Long-term portfolio buyer · Clear terms, not just cash
Turn the property
you’re ready to
release into a clear, well-structured exit.
I buy single-family and small multifamily properties using thoughtful,
portfolio-level strategies. Seller finance is my first choice. In some situations, we can also use a
trust-based acquisition structure to take over existing financing when it genuinely supports everyone involved.
I’m a portfolio investor. I think in terms of cash flow, risk, reserves, timing, and how each property fits
into a larger plan that has to work for years.
I don’t treat your sale as a one-time event to flip and forget. I treat it as a decision that should feel
sensible when you look back on it later. When we talk—whether it’s you directly, or you and your agent
together—I’m asking:
What would a serious long-term investor be willing to pay?
What outcome would a well-advised seller feel good about?
How can we use terms and structure to bring those two points closer together?
From the first conversation, the focus is on clarity, alignment, and a structure that works—not a one-size-fits-all offer.
What I buy
Real properties · Real numbers
You don’t need a perfect property. You need a property that can work as a well-structured deal.
Property profile
Types & price range
Single-family houses
Small multifamily and “mom and pop” rentals
From affordable rentals up to roughly $800,000, when the numbers and terms make sense
Condition & situations
What still works
Rent-ready or outdated but functional
Needs work or mid-rehab
Vacant, tenant-occupied, or with tenant challenges
If the property can line up as a solid, sustainable rental with the right structure behind it, I’m interested in reviewing it.
Who I’m really a fit for
Owners & sellers’ agents
If you’re an owner, a seller’s agent, or both working together, and any of this feels familiar, there’s a good chance
we can create something that works.
Owners
When this makes sense for you
You like the idea of seller finance and turning a property you’re ready to release into predictable monthly income.
You appreciate flexible terms, as long as you can clearly see how they support your next move.
You’ve outgrown this property and want a clean, thoughtful transition instead of a rushed decision.
You’re a landlord who is ready for a change, even if the property itself is still a good asset.
Sellers’ agents
When this helps your client
Your client wants options beyond a single cash offer—and they deserve a structured conversation.
The property is a good rental but not an ideal fit for a traditional buyer.
You value straightforward answers about what does and doesn’t work so you can protect the relationship.
You want to present strategies most sellers never hear about, without losing control of the process.
How deals are structured
Plain language · Real strategy
Whenever I review a property, I walk through three key questions:
What would a serious portfolio investor pay in cash today?
What can this property realistically support as a rental after expenses, reserves, and variation over time?
How do your goals line up with what the property can truly support?
From there, we begin shaping offers—with owners and their agents informed at each step.
Primary approach
Seller finance first
We usually start with seller finance, because it often creates a balanced outcome: a strong total price spread
sensibly over time, plus a steady income stream that can support your next moves.
Together, we define purchase price, down payment, monthly payment, term, and any timing or transition details
that matter to you. The design is simple enough to understand and explain, and detailed enough to create
confidence for everyone involved.
Alternate approach
Trust-based acquisition of existing financing
Sometimes a loan is already in place that is too effective to discard. In those situations, we can explore a
trust-based acquisition structure where I step into responsibility for that existing financing through a
documented agreement.
This is used intentionally, with emphasis on clarity, documentation, and long-term performance—not on cleverness.
How the process works
Three clear steps
1
You share the basics
You or your agent send the property address, whether it’s single-family or multifamily, the current
situation (loan, rent, vacancy, key details), and your ideal outcome and timeline. We start with what you
already know—documents can follow later.
2
I run the numbers like a long-term owner
I analyze rent potential, vacancy patterns, expenses, reserves, and how different structures behave
over time. From there, I create one or two clear options—starting with seller finance, and considering a
trust-based structure only when it clearly supports a better outcome.
3
We review the plan in simple terms
On a call with you and your agent if you have one, we walk through how the payment works, how long the
term lasts, how “what if” scenarios are handled, and how the plan supports what you’d like to do next.
Then you decide: move forward, adjust details, or decide it’s not the right fit. The goal is clarity,
not pressure.
How I work with sellers’ agents
You stay at the center
If you’re a listing agent or advising a seller, you stay at the center of the client relationship. I’m here to
add options and structure—not to bypass anyone.
I provide clear written outlines so you can confidently discuss them with your client.
I respond directly when something does or doesn’t work, so expectations stay grounded.
We aim for well-designed outcomes that protect your client while giving them access to strategies most
sellers never hear about.
Even if we don’t end up doing a deal, your client walks away with a better understanding of their options—because you brought them a more complete set of options.
Start the conversation
No pressure · Just clarity
Best first step: send a simple text with the basics.
When you reach out, you’re not committing to anything. You’re opening a higher-quality discussion about
what’s possible for this property.
Property address
Single-family or multifamily
Current situation (loan, rent, vacancy, key details)