Owner financing (also called seller financing) is when you, the seller, act as the bank - the buyer makes payments to you over time instead of getting a mortgage from a lender. It can be a useful tool in the right situation, but it also carries real risk and specific legal rules. Here is an honest overview for Upstate homeowners.

Quick answer: With owner financing, you sell the home and let the buyer pay you over time under a promissory note and mortgage, often with a down payment and interest. It can widen your buyer pool and create income, but you take on the risk of default and must follow federal Dodd-Frank rules. Most individual sellers financing one property are exempt from the toughest requirements - but you should always involve a South Carolina attorney.

How owner financing works

Instead of the buyer bringing a bank loan, you and the buyer agree on a price, a down payment, an interest rate, and a repayment schedule. The terms are put into a promissory note secured by a mortgage on the property, and the buyer pays you monthly. If the buyer defaults, your remedy is generally to foreclose, just as a bank would.

Why some sellers consider it

  • A larger pool of buyers, including people who can’t easily qualify for a traditional mortgage.
  • Steady income from the interest and payments over time.
  • Potentially faster closing, since there is no bank underwriting.
  • Spreading out capital gains in some cases (ask a CPA about installment-sale treatment).

The real risks

  • Buyer default. If they stop paying, you may have to foreclose to get the property back, which takes time and money.
  • You don’t get all your cash now. Your money comes in over years, not at closing.
  • Property and title risk if the arrangement isn’t documented properly.
  • Legal compliance (below). Done wrong, the note can even become unenforceable.

Because of these, owner financing is best entered into with professional guidance, not a handshake.

The Dodd-Frank rules you need to know

Federal law (the Dodd-Frank Act and SAFE Act) regulates residential seller financing to protect buyers. The key points:

  • Anyone who regularly originates residential mortgages must generally be licensed, but there are exemptions for occasional seller financers.
  • A natural person, estate, or trust that finances one property within a 12-month period is generally exempt from the loan-originator licensing rules (with some conditions).
  • Any seller entity financing three or fewer properties in a 12-month period may qualify for a broader exemption.
  • The rules generally don’t apply to non-owner-occupied properties, vacant land, or commercial property.
  • In South Carolina, an immediate family member is exempt from the loan-originator requirement.
  • Sellers who finance more than three properties a year are not exempt and must meet ability-to-repay requirements.

Getting this wrong can make the loan hard to enforce, so this is squarely a “work with an attorney” area.

Owner financing vs. a cash sale

Owner financing is essentially the opposite trade-off from a cash sale: it can bring more total money over time but ties you to the property’s risk for years, while a cash sale gives you all your money now, cleanly, with no ongoing exposure. Which is better depends on whether you want income and are comfortable with risk, or want certainty and a clean break.

Not legal or tax advice. We buy houses; we are not attorneys or CPAs. Owner financing involves federal and state rules and real risk. Always work with a South Carolina real estate attorney (and a CPA) before structuring a seller-financed sale.

If you’d like to compare owner financing to a straightforward cash sale, we are a local, family-run company buying across Greenville, Spartanburg, Anderson, and Pickens counties. Reach out for a free, no-pressure conversation.