What Is a Residential Sale-Leaseback? A Practical Guide for Homeowners

American homeowners are sitting on roughly $11 trillion in tappable home equity as of 2026, according to ICE Mortgage Monitor. The average mortgage-holding homeowner has about $302,000 in total equity, with $195,000 of that accessible without selling the home entirely.
The problem is that equity is not liquid. You cannot spend it on medical bills, pay down debt, or cover a shortfall without selling, refinancing, or borrowing against your home. Each of those options comes with its own trade-offs, and not all of them fit every situation.
A residential sale-leaseback is a third option that most homeowners have not heard of. This guide explains what it is, how it actually works, and what to think through before deciding if it is right for you.
What a Residential Sale-Leaseback Is
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A sale-leaseback is a transaction where you sell your home to a buyer (typically a real estate investment company) and then immediately sign a lease to stay in the home as a renter.
You walk away from closing with a lump sum of cash from the sale. The new owner becomes your landlord. You stay in the same house, on the same street, with the same neighbors.
What changes: you no longer own the property. What stays the same: where you live.
That is the core exchange. This is not a loan, it is not a refinance, and it is not a temporary arrangement. You are selling the property with the right to remain as a tenant under a lease you negotiate before closing.
Why Homeowners Use It
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The most common scenario is straightforward: you have meaningful equity in your home but are cash-poor and under financial pressure. That pressure could be rising mortgage payments, medical bills, job loss, a business setback, or the compounding weight of debt that has become hard to manage.
Selling the traditional way solves the cash problem, but it also means moving. And moving is not just expensive. It disrupts your kids' schools, your community, your daily routines. For people who have lived in their home for years, that cost is real.
A sale-leaseback lets you address the financial problem without adding a relocation problem on top of it.
It is also used by people approaching retirement who own a home with substantial equity and want to convert that illiquid asset into cash while continuing to live in a place they know well. In 2026, 41% of homeowners say high interest rates have led them to view their current house as a forever home, which makes the idea of selling and moving even less appealing.
The Real Trade-offs
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The benefits are straightforward. The less obvious part is what changes, and you should understand it clearly before you sign anything.
What you give up: ownership. You no longer build equity in the property, benefit from future appreciation, or have the tax advantages that come with homeownership. If the property's value increases after you sell, that upside belongs to the new owner.
What you take on: a lease. That means monthly rent, lease terms to adhere to, and eventually, if the lease is not renewed, the possibility of needing to find a new place to live.
What you need to evaluate carefully: the purchase price and the lease terms. A fair offer should be close to market value. A reasonable lease should give you enough time and stability to plan your next steps, whether that is staying long-term, rebuilding financially, or eventually relocating on your own schedule.
The quality of the company you work with matters as much as the numbers.
How the Process Works
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The process varies by provider, but here is a general picture of what to expect:
- You request an evaluation. The company assesses your property and your financial situation.
- You receive an offer. This includes a purchase price and proposed lease terms: monthly rent, lease duration, and renewal options.
- You review and negotiate. A legitimate company expects this step. Do not skip it.
- You go through closing. Similar to a standard home sale: title transfer, paperwork, closing costs.
- Your lease begins. The day of closing, you remain in your home as a renter under the agreed terms.
The timeline is typically faster than a traditional sale, often 30 to 60 days, because there is no listing process, no showings, and no waiting on a buyer's financing.
What to Look for in a Provider
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Not all sale-leaseback companies operate the same way, and this is an area where it pays to do your homework.
- Purchase price vs. market value. Get an independent appraisal or at least a comparative market analysis before accepting any offer. A fair offer should reflect actual market value, not a steep discount.
- Lease terms. How long is the initial lease? What are the renewal options? Is rent fixed or tied to an index? What are the conditions under which either party can terminate?
- Closing costs and fees. Understand exactly what comes out of your proceeds at closing.
- Company track record. How long have they been operating? Can they provide references from homeowners who have completed the process?
- What happens if they sell the property. Does your lease transfer to the new owner? Are your rental rights protected by contract?
You are entering a long-term relationship with whoever buys your home. The offer is important, but so is the integrity of who is making it.
Checklist: Is a Sale-Leaseback Right for You?
Use this as a starting point, a way to structure the decision before you have a detailed conversation with any provider.
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The Bottom Line
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A residential sale-leaseback is a legitimate financial tool. For the right person in the right situation, it solves a real problem: getting access to your equity without uprooting your life.
Like any major financial decision, the outcome depends heavily on the terms you negotiate and the company you choose. Go in informed, take your time reviewing the paperwork, and bring in an advisor if you have any doubts.
If you would like to understand what a sale-leaseback might look like for your specific situation, Sell2Rent offers a free, no-commitment evaluation. You will get a clear picture of your options, no pressure, just the numbers.
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