How Sale-Leaseback Helps Homeowners Stay Put

What is a sale leaseback for homeowners?
A residential sale leaseback is a transaction where you sell your home to an investor and immediately lease it back. After closing, you stay in the same house. You shift from owner to renter, but nothing else changes about where you live.
It is not a loan and it is not a refinance. You sell the property, receive the proceeds from that sale, and sign a lease that lets you continue living there. The lease terms, including duration and rent, are negotiated at closing before you commit to anything.
The main tradeoff: you give up ownership. You will not build equity in that property going forward. That is worth factoring in, but for homeowners carrying financial pressure, the cash-out plus the removal of ongoing ownership costs often outweighs it.
Why are more homeowners looking into this right now?
FHA loan delinquencies hit 11.52% in Q4 2025, the highest since 2021. Foreclosure filings rose 26% year-over-year, reaching a six-year high. And an estimated 1.5 million mortgages were delinquent by late 2025, according to MBA data.
What makes this unusual is the equity situation running parallel to it. U.S. homeowners collectively hold $17 trillion in home equity, with the average mortgaged borrower sitting on roughly $295,000. The financial squeeze is not coming from a lack of value in the home. It is coming from the rising cost of holding it.
Homeowners insurance is up 31.3% since January 2020. Property taxes in high-growth states have climbed significantly. Monthly ownership costs beyond the mortgage payment have become a real pressure point. A HELOC or refinance adds debt and does not address those costs. A sale leaseback does.
What situations does a residential sale leaseback actually help with?
The most common scenarios: you are behind on the mortgage and want to close the deal before the bank forces the issue. You have significant debt — medical bills, credit card balances, or personal loans — and need a real payoff rather than another payment plan. You are going through a divorce and need to liquidate the home's value quickly without either party having to move right away.
It also works for homeowners approaching retirement who want to convert equity into cash without borrowing against the home, and for anyone whose monthly ownership costs — taxes, insurance, maintenance — have outpaced what the home is worth keeping.
One distinction that matters here: a sale leaseback does not require a credit check. HELOC, refinance, and reverse mortgage products all have credit or age requirements. If your credit is already under pressure from missed payments or bankruptcy, those options are likely off the table. This one is not.
What happens to your credit if foreclosure goes through instead?
A sale leaseback closes before the bank takes action, which means the seller controls the outcome. That is a practical advantage, not just a financial one, because a foreclosure record follows you into future rental applications too.
How does a residential sale leaseback work, step by step?
What does a sale leaseback actually cost?
Sell2Rent charges a 6% fee at closing, deducted from the sale proceeds. There are no upfront costs and no fees if the deal does not close within the 3-month window.
That 6% covers the full transaction, title checks and property assessment included. A traditional real estate agent charges a comparable rate and those services are typically billed separately on top of it.
On the ongoing cost side: after the sale, you stop paying property taxes, homeowners insurance, and maintenance. Those transfer to the new owner. Given that insurance costs alone have risen 31.3% since 2020, that shift in monthly expenses is a real number worth calculating before you decide.
How is a sale leaseback different from a HELOC or reverse mortgage?
A HELOC requires a credit check and adds debt. If you are already behind on payments, approval is unlikely. A reverse mortgage is age-restricted (62+) and keeps you responsible for taxes, insurance, and maintenance. A refinance replaces one mortgage with another — still debt-based, still credit-dependent.
A sale leaseback converts equity to cash without borrowing. The tradeoff is ownership: you no longer own the property and will not build equity in it going forward. For homeowners looking to grow wealth through that specific property, that matters. For homeowners who need liquidity and reduced monthly costs now, the math often points the other way.
Can you negotiate how long you stay after a sale leaseback?
Yes. Lease duration is negotiated at closing, the same as rent price. There is no default short-term arrangement. Multi-year leases are common and the terms are agreed upon before you finalize the sale.
Because Sell2Rent runs a competitive bidding process with multiple investors, you have more leverage than if you were negotiating with a single buyer. You pick the offer that best fits your situation — not just the price but the lease terms attached to it.
One more thing worth knowing: you do not go through a rental application. Once the sale closes, you stay as a renter automatically. There is no stage where the sale approves but the tenancy does not.
Is a sale leaseback the right move for your situation?
It is a good fit if you need liquidity, want to stay in the home, cannot qualify for credit-based products, and want to move faster than a traditional sale allows. It handles several problems at once without requiring you to relocate.
It is not a good fit if your finances are stable and your primary goal is long-term equity growth through that specific property. Ownership has real value, and trading it for liquidity only makes sense when liquidity is the more pressing need.
The starting point is straightforward: find out what your home would actually be worth on the investor market. There is no credit check, no commitment, and no cost to get that number.
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