9 Questions to Vet a Sale-Leaseback Home Equity Program

American homeowners are sitting on roughly $11.5 trillion in tappable equity, about $212,000 for the average mortgage holder, according to the ICE Mortgage Monitor. Yet for many people, that wealth feels locked away. You can feel it in your home’s value, but you can’t spend it without borrowing against it or moving out.
That gap is why sale-leaseback programs have grown fast. The idea is simple: you sell your home, walk away with your equity in cash, and stay in the house as a renter. No move, no mortgage, no monthly loan payment. It is one of the few ways to access home equity without taking on debt or leaving the neighborhood you know.
But “sale-leaseback” is not one standard product. Terms swing widely from one company to the next, how your home is priced, what you pay in rent, how long you can stay, and what protects you if life changes. Before you sign anything, run every offer through the same nine questions.
What is a sale-leaseback, exactly?
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A residential sale-leaseback is a transaction where you sell your house to an investor and immediately sign a lease to keep living in it as a tenant. You convert 100% of your equity into cash at closing, then pay rent to the new owner instead of a mortgage to a lender. Unlike a HELOC, a cash-out refinance, or a reverse mortgage, it is not a loan — no interest, no monthly debt payment, and (with most reputable programs) no credit requirement. The trade-off is that you give up ownership and future appreciation in exchange for liquidity and the right to stay.
1. How much cash will I actually walk away with?
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This is the headline number, and it’s where programs differ most. Some home-equity sharing companies (like Point, Hometap, or Unison) give you only a slice of your equity — a lump sum in exchange for a percentage of your home’s future value. A true sale-leaseback should convert your full equity, minus selling costs, into cash you can use right away.
What a strong answer sounds like: a clear breakdown of your sale price, every fee, any mortgage payoff, and the exact dollar figure you’ll receive at closing.
Red flag: vague “up to” figures, equity-sharing percentages dressed up as a sale, or pressure to accept before you see the math.
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2. How is my home’s value determined — one offer or competing bids?
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A single take-it-or-leave-it offer almost always favors the buyer. iBuyers and many leaseback companies make one offer, and you have no way to know if it’s fair. Competition is what protects your price.
What a strong answer sounds like: a transparent valuation method and, ideally, multiple investors competing for your home so the price is set by the market.
Red flag: “this is our final offer,” no explanation of how the number was reached, or a deadline designed to stop you from comparing.
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3. How is my rent calculated, and is it at or below market?
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Your rent is the cost of staying, so understand exactly how it’s set. In some programs, rent is inflated to boost the investor’s return — quietly clawing back the equity they just paid you. Rent should be tied to local market rates, not to how much cash you took out.
What a strong answer sounds like: rent benchmarked to comparable rentals in your area, disclosed in writing before you commit.
Red flag: rent that rises with the size of your cash payout, or a refusal to show how the figure was calculated.
4. Can my rent be raised after the sale — and is there a cap?
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A low starting rent means little if the owner can double it next year. The contract — not a verbal promise — is what protects you. Look for written limits on increases and a clear term.
What a strong answer sounds like: a signed lease that caps or fixes increases for a defined period, so you can budget with confidence.
Red flag: month-to-month-only terms, no cap on increases, or “we’ll work it out later.”
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5. How long can I stay, and who controls the lease term?
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Some programs quietly cap your stay at a year or two — fine if you’re planning a move, a problem if you want to put down roots. The length of your lease, and who gets to decide it, is one of the most important terms in the whole deal.
What a strong answer sounds like: flexible lease length that you help negotiate, with the option to stay long-term if that’s what you want.
Red flag: a short, fixed lease you can’t extend, or terms the company sets unilaterally.
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6. What protects me from eviction?
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This is the question people forget to ask, and it matters most. Once you’re a tenant, your security depends on the lease. Know your rights, the cure periods for a missed payment, and what circumstances could end your tenancy.
What a strong answer sounds like: a clear lease that spells out your rights, reasonable cure periods, and no hidden clauses that let the owner remove you without cause.
Red flag: vague eviction terms, the requirement to re-apply as a tenant, or a separate approval step that could leave you out of your own home.
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7. What are the all-in fees, and what do they cover?
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Fees decide how much equity actually reaches your pocket. Ask for every line item: transaction fees, service charges, title work, and anything deducted at closing. A low advertised rate can hide costs that show up later.
What a strong answer sounds like: one clear, all-in fee disclosed upfront, with a written explanation of what it includes.
Red flag: stacked fees revealed at closing, charges for services you assumed were included, or numbers that keep changing.
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8. Do I need good credit or to pass a rental application?
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If you’re exploring a sale-leaseback during a life transition — divorce, retirement, medical debt, or a tough financial stretch — credit requirements can be a dealbreaker. HELOCs, refinances, and reverse mortgages all hinge on credit and income. Many sale-leaseback programs do not, but you should confirm it.
What a strong answer sounds like: no credit check to sell, and no rental application standing between you and staying in your home.
Red flag: credit pulls, income verification, or a tenant-screening step that could disqualify you after you’ve already committed.
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9. What are my exit options when I’m ready to move?
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Finally, look down the road. Some companies advertise a buyback option that lets you repurchase the home later — but read the fine print, because buyback terms can be expensive or hard to actually exercise. Others focus instead on secure, flexible tenancy. What matters is that the exit matches your real plans.
What a strong answer sounds like: an honest explanation of whether buyback is offered and on what terms, plus the freedom to move when your lease allows without penalties.
Red flag: a buyback “promise” with no written price formula, or steep penalties for leaving.
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How sale-leaseback compares to other ways to access home equity
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A sale-leaseback is the only option here that gives you full equity in cash without debt — while letting you stay in the home. The cost is ownership and future appreciation, which is why the nine questions above matter so much.
Frequently asked questions
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Is a sale-leaseback a loan?
No. A sale-leaseback is a sale, not a loan. You sell the home, receive your equity in cash, and pay rent to the new owner. There’s no interest and no monthly debt payment, which is the main difference from a HELOC, a cash-out refinance, or a reverse mortgage.
Can I access home equity without selling my home?
Yes — through a HELOC, a home equity loan, a cash-out refinance, or a home equity sharing agreement. Each lets you keep ownership, but most require good credit and either add debt or share your future appreciation. A sale-leaseback is the alternative when you want full equity in cash, no debt, and the ability to stay as a renter.
Do I need good credit for a sale-leaseback?
Often not. Unlike loans and refinances, many sale-leaseback programs don’t require a credit check on the seller. Sell2Rent, for example, requires no credit check and no rental application to stay in your home.
How fast can a sale-leaseback close?
It varies by provider. Traditional home sales average around 80 days. With a ready investor network, a sale-leaseback can close much faster — Sell2Rent reports closings in as little as 2 weeks, with a realistic average of about 20–25 days.
What happens to my rent over time?
That depends entirely on your contract. Reputable programs benchmark rent to the local market and put any increase limits in writing at closing. Always confirm the cap before you sign.
The bottom line
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Accessing your home equity without moving is a real, empowering option — but the details decide whether it’s a smart pivot or a costly one. Bring these nine questions to every conversation. The right program will answer all of them clearly, in writing, and without pressure.
Ready to see what your home could do for you? Sell your house, cash out your equity, and stay as a renter — with the terms spelled out before you decide. Get your free valuation.
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