Today, they normally demand upfront payment, so the buyer has to borrow from a bank. These loans are extortionate. The buyer normally pays the bank back about double what he borrowed, over about 30 years.

Instead, the buyer could offer to pay 50% extra on the cost of the house. But he will pay some of it in installments over 30 years. The bank gets nothing, and the buyer and sellers both make huge savings.

It wouldn’t be suitable for every sale, but it would for many. So why don’t people do it? Is there some legal restriction where only the banks are allowed to do this kind of financing?

  • @armond
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    22 years ago

    Assuming the homeowner isn’t wealthy, the current homeowner probably needs the entire payment upfront in order to move to a new house - that would be the case for me anyhow.

    • @roastpotatothiefOPM
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      12 years ago

      I forgot to mention, this arrangement would work even better, once it becomes common. If the seller is also buying a new house, and not paying the full price upfront. Then he also saves 50% of his purchase price. And the monthly payments he gets from his buyer will fund the monthly payments for his own new house.

    • @roastpotatothiefOPM
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      12 years ago

      I don’t know if this would make sense in that case. The seller would need to take a bigger mortgage. You’d need to do a calculation.

      But often people are buying cheaper houses than the ones they are selling. So they receiving a huge cash payment, which either sits in a bank or under a mattress, and they then need to invest somehow.

      It would make more sense to receive 50% more money, but over a long time. So the investment and getting a return on the investment, which you would normally need to manage yourself, happens automatically. So the end result is the same, but without the financial risk or hassle, and for much higher return.

      And the buyer also saves massively. Everyone wins, by removing the middlemen and their fees. The loser is the moneylenders.