The value of a contract for deed depends on your motive for selling. Right now, I am selling a house this way. I am making more on the cfd than I was getting in rent, so that's a nice perk for me. And, unlike a rental, I don't have to maintain the house -- if the water heater goes out, they replace it, not me. The note is for 20 years, though the buyer says they'll get a loan in a couple of years and pay me off. If they do, fine; if they don't, we'll keep going the way we are and I'm fine with that too.
For some folks, the downside is having to get the buyers out of the house if they don't pay. Heh, if that happens, I'll give them two options -- I file a foreclosure notice at the courthouse and they sign a Quit Claim deed back to me, or I take them to court and give them a real headache. I full well expect to get the property back in a few short years because they moved back here to take care of the aging mother, who lives next door. When she's gone, I expect they'll go elsewhere. And then we'll gut the house and remodel it . . . and decide then what to do with it.
I'll admit, I live in a much slower paced area than many people, and I didn't have a mortgage on that house so I didn't have to worry about a lender "catching" me. If you have a loan on the house, your lender can probably call your note for doing this - but, so long as you're really making the payments, I can't see why they'd get upset. However,
I am not an attorney, and there is NO legal advice being offered in this post! Recommend you read your mortgage carefully and run your idea by a local attorney.
