You guys are so great about sharing how much you appreciate my free REI forms and enjoythe time-to-time “videos I put out on how to use them.
So hey…here’s another one!
This one’s about a relatively “new breed” of option contract that’s become increasingly popular over the last few years – the non-exclusive, “flexible option”.
It’s actually an extremely simple agreement, and one that savvy wholesalers are increasingly using to open doors to new profits by tapping into flipping other wholesaler’s inventory of deals.
Some questions answered in this here video:
- What the heck is a non-exclusive, “flexible” option?
- How is it different from a regular real estate option?
- Any danger of practicing real estate without a license? (Why/why not)
- What does this form actually give you, in a legal sense?
- Who’s really obligated and who’s not?
- Can you shop other investors deals to your buyers list? If so, how?
- Can other investors use this to shop your deals to their buyers? If so, how?
- What’s a good “option term” for a deal like this?
- And more…
Intriguing, say you? Then watch the video, says I! Arrrrgh!
The Originator…
The original “Flex Option” is a concept conceived and born (and now trademarked 🙂 ) by Tim Mai of DoDeals.com. ANd while the “Non-Exclusive, Flexible” Option here is along similar lines to Tim’s, there are also some key differences. For starters, Tim offers one Flex Option for Wholesalers and another for Owner Financing deals.
But credit should be duly given to Tim for being the first mad scientist (that I know of at least) to really come out witha form like this, and start teaching people how to use it to wholesale other people’s deals. You did a good thing, Tim. Thanks!
Also, in order to get Tim’s two flex options, you historically had to be a student of his full blown REI course. But he actually shared with me via email that both of his original Flex Options are now freely available to his premium dodeals members. So if you want Tim’s original Flex forms, go check it out!
Other Quick Stuff…
- You can download the “non-exclusive, flexible option” by itself here…
- If you already have my packet of 53 free REI forms, yes, you’ll find it already inside (under the buy/sell folder).
- Very special thanks to my buddy Erik Stark for being our guest start in this “REI Undressed” episode. And again, thanks to Tim for the popularizing the original concept!
And yes, I’d really love your honest feedback on this one please. After you watch/download, please leave a quick comment with your own thoughts or questions below. Thanks in advance!
PS – If you enjoyed this free video form, you can say “thanks” by voting for me in the 2009 REI Battle of the Blogs!
Dude! This is *VERY* valuable! Everyone who reads this post is going to be stoked! Thank you! 🙂
I love options…
This ones great for quick flips…
I’ll do you one better…
Has anyone ever heard of a non-exclusive option to purchase?
JP, as always, this is EXCELLENT content. Your contributions are valued and Erik did a great job explaining the Flex Option document, as well as its role and utility. Well done.
This is great!
My question is then when you assign the option do you use an assignment of contract or is there an assignment of option? Thank you.
JP
Hey, I watched the video on the real estate flex option and I have a question. Once I find a buyer after having the flex option signed by the wholesaler do I need a new contract between the end buyer and the owner of record or between the wholesaler and end buyer or between myself and the end buyer. What is the appropriate way to do this?
Whose title company do I use mine or the wholesaler’s to send the contract(s) to?
Thanks in advance for your response.
ML
no i would really appreciate any info about non exclusive option to purchase thank you walt lafayette email [email protected]
hijp great info can you do a video on how to determine comps,that’s one of my weak area,knowing how to read comps.what if the property is in a nice area,and it’s not a foreclosure,but a free and clear 3/2brick 1100sf needs about 10 or 15k in repairs,has some foreclosures in area that sold for 30k but area is worth 75k and up.how do i determine arv to make a offer to seller? p.s i live in michigan,so you know how this economy is
Hi JP!
THANK YOU for posting this very valuable piece of information. This was a very timely post, as I am taking the step in birddogging/property prospecting and was unclear of how the chain of transactions and the paperwork on the back end would be. I wanted to see if someone could clarify though some questions I had. If I took your first suggested method and just assigned the option agreement and let them step in my shoes, than the end buyer and the Optionor that I marketed this deal for would just work together on the deal to close on the deal? Would the birddog fee appear on the HUD somewhere if I were to go this route? It would appear to be that it would be just one set of closing costs as well since its a straight assignment of option? What if I was being offered a referral fee from the Optionor for finding a buyer, as well as the referral fee that the end buyer and I had agreed upon. Is this even legal to collect (2) sets of referral fees if I was able to be the principal in this deal because of this option contract? And then, how would it be reflected on the HUD if it is legal?
As far as the 2nd method by exercising my option to purchase and execute a purchase and sale agreement with the end buyer, then assigning it – Im not clear as to how that is different than the first option, aside from the fact that there is an extra step? Would this method prevent the optionor’s info from being public info (thats what is seems like) and would this result in a double close situation or would I have to work out a simultaneous close with the title co/atty?
Thanks for all your helpful information! And you’re welcome for the post.
J.P.,
This is basically the identical agreement I’ve been using for more than a year. An investor sent it to me. Later that year, I saw Tim Mai’s video on Flex Option agreements and paused the video, when he showed the agreement. It was the same agreement that was e-mailed to me.
I modified it to take out the “seller can cancel…” sentence, so I can actually assign this agreement. Without doing that, I would first have to notify the seller of my intention to exercise the option and then I would have to write up another contract. Sometimes it would take to long to do that and I might lose the buyer.
Of course, if I have a seller that’s not sure if they to tie up their property with me, I can leave the cancelation sentence in their.
I use the flex option agreement when wholesaling other wholesalers’ deals.
Demos Loizides
thanks JP, great contract!
Two questions
1.) Do you know or do you know someone who would know if use of this contract and subsequent marketing to investors would be considered brokering without a license (or something similar) in Canada?
2.) What do you do to agree to a closing period once you actually write up the purchase and sale? e.g. if the seller wants 15 days closing and your buyer wants a bit longer.
I have ID’d a property where, as a subject to, there would be good cash flow (taking into consideration mortgage payments, area rents, and everything else). However, going by comps the mortgage principal would put the property underwater.
So, it might make sense for someone for a long-term hold. However, I don’t want to get tied up myself (I don’t want to take on the mortgage), I’m new at flipping (so have to generate a buyer’s list, and not confident I can find buyers in a short time), plus I’d like to set the seller’s mind at ease about tying it up. So a flex option might work.
Have you ever written a flex option subject-to, or suggest what one might look like? (And, is this just too wacko?)
.-= Eric´s last blog ..3 Secrets to Reading Housing data for the Real Estate Investor, Part 1: Understanding Seasonally-Adjusted Data =-.
Great video JP, thanks for sharing.
I have a somewhat related question:
How the heck did you get a 13 minute video on YouTube? I thought that they were capped at 10 minutes
🙂
Justin
My VOTE IS IN!!
anyway, if you had a home you were selling and needed to sell it and i came along and said, “Hey i will try and see if i can find a buyer, sign this (option)” then i find a buyer for say $5,000 more than what the owner wants, am i paid up front by the buyer or out of escrow? Cause if the seller can cancel then my investor just lost his money to me!
Also, if there is no purchase agreement first, then i find a buyer with the option contract and he signs, does he just go to the seller and start a purchase and sale?
now if i was marketing for ANOTHER wholesaler and i used this with him while he had a purchase and sale contract with the right to assign, then it makes more sense to me. Basically i would find a buyer, he signs my document, gets in touch with the person with the right to assign, assigns to him and they all go to closing and we are paid out of closing right?
I just don’t want my buyer to feel like something might not go through and he just dumped me a check for 5k. Small walk through on this maybe?
Thanks!
Dwight
I think i get it. The option is a piece of paper basically that’s not notarized so when i find a buyer he can literally just start a new purchase and sale agreement with the seller and i can get my fee by assigning the option??
i heard of another way before and its that you start a contract with the owner and put your earnest money out at whatever you choose like due on 45 days or before, then find an end buyer even if he is retail and start another contract. if he is cash you can do a back to back closing, if its retail you keep both those contracts around but do not give them to title. I guess for security just in case or so you can act as a principle i guess. But you start a 3rd contract between the homeowner and the end buyer and put an INVOICE as your payment. By law all invoices MUST be paid out first prior to any closings. I guess some assignments are gone around by investors and you lose all your profit so this is the best way. heard of this?
Hey Jp, If I”m use n the Flex option To Market a sellers property to my Investor buyers, When I find a buyer, What paper work do I need to put together, so that I can cenect every one together & I get paid at closeing If It is a Assignment of Option can you email me a copy of one – And can you tell me how to put this deal together.
JP,
I like it! I was listening to Flip or Treat on the way home last nite and heard you talking about this. Now, I’ve used a straight up option before to try to purchase a property (obviously, I was shopping for an end buyer) but I never even thought of using an option the way you propose in the video. Brilliant. I’m gonna do it!
Thanks!
Carey
P.S. The Pending Hi-Jack was genius too!
.-= Carey_PA´s last blog ..Met with attorney =-.
Will a trust work to take care of FHA seasoning issues on a back-to-back? If so, how do you implement this technique?
Thanks,
Tony
THanks so much! I’ve been looking everywhere for one of these to use in my wholesale business. My mentor calls this “recycling” and does not like the concept as things can get muddy with more moving parts, but I think if you can use systems like Tim and do enough volume it is a viable strategy.
I had to at least say thank you for providing this resource.
Thanks JP,
Hurol
Awesome vid JP.
Jay von Mohr
818-359-1617
i have been looking for someone to explain how this works to me! i am fairly new to wholesaling and just came across a huge inventory and extreme discount deals and wasn’t sure how to do this so thank you so much for explaining so well!!! i just have one question – if I am the Optionor and marketing another wholesalers properties, do i become the one that is on the purchase and sales contract with my end buyer i found? or how do i assure i get paid? and what part does the other wholesaler play at closing? thx again!!!
Hi, thanks for commenting! No, you would assign your option via an assignment of option agreement. This would be in return for a fee (your profit) to be paid at closing. It would all be on the HUD-1 settlement statement. The new buyer steps into your shoes and exercises the option agreement. Make sense?
…jp
Thanks JP! I did not see an assignment of option agreement in your forms (unless I missed this)…Do you know where a good place is to get something like this? Also, do I give a copy of this paperwork to the title company or how can I make sure that I receive monies at closing?
You can just tweak the wording of my assignment of contract…just make it say option instead. It’s not that big a deal at all really. Or your local Realtor board may have one also. Ask a Realtor you know. In terms of ensuring you get paid, yes, you’ll send a copy of the assignment to your title company and make sure they add it to the docs for the deal and know you’re supposed to get paid at closing and be on the HUD-1. I always make sure it’s closing at a title company I know, like and trust.
…jp
AWESOME!! Thank you SO SO much! I think I got it 🙂 I appreciate your help a ton! – And i love what you are doing on this site, including the Faith Corner! Have a great week!
Hi Tim,
After I assign my option to the end buyer, does he give that assignment form to his title company so they know they have to pay me when it close? Is that the way it works unless I get paid my assignment fee in cash?
Thanks for the info! I want to make sure that I’m clear – I understand that this contract can be assigned to an end buyer – and if used to market a wholesale property, the wholesaler may also have a contract in place – so with the seller + wholesaler + ME + End Buyer (that I brought to the table) – How is it possible to gain enough control to assure that MY expense is added to the HUD? I can see where it would be VERY COOL to use in a Seller + ME + End Buyer scenario – but when adding a 4th party, I’d be afraid of losing my cut. I would think that the “wholesaler” in a 4 party scenario would call the shots?
How does this differ from a Net Listing, which is illegal by the way?
Hi, Jerry. Thanks for commenting.
For anyone who doesn’t know, a “net listing” is listing in which the broker’s commission is the excess of the sale price over an agreed-upon (net) price to the seller. I.E. Andy Agent agrees to sell Sally Seller’s house on a net listing. They set the net price at $200K. Andy finds a buyer willing to pay $210,000, so his commission is $10,000. Conversely if he finds a buyer offering only $200K, then he earns zero commission.
This is illegal in some states because it can create a conflict of interest for the broker.
The big difference I see between a net listing and using a flex option as described in this post is that we’re investors, buying & selling houses, not agents listing them. There’s no “commission” here. We’re not representing the sellers as their agent (which is why a net listing creates a conflict of interest). We’re acting as principles in the transaction, which means we’re not expected to fall in line with laws governing agency.
Make sense, Jerry?
Thanks for commenting!
This is great. But what about the option consideration? Shouldn’t there be $10 at least as an Option Consideration? Or does there not need to be? I tried this earlier this year (REProfitEngineering on youtube) and was able to record my receipt of option consideration. (It was odd but our “online-signatures” weren’t good enough but the receipt was signed in person, and had “live” signatures so the recorder’s office used that to record and allowed me to submit the option as supporting documentation.)
Thoughts?
-Cory ( currently an IPOD student also.)