The Facts on Lease-to-Buy

By Tammy Stoner, FrontDoor.com | Published: 11/01/2007

There's more than one way to get out of your house. You can, of course, sell it outright. Or you do a lease-to-buy deal.

Lease-To-Buy
If your house has been on the market for a while, you need to move quickly, or you have a motivated buyer who can't gather enough cash to buy but can put down a nonrefundable deposit on a future buy, you might consider a Lease-to-Buy Option.

Your Realtor (or your collection of real estate books) can walk you through the details, but the overall picture is this: You and your leasor agree to a set price (great for the leasor/buyer if the market goes up and great for you if the market goes down) and time frame to make an offer with a nonrefundable "earnest money" deposit (often called a "consideration" in lease-buy options) from your leasor. The leasor may offer to buy at any time during your term, often putting their rent and earnest money against the agreed-upon price. If they decide not to buy, you keep the earnest money and put the house on the market again (you hope at a higher price than the year before), continue your lease-to-buy, or simply switch to a standard rental agreement with your tenant.

GO TO: Part 1: Evaluate Your Situation

GO TO: Part 2: Plan Your Selling Strategy

GO TO: Part 3: Stage and Show the Home

GO TO: Part 4: Close the Deal

GO TO: Home Seller's Guide

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