The single most-Googled question in this game is "is wholesaling legal?" — and the honest answer isn't a clean yes or no. It's "in most places, yes — if you do it right, and increasingly only if you follow new state rules." Several states tightened their laws in 2024 and 2025, and a few now require a license or specific disclosures for activity that used to fly under the radar. Here's the straight, cited version so you don't learn the line the hard way.
The honest version, up front
We're going to say this loud because it matters: this article is education, not legal advice. SQUATTERS is a software platform and a community — not a law firm, broker-dealer, or investment adviser. Real estate licensing and wholesaling rules are set state by state (and sometimes county by county), they change, and the penalties for getting it wrong can include fines, voided contracts, or worse. The Federal Trade Commission and HUD govern how you advertise and treat consumers, but whether your specific activity needs a license is a state question. Before you wholesale a single deal, talk to a local real estate attorney about what's allowed where you operate. We mean it.
What wholesaling actually is (and what it isn't)
Wholesaling is widely defined — including by reference sources like Investopedia — as putting a property under contract and then either assigning that contract to an end buyer for a fee, or doing a quick double close. The key word is contract. You're not selling the house. You're selling (or transferring) your equitable interest — your contractual right to buy it.
That distinction is the whole ballgame:
- Assigning your own contract = transferring a right you legally hold. (See our honest breakdown of what wholesaling actually is.)
- Brokering someone else's property = marketing, negotiating, or selling real estate you don't have an interest in, on behalf of an owner, for compensation. That's the activity nearly every state reserves for licensed real estate brokers and salespersons.
Mix those two up and you've crossed from "investor" into "unlicensed broker." That's the line every state statute is really drawing.
The core legal line: equitable interest vs. brokering
State real estate licensing acts — you can read your own state's at its real estate commission .gov site, or look up the statute text on Cornell Law School's Legal Information Institute (LII) — generally require a license for anyone who, for a fee, sells, lists, negotiates, or advertises the real property of another.
So the principle most attorneys point to:
- You can sell YOUR equitable interest. Once you have a valid, assignable purchase contract, you hold a real, transferable right. Assigning that right (with intent and ability to perform) is contract law, not brokerage — in most states.
- You cannot broker OTHERS' property without a license. The moment you're marketing a house you don't actually have under contract — "I've got a deal, who wants it?" when you have no signed agreement — you look like an unlicensed broker, and that's where the trouble lives.
If you can't point to a signed, genuine contract that gives you a right to buy, you probably don't have something to assign — you have a listing you're not licensed to take.
The 2024-25 state license + disclosure wave
Here's what changed, and why "is wholesaling legal" is now a moving target. Over roughly 2024 and 2025, a cluster of states acted to regulate wholesaling more directly. Reporting from industry bodies like the National Association of Realtors and trade coverage describe the trend this way:
- Some states have required a real estate license (or restricted unlicensed wholesaling) — Illinois, South Carolina, and Oklahoma are frequently cited examples where statutes were enacted or tightened.
- Others added mandatory disclosure rules — you must tell the seller in writing that you're a wholesaler intending to assign, that you're not buying to live in or hold, and disclose your assignment.
- A few capped or scrutinized practices like deceptive "we buy houses" marketing or assigning without ever intending to close.
Do NOT take the specific list above as current law for your state. Statutes get amended, effective dates shift, and what's true in Illinois isn't true in Texas. The only reliable move is to pull your own state's real estate licensing act — search "[your state] real estate commission" .gov, or read the statute on Cornell LII — and have a local attorney confirm whether your exact activity needs a license or a disclosure. The trend is clearly toward regulation, so assume more rules, not fewer.
Double close vs. assignment: two different paper trails
The two main ways to execute affect both your fee and your legal exposure:
- Assignment — you assign the contract to the end buyer for an assignment fee. Cheaper and faster, but your fee is often disclosed, and some states now require that disclosure.
- Double close (back-to-back closing) — you actually buy the property (A-to-B), then immediately sell it (B-to-C), usually through a licensed title or escrow company, sometimes with transactional funding. More cost and steps, but you take title, which sidesteps some "are you brokering?" arguments.
Neither one is a magic legal shield. A double close done to disguise unlicensed brokering is still a problem. The structure is a tool; the underlying conduct is what gets judged.
Disclosure and transparency: your best defense
Across almost every state's framework, transparency is the through-line. The FTC's guidance on advertising and the broader consumer-protection rules it enforces come down to one idea: don't deceive. Applied to wholesaling:
- Disclose that you're a wholesaler assigning a contract — to the seller and the buyer, in writing.
- Use a real, assignable contract with genuine intent and the ability to perform. A sham contract you never meant to honor is fraud-adjacent, not investing.
- Don't pretend to be a licensed agent or imply you represent the seller.
- Follow marketing and contact laws — Fair Housing (HUD), and TCPA / Do-Not-Call for calls and texts. When in doubt, don't.
- Never touch funds outside a licensed title/escrow company. We will never tell you to wire money, and neither should anyone legitimate.
If every party knows exactly what you're doing and agrees in writing, you're standing on solid ground. If you're hiding the assignment, the fee, or the fact that you don't own the house — you're not.
When you need a license (or an attorney, period)
A few honest tripwires that signal "get licensed or get counsel before you act":
- You're marketing properties you don't have under contract.
- You're negotiating sales on behalf of owners for a fee.
- You're doing high volume — many states scrutinize repeat, business-like activity harder than a one-off.
- Your state recently passed a wholesaling statute (the 2024-25 wave) and you haven't read it.
- You're touching earnest money, escrow, or buyer funds directly.
The cost of an hour with a real estate attorney is nothing next to a voided deal or an unlicensed-practice fine. Pay it.
Red flags to avoid
- Anyone selling a "loophole" that makes a license unnecessary nationwide. There isn't one — it's state-specific.
- Contracts with no real intent to close ("just lock everything up and we'll figure it out").
- Hiding your fee or your assignment from the seller.
- "Wire the funds here" anywhere outside licensed escrow.
- A guru telling you a $2,000 course replaces reading your own state's statute.
Frequently asked questions
So — is wholesaling legal or not?
In most states it remains legal when done correctly: you assign a contract you genuinely hold, you disclose what you're doing, and you don't broker property you don't have an interest in without a license. But the rules vary by state and the 2024-25 wave tightened several of them — so the only correct answer is "check your specific state and confirm with a local attorney." We can't and won't give you a blanket yes.
Do I need a real estate license to wholesale?
It depends entirely on your state and your exact activity. Several states now require a license (or limit unlicensed wholesaling) — Illinois, South Carolina, and Oklahoma are commonly cited examples — while others don't, provided you stay on the "assigning my own contract" side of the line. Read your state real estate commission's licensing act (.gov) or the statute on Cornell LII, and confirm with counsel.
Is a double close more legal than an assignment?
Not inherently. A double close means you actually take title, which can sidestep some "are you brokering?" questions, but it costs more and adds steps. The structure doesn't cure deceptive or unlicensed conduct underneath it. Pick the structure your attorney and your numbers support.
Sources
- U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — advertising substantiation and consumer-protection guidance ("don't deceive")
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) — the Fair Housing Act
- Cornell Law School, Legal Information Institute (LII) — state real estate licensing statutes and definitions
- Your state's Real Estate Commission (
.gov) — the official state real estate licensing act (the authoritative source for YOUR state) - National Association of Realtors (NAR) — industry reporting on state-level wholesaling legislation
- Investopedia — general definition of real estate wholesaling, assignment, and double closing
Want to learn this the right way — legality-first, not hype-first? The free SQUATTERS Academy teaches the legal line, disclosure, and the numbers before it ever teaches you to chase a deal. Start on Squatters →
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SQUATTERS is a software platform and community for real estate investors — not a law firm, broker-dealer, or investment adviser. Nothing here is legal, tax, or investment advice. Wholesaling and real estate licensing laws vary by state, change frequently, and some activity requires a license; the specific states named are illustrative of a trend, not a current legal determination for your situation. Always read your own state's statute and consult a licensed local real estate attorney before acting.