And What Note Holders Should Know Instead
If you’ve ever considered selling a seller-financed mortgage note, you’ve probably heard strong opinions—some from well-meaning friends, others from the internet, and some from people who have never actually sold a note.
Unfortunately, a lot of what circulates about selling notes is incomplete, outdated, or flat-out wrong.
This article addresses the most common myths note holders believe—and replaces them with clear, practical reality.
Myth #1: “My Note Is Worth the Full Balance”
This is the most common misconception.
Your note has a remaining balance, but that balance is not the same as market value. Buyers are purchasing:
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Future payments
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Over time
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With risk
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Using their own capital
Market value reflects time value of money and risk, not what the borrower still owes.
A discounted price doesn’t mean your note is bad—it means it’s being priced as a financial asset.
Myth #2: “Only Non-Performing Notes Get Sold”
Many people assume selling a note means something has gone wrong.
In reality, many notes are sold when:
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Payments are current
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The borrower is cooperative
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The property has strong equity
Selling while a note is performing often results in better pricing and more options, not fewer.
Waiting until payments stop usually reduces leverage.
Myth #3: “All Note Buyers Lowball”
There are low-quality buyers in every industry—but discounting alone does not equal lowballing.
A legitimate buyer:
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Explains pricing
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Stays consistent through closing
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Accounts for real risk and time
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Actually closes the deal
Unrealistically high offers that don’t close are far more costly than fair offers that do.
Myth #4: “I Should Wait Until I Need the Money”
Waiting often feels safe—but it introduces risk.
Common issues that arise while waiting:
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Borrower circumstances change
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Property condition declines
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Markets soften
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Your urgency increases
The strongest negotiating position is before a problem exists, not after.
Myth #5: “Selling a Note Is Complicated and Risky”
Selling a note can feel intimidating—especially if you’ve never done it before.
In practice, when documents are in order and expectations are realistic:
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The process is straightforward
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Due diligence protects both sides
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Closings are often faster than traditional property sales
Most of the perceived complexity comes from lack of clarity, not the transaction itself.
Myth #6: “I’ll Lose Control Once I Ask for an Offer”
Requesting an offer does not obligate you to sell.
A professional buyer should:
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Review the note
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Explain the numbers
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Allow you to decide without pressure
If someone pushes urgency before you’ve agreed to terms, that’s a red flag.
The Pattern Behind These Myths
Most myths stem from confusing:
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Loan balances with asset value
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Best-case scenarios with real-world outcomes
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Emotion with financial structure
Once you understand how notes are priced and why buyers think the way they do, these myths lose their power.
Final Thoughts
Selling a seller-financed mortgage note isn’t a sign of failure, desperation, or bad judgment.
It’s a financial decision—one that should be made with accurate information, realistic expectations, and a clear understanding of the trade-offs.
The more you understand the process, the easier it is to decide whether selling makes sense now, later, or not at all.

