Lease Purchase Agreement: Benefits for Buyers and Owners

Amy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.

Amy Fontinelle Personal Finance Expert

Amy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.

Written By Amy Fontinelle Personal Finance Expert

Amy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.

Amy Fontinelle Personal Finance Expert

Amy Fontinelle is a freelance writer, researcher and editor who brings a journalistic approach to personal finance content. Since 2004, she has worked with lenders, real estate agents, consultants, financial advisors, family offices, wealth managers.

Personal Finance Expert Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

Chris Jennings Loans & Mortgages Editor

Chris Jennings is a writer and editor with more than seven years of experience in the personal finance and mortgage space. He enjoys simplifying complex mortgage topics for first-time homebuyers and homeowners alike. His work has been featured in a n.

| Loans & Mortgages Editor

Updated: Feb 16, 2023, 11:00am

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If you own a home that you’re having trouble selling, or if you want to buy a home but you’re not financially qualified, a lease purchase agreement could be appealing. Here’s how they work, along with what you should consider as a potential buyer or seller under this type of contract.

What Is a Lease Purchase Agreement?

A lease purchase agreement—also known as a rent-to-own or lease-to-own agreement—lets someone rent a property for a specified period of time with the promise to purchase it at the end of the lease term. The owner is contractually obligated to sell the property to the renter when the end of the term hits. Likewise, it also obligates the renter to buy the property from the owner.

Lease purchase agreements are considered a type of alternative financing (like land contracts). There’s not a lot of data about how often these arrangements succeed, so both parties should approach them with caution.

We’ll use the terms renter and buyer interchangeably in this article and do the same for the terms owner and seller.

How to Structure a Lease Purchase Agreement

Property sellers and buyers can structure a lease purchase agreement however they want. As long as both parties find the arrangement acceptable, they’re free to set their own terms for both the rental period and the eventual sale.

However, certain terms may have to fall within guidelines established by local, state or federal laws, such as the Fair Housing Act and landlord-tenant laws.

Contract of Sale

The whole point of a lease purchase agreement is for the owner to sell the property and the renter to buy it. So, the contract needs to include sale terms, such as:

Both the buyer and seller may want to review each other’s credit reports for red flags as well. If the buyer’s credit is poor, they may not qualify for a mortgage by the purchase date. If the seller’s credit is problematic, their home could be at risk of foreclosure.

The contract should also outline who will pay certain closing costs. It may be wise for the buyer to perform a title search before signing the contract so that they can confirm—at least as of the lease start date—no one else has a claim against the property. Sellers must also provide buyers with certain disclosures about the property’s condition and history, such as lead-based paint disclosures for most homes built before 1978.

Similarly, it may be wise to pay for a professional home inspection and appraisal up front to make sure the property is worth the purchase price.

Lease Period

The lease period works much like a traditional lease, but with a few key differences. The contract will need to define the terms of the lease period leading up to the sale, such as the beginning and ending dates of the lease, monthly rent amount, security deposit, rent increases and penalties for late payments or breaching the agreement.

In addition, the contract should also go over the following:

Buyers and owners may wish to add additional terms to the contract defining things like pet rules, smoking rules and parking fees. Each party would be wise to hire a real estate attorney or real estate agent to represent them and help protect their interests in drawing up the contract.

Pros and Cons of a Lease Purchase Agreement for Buyers

The renter will have to accept certain risks in exchange for potential rewards when they enter a lease purchase agreement.

Pros of a Lease Purchase Agreement for Buyers

Cons of a Lease Purchase Agreement for Buyers

Pros and Cons of a Lease Purchase Agreement for Sellers

The property owner will also have to accept certain risks in exchange for the potential reward of selling their home.

Pros of a Lease Purchase Agreement for Sellers

Cons of a Lease Purchase Agreement for Sellers

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