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Updated 2 days ago on . Most recent reply

The sellers were looking to free up capital quickly
I’ve been working in the performing note space for a while now and recently completed several purchases of 1st position residential notes (1–4 units) that were 12+ months seasoned. The sellers were looking to free up capital quickly, and the transactions went smoothly thanks to transparent terms and fast closings.
On a related note, I’ve also been watching the tax lien market closely — noticing some changes in yields and competition over the past year.
I’d love to hear from other investors:
- Have you sold or purchased any seasoned performing notes recently? How was the process?
- For those active in tax liens, what’s your outlook for the rest of 2025?
- Are you seeing more crossover between lien investors and note investors?
Looking forward to exchanging ideas and learning from the community’s recent experiences.
Most Popular Reply

- Lender
- Charleston, SC
- 795
- Votes |
- 989
- Posts
Are these notes on vacant land? A couple thoughts:
- typically, the borrower is buying these properties for significantly more than it's worth in return for low or no downpayments. Pay close attention to property values and LTV coverage on these; they may be one step away from being unsecured due to lack of sufficient equity coverage
- a $10k discount on a new note is nothing. You will probably spend $1k-$2k just acquiring the note between DD and closing costs
- I would be leary of notes with little or no seasoning. Make sure you really dig into the credit risk of the loan if there is less than 12-18 months of seasoning
- the price point is concerning. A newly created note around $50k is either vacant land or a low-value home, which is likely to be Class D and very difficult to deal with in a nonperforming situation, especially considering that these buyers tend to have above average default rates
- if these are in fact low value properties, foreclosure costs can wipe out a lot of your equity as they are disproportionately large
- Patrick Roberts
