Everybody starts at the bottom. The come-up is finding a real deal nobody else is looking at, running the numbers honestly, and getting it funded and closed — brick by brick, door by door. This is the full playbook for your first off-market deal, start to finish, the legal way. No secret list, no $2,000 course required.
First, the honest part
Off-market and wholesaling rules vary a lot by state, and several states have tightened them. Real estate brokerage and the activities that require a license are regulated at the state level — each state has its own real estate commission setting who must be licensed, which is why the line between legal wholesaling and unlicensed brokering can look different across state lines (check your own state's real estate commission). Some activity can require a real estate license. This is an educational guide — it is not legal, tax, or investment advice, and we're not your attorney. Before you tie up a single property, talk to a local real estate attorney about what's allowed where you operate. Transparency and legality are the whole foundation. Build on anything else and it falls.
Step 1 — Find an off-market property
"Off-market" just means a property that isn't listed on the MLS. The owner may be a tired landlord, an out-of-state heir, or someone behind on taxes who hasn't decided to sell yet. You find them with free public data and consistent legwork — not money.
- Public records — county assessor, recorder, and treasurer offices list owners, mailing addresses (absentee = lives elsewhere), and tax status. Property deeds and assessment records are public record maintained by these county offices, and most publish them online for free.
- Driving for dollars — distressed exterior signals (overgrown yard, code violations, long-vacant) point to a motivated owner.
- Consistent outreach — a respectful, honest letter or call: who you are, that you buy off-market, and a real way to reach you. Stay clean on the rules that govern how you reach people. The Fair Housing Act, enforced by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), prohibits discrimination in housing-related transactions — so never target or screen based on a protected class. If you cold-call, the Federal Trade Commission's Telemarketing Sales Rule and the National Do Not Call Registry restrict calls to registered numbers; if you email, the FTC's CAN-SPAM Act requires honest headers, a real physical address, and a working opt-out. When in doubt, don't.
Our Recon layer surfaces a lot of these signals from free public data, so you spend your time on the best doors instead of scrolling. For the deep version of this step, read how to find off-market properties with no money.
Step 2 — Analyze it cold
A deal lives or dies on the numbers. Three you must know before you make any offer:
- ARV (After-Repair Value) — what the house is worth fixed up, from recent comparable sales ("comps") nearby. The underlying logic isn't invented by investors: appraisers value residential homes using the sales comparison approach — estimating value from recent arm's-length sales of similar nearby properties, adjusted for the differences (as Investopedia describes both ARV and the comparable-sales method).
- Repair estimate — an honest cost to bring it to that ARV condition.
- MAO (Maximum Allowable Offer) — the most you can pay and still leave room for everyone. A common starting formula:
MAO = (ARV × 0.70) − repair costs − your fee
The 70% rule isn't gospel — it's a widely-used investor rule of thumb (the 70% rule and Maximum Allowable Offer as commonly defined by references like Investopedia) that bakes in the end buyer's margin and your assignment fee. Tighter markets run higher; rougher ones run lower. The point is you never make an offer you haven't backed out of the comps.
Step 3 — Get it under contract
If the seller agrees to a fair number, you sign a real, assignable purchase contract — with genuine intent and ability to perform. If you plan to wholesale (assign the contract to an end buyer rather than close it yourself), say so, in writing, to both the seller and the buyer. Hiding the assignment or the fee is exactly where people get into trouble. See what wholesaling actually is for the legal-vs-risky line in detail.
Step 4 — Fund it (or assign it)
Now the money. You have a few honest paths:
- Assign the contract — find a cash buyer or flipper who'll pay for your right to buy, and collect an assignment fee at closing. Lowest capital, the classic come-up entry.
- Bring in a funding partner — a private or hard-money lender funds the purchase and rehab against the deal's numbers (ARV, LTV/LTC, rehab scope, exit). You package the deal so a lender can underwrite it.
- Close it yourself — once you have capital or financing, you take title, execute the plan (flip, BRRRR, or hold), and keep the upside.
Whatever the path: money only moves through a licensed title or escrow company. Nobody legit will ever ask you to wire funds to a personal account, and neither will we. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the FBI both warn that real estate closings are a top target for wire-fraud schemes — scammers send fake last-minute "updated wiring instructions," so always verify any wire details by calling the title or escrow company on a number you independently confirmed, never one from the email.
Step 5 — Close, and build the record
At closing the title company handles the funds and the deed, and you get paid for the work you actually did — finding and tying up a deal someone wanted. Then the most important part: the record. Every honest, verified close is reputation you can't fake and can't buy. That track record is what makes the next deal — and the next funding partner — easier.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need money to start?
Not to find a deal. Your main cost early is time and consistent outreach using free public data. Money — yours or a partner's — comes in at the funding step, after you've found something worth funding.
Is wholesaling legal?
It can be, when you use a real assignable contract, disclose the assignment to all parties, and don't perform activity that legally requires a license where you operate. It varies by state — confirm with a local attorney before you do a deal.
How do I know a deal is actually good?
Back it out of the comps. If the numbers leave honest room after a realistic repair estimate and everyone's fee, it's a deal. If you have to fudge the ARV or shave the repairs to make it work, it isn't.
Sources
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) — Fair Housing Act (prohibited discrimination in housing transactions)
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — Telemarketing Sales Rule, the National Do Not Call Registry, and the CAN-SPAM Act
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — consumer warnings on real estate closing / mortgage wire-transfer fraud
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) — public alerts on business email compromise and real estate wire fraud
- State real estate commissions — state-by-state licensing requirements for real estate brokerage activity
- U.S. county recorder, assessor, and treasurer offices — public records of property ownership, deeds, and tax status
- Investopedia — definitions of After-Repair Value (ARV), comparable sales (comps), the sales comparison approach, Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO), and the 70% rule
Where Squatters fits
You drop in at the bottom and climb. Recon surfaces off-market signals from free public data. Bandit, our AI deal agent, helps you draft compliant outreach and pressure-test the numbers before you commit. And the Block is a crew that's actually run these deals — so you learn from people who've done it, not a guru.
Squat it. Fund it. Own it.
Ready to run the playbook? Start on Squatters →
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. Off-market and wholesaling rules vary by state and some activity may require a license; always consult a local attorney and comply with all applicable laws.