Contracts for Deed and the FSBO Sign
If you have chosen to put an FSBO sign of your property, then you need to learn about “contracts for deed.” That term refers to a type of owner financing, as used in a real estate transaction. Under the terms of a sale conducted within a “contracts for deed” agreement, the property owner promises to give the buyer a deed after the buyer has paid the property owner a certain amount of money.
In most cases, the terms of a “contracts for deed” agreement allow the new property owner to make payments over a set period of time. Each of those payments is expected to include a payment for the interest on the unpaid balance. Only after the buyer has completed all of the required payments does the seller hand the buyer the deed for the property.
Whenever a property owner with an FSBO sign on his or her property calls for the making of a “contracts for deed” agreement, then that property owner can manage to lay aside certain concerns. Once a buyer has signed such an agreement, then the seller of a property expects that buyer to keep the property insured, and to pay the real estate taxes on that property. The buyer carries out those duties in exchange for the opportunity to possess the real estate that has yet to be paid off.