14 Seller Financing Terms Every Note Holder Must Know
From promissory notes to partial purchases, these 14 definitions give private lenders and note holders a clear operational vocabulary for managing seller-financed deals.
From promissory notes to partial purchases, these 14 definitions give private lenders and note holders a clear operational vocabulary for managing seller-financed deals.
A five-step framework for private mortgage lenders and servicers to calculate EACC accurately—covering data verification, fee aggregation, net proceeds, and rate resolution.
Eight creative loan workout structures private mortgage lenders use to resolve distressed notes without foreclosure — from deed-in-lieu with leaseback to structured sale agreements — with lender risk ratings and attorney requirements for each.
Know the vocabulary before you sell, transfer, or restructure a seller-financed note. 13 essential terms explained for private lenders and note holders.
Hard money lenders build sustained investor confidence through proactive private mortgage servicing — early warning systems, structured investor reporting, and decisive default management that protects capital and drives repeat funding.
Ten transparent reporting practices private mortgage investors should demand from servicers — payment ledgers, escrow detail, delinquency aging, exception flags, and audit-ready document retention.
Stop guessing your real cost of capital. These 5 steps show private lenders exactly how to calculate effective annual cost with precision.
Interest rates directly determine which private mortgage workout strategies work — and which ones fail. This guide explains how rate environments change loan modifications, forbearance exits, and liquidation outcomes for private mortgage lenders and investors.
Selling a seller-financed note takes documentation, due diligence, and clean servicing records. Here are the 9 steps that drive a faster, higher-value exit.
Hard money loans carry costs far beyond the interest rate. Here are 7 hidden servicing costs that erode investor returns—and how to control them.