Finding tenant buyers that want to buy your real estate property

HomeReal Estate

  • Author Alan Cowgill
  • Published September 16, 2010
  • Word count 408

When you're in the market to buy homes in order to sell them to tenant buyers, you need a good system for screening potential tenants. If you recruit the right tenants, your business will thrive. If you end up selecting tenants who abandon the properties, you end up losing valuable time, money, and other resources.

Certainly, there is a large pool of people who want to move from being apartment dwellers to home owners. In other words, you may have no shortage of people desiring to become tenant buyers. But how do you separate the good prospects from the bad? And does it cost a great deal of time and money to find suitable tenants?

In order to recruit successful tenant buyers, you need to have a reliable process for screening potential tenants. The better your screening process is, the more trustworthy the applicants you will recruit and the more houses you will sell.

You can receive applications from potential tenants in any number of ways. For instance, you can have the applications dropped into your office mailbox. You can have the applications faxed to you, or you can accept applications online. With so many people surfing the Internet these days, you might find that the online applications are the most popular.

Once you receive an application, you can then run a credit report on the prospective tenant. This is absolutely crucial because, if the prospect has a poor credit history or no credit history at all, he or she is unlikely to be successful in obtaining a home loan. You may also find that people with good credit histories are conscientious and therefore are more likely to be trustworthy tenants.

You'll then need to fill out a fax form that includes the name of the individual, the property in which they're interested, the monthly payment, and the down payment. You then fax the form along with the credit report to the mortgage broker. The mortgage broker then reviews the application and informs the company about when he or she expects to be able to obtain financing for the tenant.

While a salesperson is likely to want to get a tenant into a house right away so that they can be compensated, if a tenant buyer doesn't work out, it causes a myriad of problems. Therefore, you want to recruit only those tenants who have the wherewithal to purchase a house. Otherwise, you're wasting valuable time and money.

E. Alan Cowgill is the owner of Colby Properties, LLC. and President of Integrity Home Buyers, Inc. Since 1995, Alan has bought and sold hundreds of single family and small multi-family investment properties. His home study system, 'Private Lending Made Easy', shows others how to find private lenders for their very own real estate business.

His website is http://www.truthaboutprivatelending.com

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