The Beginner’s Guide to Finding Your Very First Flip
Many first-time flippers struggle to identify a good opportunity, especially when starting from scratch. This guide walks you through the full process, from zero leads to a signed contract.
In real estate, flipping properties can be highly lucrative, but only if you find the right deals.
Many first-time flippers struggle to identify a good opportunity, especially when starting from scratch. This guide walks you through the full process, from zero leads to a signed contract, so you can consistently find profitable flips, even in competitive markets.
This is how seasoned investors build pipelines, dominate local markets, and create predictable profits.
Let’s dig in.
Step 1: Define Your Flip Criteria
Before you ever start searching for properties, you need a crystal-clear flip profile. This keeps you from wasting time analyzing deals that don’t fit your model.
Here’s what to define:
Target ARV (After Repair Value) range
Ideal neighborhoods or zip codes
Property types (SFR, duplex, small multis, etc.)
Minimum profit margin (after all costs)
Max rehab budget
Deal timeline (from purchase to sale)
Buyer profile (who will eventually buy it?)
By narrowing your criteria, you’ll be able to filter faster and spot winners with confidence.
Step 2: Pick Your Lead Source(s)
You can’t find flips without lead flow.
So the next step is deciding where your deals will come from. For beginners, it’s best to start with 1–2 sources and get good at them.
Here are popular lead sources:
Driving for dollars (DFD)
PropStream or ListSource lists
MLS (for certain markets)
Facebook Marketplace / Craigslist
Direct mail
Networking with wholesalers
Code violation and probate lists
Zillow “for sale by owner”
The key is to pick one and get moving. Don’t get stuck trying to do them all at once.
Step 3: Build a Deal-Finding Routine
You need a repeatable daily or weekly process that feeds your pipeline.
A basic weekly flip-finding routine might look like this:
Monday
Drive 1 new neighborhood
Add 30 distressed homes to your DFD app
Pull MLS and Zillow listings for your zip codes
Tuesday
Call or text 20 DFD property owners
Analyze 5 properties from your MLS/Zillow leads
Wednesday
Check public auction lists for the next 30 days
Pull code violation or probate data
Thursday
Follow up with any leads from earlier in the week
Run comps and analyze the top 3 potential deals
Friday
Reach out to 5 wholesalers and ask what they have
Review the results from the week
Consistency beats complexity. The flippers with the best systems win.
Step 4: Learn to Read the Signs of Flip Potential
Once leads are coming in, your job is to quickly spot which ones are worth deeper analysis. You’re looking for key flip signals like:
Outdated kitchens and bathrooms
Deferred maintenance, but no major structural issues
Listed well below renovated comps in the same area
Motivated sellers with timeline pressure
Vacant or inherited properties
Long DOM (days on market) with declining price
Agent remarks like “investor special” or “needs TLC”
Don’t fall in love with a house because it looks cool. Fall in love with the spread, the gap between the purchase price and the resale potential.
Step 5: Analyze the Deal Like a Pro
Once a property shows promise, run your numbers. Here’s what to calculate:
Purchase price
Rehab budget (cosmetic vs. major)
ARV based on comps
Holding costs (loan interest, insurance, taxes)
Selling costs (agent commissions, closing costs)
Buffer for surprises (10–15%)
Then apply your formula:
Profit = ARV – (Purchase + Rehab + Holding + Selling + Buffer)
If the profit is below your target margin, move on. Don’t rationalize thin deals.
Step 6: Make Contact with the Seller or Wholesaler
Now it’s time to reach out. This is where many flippers freeze. But you don’t need to be a master salesperson; you just need a plan.
If it’s a direct seller lead:
Introduce yourself briefly
Acknowledge the property
Ask if they’re open to a cash offer
Set an appointment (in-person or virtual)
If it’s a wholesaler:
Ask for address, price, pictures, and access info
Request comps or repair estimate (if they have it)
Confirm assignment fee is included in the price
Speed matters here. The faster you get in touch, the less likely you are to lose the deal.
Step 7: Walk the Property and Confirm Scope
If the seller is open, schedule a walkthrough ASAP. Bring a basic repair checklist, flashlight, and camera.
Look out for:
Foundation cracks or uneven floors
Roof condition and age
HVAC, electrical, and plumbing systems
Kitchens and baths (condition, layout)
Water damage, mold, or termites
Access issues (easements, shared driveways)
Snap 30–50 photos to review later or share with your contractor.
Step 8: Firm Up Your Rehab Budget
Even a ballpark repair number needs logic behind it. Work with a contractor or use past rehab templates to estimate costs accurately.
Example breakdown:
Roof replacement – $8,000
Kitchen remodel – $12,000
2 bathroom remodels – $9,000
Paint interior/exterior – $6,000
New flooring throughout – $7,000
Misc. (demo, yard, permits, etc.) – $5,000
Total: $47,000
Add 10–15% for surprise issues.
Step 9: Recheck Your Numbers
Now that you have real figures, re-run the deal analysis.
If your profit margin still holds after updated rehab and buffers, move forward.
If not, you can either:
Try to negotiate the purchase price
Change your exit strategy (e.g., rental
Walk away and move on
Most flippers lose money by forcing a bad deal to work. Don’t fall into that trap.
Step 10: Make the Offer
Keep your offer simple and direct.
If working with a wholesaler:
Ask for the assignment agreement
If direct to seller:
Use a short, one-page contract
Keep contingencies clear (inspection, financing if any)
Include EMD amount (earnest money deposit)
Set a realistic but fast closing timeline
Always send the offer via email and text it as a follow-up. Some sellers don’t check their email often.
Step 11: Lock the Deal, Start the Clock
Once the contract is signed:
Submit to title/escrow
Line up your funding (HML or private money)
Schedule your contractor for a final scope walk
Get permits started if needed
Create your flip timeline
From this point on, execution is what determines your margin. But it all started with finding the right deal.
Bonus Tips: Avoiding Common Pitfalls
Here are the top 5 mistakes new flippers make when trying to find deals:
Wasting time analyzing properties that don’t fit their criteria
Underestimating repair costs from photos alone
Chasing on-market deals with no spread left
Falling in love with houses instead of numbers
Not following up fast enough with sellers or wholesalers
Stay disciplined, move fast, and trust your framework.
Repeatable Success Comes from Repeatable Systems
Finding a flip from scratch doesn’t mean starting with nothing. It means building a process so good, you can manufacture your next deal on demand.
Set your filters. Pick your sources. Stick to your numbers. Stay consistent.
Flipping isn’t magic; it’s a method. Now you’ve got yours.
Written By:

Austin Beveridge
Chief Operating Officer
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