How to Gather the Right Docs for a Smooth Novation Close
Unlike a traditional assignment or a straightforward cash purchase, novations introduce more moving parts and more documentation. If you want a clean, compliant, and closeable transaction, you need the right docs at every stage.
You negotiated the deal.
You explained the novation.
You’ve even got a buyer lined up.
Now comes the part where most wholesalers and investors run into trouble: the paperwork.
Unlike a traditional assignment or a straightforward cash purchase, novations introduce more moving parts and more documentation.
If you want a clean, compliant, and closeable transaction, you need the right docs at every stage.
This guide walks through all the key documents required for a successful novation close, from acquisition to resale.
Why Novation Requires More Documentation Than Assignments
Let’s clarify first: a novation is not a workaround or shortcut.
It’s a legitimate legal structure that replaces one party in a contract with another. That means more compliance. More transparency. And yes, more paperwork.
You’re essentially operating in three layers:
Your agreement with the seller
Your agreement with the end buyer
The paperwork that makes the substitution legal and enforceable
Miss one step, and the title company might reject the closing, or worse, your deal could fall apart in escrow.
Phase 1: Documents Between You and the Seller
These are the core documents that give you the legal right to market and resell the property through novation:
1. Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA)
A standard purchase agreement between you and the seller, structured to allow novation. Key clause: “Buyer reserves the right to novate or substitute themselves in the contract for a third-party end buyer.”
2. Novation Agreement or Novation Addendum
This is the document that explicitly states the seller agrees to replace you with another buyer (your end buyer) in the transaction. It includes:
Consent of the seller
The right for you to market the property
Agreement to accept the end buyer’s financing and terms
A release of liability for you after substitution
3. Power of Attorney or Limited Authorization to List (if applicable)
If you're listing the property on the MLS or coordinating with agents, you’ll often need the seller’s signed consent or authorization to act on their behalf. This might include:
Right to sign listing agreements
Authority to negotiate offers
Access for showings, inspections, etc.
Some title companies will require a notarized POA or strict limits on this language, check with them upfront.
4. Seller Disclosures and Property Reports
Since this is a retail-style deal, expect to collect any documents required by state law for traditional sales. That may include:
Seller disclosure statements
Lead-based paint disclosure
HOA documents (if applicable)
Utility info or recent repair history
Phase 2: Documents Between You and the End Buyer
Here’s what you’ll need to legally and logistically hand the deal off to your retail buyer:
5. New Purchase Agreement (End Buyer to Seller)
This is the formal contract between the end buyer and the original seller (not you). You’ve been replaced in the deal. Your role is now behind the scenes.
6. Addenda or Clauses Protecting Your Fee
Your fee needs to be built into the resale contract or title instructions. Common options include:
A “Payoff Letter” signed by the seller at closing, instructing title to pay you
A marketing or consulting fee clause disclosed in the final settlement statement
A HUD line item showing your fee, marked as part of the seller’s proceeds
7. Escrow Instructions
Coordinate with the title company to make sure your position is protected. The escrow instructions should specify:
When you’re getting paid
That your fee is contingent on successful closing
That all parties have reviewed and accepted the novation
Phase 3: Final Title, Legal, and Closing Docs
You’re almost there, but don’t let these last steps slip:
8. Assignment of Rights (optional but helpful)
This is an internal doc that memorializes your agreement to step out of the transaction and let the buyer step in. It’s not always recorded, but it can provide a clean paper trail.
9. Lien Waivers or Clearance (if you did repairs or cleanup)
If you spent money prepping the property (cleanout, staging, light rehab), the title company may ask for:
Invoices
Lien releases from contractors
Proof of payment
This ensures the seller isn’t left liable.
10. Final HUD-1 / ALTA Settlement Statement
This document must show:
The seller as recipient of sale proceeds
Your fee as a line item (or separate disbursement from seller proceeds)
Any agent commissions
Closing costs, taxes, and lender fees (if financed)
Make sure you preview this before the seller signs. If your fee is missing or miscategorized, you risk not getting paid.
What Title Companies Will Look For
Title companies that have never done a novation will have questions. Be ready with:
A sample deal structure with clear docs
Legal justification for the substitution
Proof of seller consent
Proof that you are not acting as an unlicensed agent
Your marketing agreement, fee disclosure, or POA
If the title company is still confused, ask to speak directly to their legal counsel or offer to bring in an attorney familiar with novation transactions.
Bonus Tip: Organize Your Paperwork Like a Pro
To avoid last-minute surprises:
Keep each doc signed and dated
Store all versions of the contract (original, amended, novated)
Confirm that all parties sign every page of the novation agreement
Keep communication logs in case questions arise
You’re not just protecting your fee, you’re protecting the seller and the integrity of the transaction.
Paperwork Is What Makes It Legal
A novation deal isn't just about the idea. It’s about execution.
And execution lives or dies in the documentation.
If your paperwork is buttoned up:
Title companies take you seriously
Sellers trust the process
Buyers feel protected
You get paid, cleanly and legally
Sloppy deals might close, but clean ones close and build your reputation.
Know your documents. Use them right. And every novation deal will get smoother from here.
Written By:

Austin Beveridge
Chief Operating Officer
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