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How much is your seller financed mortgage worth?

This depends on several factors:

bulletThe interest rate on your mortgage
bulletWhether it is current or not
bulletIf it is a first or second mortgage
bulletThe size of the mortgage to the value of the property (Loan to Value)
bulletThe credit report of the borrower
bulletHow many payments you have received (Is the mortgage "aged")
bulletThe type of property
 
Value Increased Value Decreased
Equity position of 20% or more Limited equity/Small down payments
1-10 year maturities, or longer term amortization with balloon Long term fully amortizing obligations (no balloons)
Good borrower credit Bad borrower credit
Seasoned note with satisfactory payment history Unseasoned note or simultaneous closing
Market interest rate for risk involved Below Market interest rate for risk involved
Late charge provision in note No late charge provision on the note
Due on sale/right to approve Assumptor clause No due on sale or Assumption/Approval right
Financial statement on borrower No Financial statement on borrower
First mortgage or large second mortgage relative to first Large amount of debt senior to subject debt (on junior liens only)
Step rates which increase interest rate over time (not usual) Fixed rate note
Timber cutting clause on acreage properties No timber cutting clause on acreage properties
Flood insurance required and maintained if property is in flood zone Property in a flood zone without flood insurance
Professional note collection by third party Seller collects own payments
Cross default clause in junior liens (default on first mortgage is grounds to default the second, even if second is current) No cross default clause in junior liens (default on first mortgage can mean second is wiped out and holder of second has no right to default the second, if it is current)
Credit report on borrower available and up to date No credit report on borrower and no right to pull one
Reasonable sized mortgage compared to the property value Small size note or contract
Well written and structured note and Deed Release provisions Badly written note
Title insurance available and no exclusions No title insurance
  Subordination clause that could force the note into lower priority
 

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