help them find a home. They think that it is similar to going to some of the “no credit check” rent-to-own furniture stores that are in every town. “I’ll pay $1000 a month and then one day I’ll own the home”. Yes, it is possible to structure a “rent to own” contract, but it is extremely important to lay out all contingencies. How much of the base rent will go towards principle? Who is responsible for repairs? Is there a default clause if the buyer leaves the home before the house is paid off? Will the buyer forfeit the equity or will he get some of it back? In the case of delinquent rent, will the equity be applied to delinquent rent and the purchase/rent to own contract be voided? Remember, in a rent to own situation, the tenant/purchaser does not have title to the property.

Owner financing is different. In this case, deed is passed to the buyer at closing and a mortgage is held by the seller. The buyer will sign a mortgage note and mortgage the home. The terms of the note will have been negotiated before closing. In this case, the seller is not responsible for any repairs to the home and must proceed through legal channels to foreclose on the property should the buyer default on the mortgage note. Most sellers are reluctant to owner finance to someone with poor credit, but if there extenuating circumstances, this might be an option for those buyers who are not eligible for traditional financing.



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Local Information for Pittsboro, NC

Latitude: 35.925921 -- Longitude: -79.039466


Other Area Cities:   Chapel Hill  Durham  Hillsborough  Mebane  Cary 

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Chapel Hill is a town in North Carolina and the home of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH), the oldest state-supported university in the United States. As of the 2000 census, it had a population of 48,715. As of 2004 its estimated population was 52,440[2]. The 2004 Metropolitan Population was: 1,467,434, for The US Office of Management and Budget's Metropolitan Combined Statistical Area known as Raleigh-Durham-Cary (formerly known as the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill Metropolitan Statistical Area). Chapel Hill, Durham and Raleigh make up the three corners of the Research Triangle, so named in 1959 with the creation of the Research Triangle Park, a research park between Durham and Raleigh. Since the early 1980s, the bedroom community of Cary, near Raleigh, has grown to be more than twice the size of Chapel Hill. -- Source: Wikipedia.com




North Carolina 2000 Census Population Profile Map

Chapel Hill North Carolina United States
Population 48,715 8,049,313 281,421,906
Median age 24 35.3 35.3
Median age for Male 24.8 33.8 34
Median age for Female 23.2 36.7 36.5
Households 17,808 3,132,013 105,480,101
Household population 39,468 7,795,432 273,643,273
Average household size 2.22 2.49 2.59
Families 8,139 2,158,869 71,787,347
Average family size 2.88 2.98 3.14
Housing units 18,976 3,523,944 115,904,641
Occupied units 17,808 3,132,013 105,480,101
Vacant units 1,168 391,931 10,424,540

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Lisa Pishney - Realty World Carolina Properties
Lisa Pishney
Realty World Carolina Properties


PO Box 1400
Pittsboro, NC 27312

VOICE: 919-545-9911

FAX: 919-545-9406



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