How Investors Use Novations to Unlock Retail Buyers
If you’re not already using novations in your exit strategy, this guide will walk you through exactly how they work, when to use them, and what makes them a game-changer in today’s market.
Most wholesalers are stuck playing the same game: find off-market properties, negotiate steep discounts, and assign the deal to a cash buyer who can close fast.
But there’s a ceiling to this strategy. When the seller wants top dollar and your buyers won’t pay more than 70–75% of ARV, the deal dies.
Unless… you use a novation.
Novation agreements are how smart investors flip to retail buyers without ever owning the property, and without needing to double-close, hard money, or high assignment limits.
If you’re not already using novations in your exit strategy, this guide will walk you through exactly how they work, when to use them, and what makes them a game-changer in today’s market.
What Is a Novation Agreement?
At its core, a novation is a legal replacement of one contract with another, with the consent of all parties involved.
In real estate, a novation allows you to:
Get under contract with a seller
Find a new end buyer (often retail)
Replace your original purchase agreement with a new contract between the seller and end buyer
Get paid directly from escrow as a line item
Key difference from assignment: With an assignment, you're transferring your rights to an existing contract. With a novation, you're substituting in a new contract altogether.
That difference matters. A lot.
Novation vs. Assignment: The Exit Strategy Comparison
Let’s compare how novations work vs. traditional wholesaling in real-world terms.
Exit Method | Ownership? | Type of Buyer | Closing Cost to Wholesaler | Disclosure? | Assignment Fee Limits? |
Assignment | No | Cash buyers only | None | Must disclose assignment | Often limited by title/lender |
Double Close | Yes (briefly) | Cash or retail | Closing costs + funding | No assignment disclosure | No assignment limits |
Novation | No | Retail buyer (with loan) | None | Not technically assigning | No assignment cap |
With novation:
You’re not assigning the original contract.
You don’t need to double close or come out of pocket.
You can use conventional or FHA buyers, because they’re contracting directly with the seller.
You get paid via HUD as a line item (often labeled as “consulting” or “marketing” fee).
The Novation Process: Step-by-Step
Here’s how a typical novation deal plays out from start to finish:
1. Lock Up the Property
You get a signed agreement with the seller (often a standard purchase agreement + a novation addendum). This agreement should:
Allow marketing the property
Permit repairs or showings
Grant you the right to substitute the end buyer
This is key: The seller must agree to the novation terms up front.
2. Run the Numbers
You’ll evaluate the property like a flip or wholetail:
What is the retail ARV?
What repairs are needed to get it retail-ready?
Can you invest in light touch-ups (paint, staging, etc.)?
Will it appraise?
Your profit needs to be built in between the seller’s net price and the retail end buyer’s price.
3. Find a Retail Buyer
Now list the property on the MLS, this is the novation sweet spot.
Because you’re not technically assigning, you can use an agent and list at retail pricing.
That opens the door to:
Conventional buyers
FHA/VA buyers
First-time homebuyers
Owner-occupants
These are the folks willing to pay full price, as long as the property is financeable and move-in ready.
4. Replace the Contract (Novate It)
Once your retail buyer is locked in, you initiate the novation.
That means:
The original contract between you and the seller is substituted with a new one
The buyer is now in direct contract with the seller
You’re removed from the original purchase agreement
Your profit is baked into the HUD/CD as a third-party fee
Title companies must understand and support novations. (More on that later.)
5. Close and Get Paid
At closing:
The seller gets their agreed-upon price
The end buyer gets title
You get a fee (sometimes $20K, $40K, or more) on the HUD as a line item
And you never had to own the property.
Why Novations Work (Especially Now)
The market has changed.
Sellers aren’t giving away properties at 60% of ARV anymore, not without serious distress. And many motivated sellers are still hoping for close-to-retail pricing.
That’s where novations come in.
Here’s why they’re so powerful right now:
1. Novations Let You Say Yes to More Sellers
Traditional wholesale offers are offensive to many sellers.
But novation allows you to say:
“I can’t pay full price myself… but I work with retail buyers who might. I can handle the process, get the house listed, and make it hassle-free for you.”
It’s a softer pitch. It lets you solve more seller problems without needing steep discounts.
2. You Get Access to Retail Buyers
The best offers come from people who live in the house, not investors trying to squeeze a return.
When you can access retail MLS buyers:
Your deal spreads increase
Your buyer pool expands
You’re not dependent on cash buyers
In fact, you can sell at full ARV, minus minor fix-up costs, and still profit.
3. It Keeps You Compliant
Some states are tightening laws around wholesaling. Disclosures, licensing, and assignment limits are getting stricter.
Novation helps you:
Avoid assignment caps
Sell to financing buyers
Stay compliant without double closing
You’re not transferring contract rights, you’re replacing the contract.
Real-World Example: Novation Profit Breakdown
Let’s say:
Seller agrees to $220K net
You clean up, stage, and list at $275K
It sells to FHA buyer at full price
After agent commissions, you net $260K
Seller gets $220K
You walk away with $40K profit
No hard money. No double close. No disclosure drama. Just clean profit from a smart retail exit.
Common Novation Deal Structures
There are multiple ways to run a novation. Here are the most common:
A. Basic Novation with MLS Listing
You sign a novation agreement with the seller
List the property with your agent (or a partner’s agent)
Find a retail buyer
Novate the contract and get paid via HUD
This is the cleanest, most common form.
B. Novation with Repairs
Sometimes you invest in:
Light rehab
Paint, flooring, fixtures
Staging or landscaping
This adds value before listing. You might spend $5K–$10K and make $20K–$40K more.
It’s essentially a wholetail flip, without owning the house.
C. Partnered Novation
You partner with an agent or another investor who handles:
Retail buyer sourcing
Showings
Negotiation
You split the profits but scale faster with less time in the trenches.
The Legal Side: Contracts and Compliance
Novation requires airtight paperwork and a good title partner.
Documents You’ll Likely Need
Purchase agreement with novation clause or addendum
Authorization to market
Authorization to list (if using MLS)
Novation agreement signed by seller and buyer
Fee disclosure to title/escrow
Make sure all parties understand:
Seller is agreeing to the process
You’re not the end buyer
You are due a fee for services rendered
State Law Considerations
Some states have tight laws on wholesaling, marketing, or dealing in real estate without a license.
Novation can offer a workaround, but talk to a real estate attorney to:
Review your paperwork
Ensure you’re not crossing legal lines
Avoid triggering license requirements
Pro tip: Avoid calling it an “assignment fee” on the HUD. Instead, use “consulting,” “marketing,” or “transaction coordination” fee, whatever fits your state’s title standards.
When NOT to Use a Novation
Novations are powerful, but not always the right move. Avoid them when:
The property is too distressed for financing
Seller won’t give you the access or time to list
Timeline is too tight for an MLS sale
There’s a tenant who won’t cooperate
Appraisal risk is too high
Also, if your market moves fast and cash buyers are strong, a traditional assignment may be quicker and cleaner.
How to Talk to Sellers About Novation
The key to a successful novation is positioning.
Here’s a sample script:
“Mr. Seller, here’s the truth, I can’t personally pay $270K for your home. But I do work with people who buy retail. If we partner together, I can handle getting the property cleaned up, listed, and sold, without you having to pay commissions or fix anything. You’ll get the price we agreed on, and I’ll just collect a fee if it sells for more. If it doesn’t, you owe me nothing.”
That’s much easier to swallow than:
“I’m going to assign this to another investor who will pay less.”
Novation sounds like help, not a lowball tactic.
Title Company Matters: Choose the Right Partner
Not all title companies will handle novations.
You need:
Investor-friendly title reps
Experience with third-party fees on HUD
Willingness to review your docs
Ability to explain the process to lenders and underwriters
Pro tip: Always pre-qualify your title company. Ask:
“Have you closed novation deals before?”
“Will you allow a consulting fee on the HUD?”
“Are you comfortable with retail buyers and conventional loans on these?”
Questions to Ask Before Novating a Deal
Before you dive into a novation, ask yourself:
Will the home pass a retail inspection or appraisal?
Can I get seller permission to list?
Do I have a reliable agent to list the home?
Can I control access and showings?
Is there enough spread between seller price and retail value?
Will the seller sign a novation agreement?
If the answer is yes across the board, you might have a six-figure novation waiting.
Add Novation to Your Exit Toolkit
You don’t need to replace wholesaling. But you should expand your options.
Here’s the bottom line:
Novation lets you go after higher-margin sellers who won’t sell at a discount
It lets you exit through retail buyers paying full price
You don’t need cash, credit, or transactional funding
You can scale your wholesaling business by solving more problems and capturing more spread
As investors face tighter markets, rising rates, and more competition… novations are the next evolution.
Written By:

Austin Beveridge
Chief Operating Officer
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