Strategy

    All 8 Real Estate Exit Strategies Explained: Which One Fits Your Deal?

    Appraize Team·April 15, 2026·10 min read
    All 8 Real Estate Exit Strategies Explained: Which One Fits Your Deal?

    Why You Need to Pick Your Exit Before You Make an Offer

    Most real estate investors analyze a deal by picking a strategy first — "I'm a wholesaler" or "I flip houses" — and then running the numbers for that one exit. If it works, they move forward. If it doesn't, they move on.

    That approach leaves money on the table on every deal they walk away from.

    The professional move is to evaluate a property across every viable exit simultaneously, then let the numbers tell you which strategy produces the best outcome given your capital, timeline, and risk tolerance. A deal that doesn't work as a wholesale assignment might be an exceptional BRRRR candidate. A property that's too expensive to flip might pencil out perfectly as a seller-finance exit.

    There are 8 primary exit strategies used by residential real estate investors in the United States. Here is exactly what each one is, when it works best, and what the numbers need to look like for it to make sense.

    1. Wholesale

    Wholesaling means getting a property under contract at a discount and assigning that contract to a cash buyer for an assignment fee — typically without ever taking title to the property. Your profit is the spread between what the seller accepted and what your end buyer pays you.

    When wholesale works

    Wholesale works best on deeply discounted distressed properties where the gap between your contract price and the end buyer's acquisition cost is wide enough to support your fee and still leave the buyer with a viable flip or rental. The property needs to be at least 25–35% below ARV after accounting for estimated repairs.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • Your contract price should be at or below: (ARV × 70%) − estimated repairs − your assignment fee
    • Assignment fees typically range from $5,000 to $30,000 depending on market and deal size
    • Your end buyer needs to be all-in at 70–75% of ARV or less to make the deal work for them

    Wholesale requires the lowest capital and carries the least risk of any exit — you never own the property. The tradeoff is that your upside is capped at the assignment fee, and you need a reliable cash buyer pipeline to close consistently.

    2. Fix and Flip

    Fix and flip means purchasing a distressed property, renovating it to retail condition, and selling it to an end buyer — typically a homeowner — for a profit. Your return is the difference between your all-in cost and your net sale proceeds.

    When fix and flip works

    Flipping works best in markets with strong buyer demand, rising or stable values, and a contractor ecosystem that allows predictable rehab timelines. It produces the highest cash profit of any short-term exit but requires the most capital and carries execution risk — cost overruns and timeline delays are the two most common deal killers.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • All-in cost (purchase + rehab + carrying costs + closing costs) should not exceed 75–80% of ARV
    • Target net profit of at least $25,000–$30,000 minimum to justify the risk and capital deployed
    • Rehab timeline should be modeled conservatively — add 20% to contractor estimates
    • Carrying costs (hard money interest, insurance, utilities, taxes) accrue daily — speed matters

    3. Buy and Hold

    Buy and hold means acquiring a property and renting it out for long-term cash flow and equity accumulation. It is the foundational wealth-building strategy for most serious real estate investors.

    When buy and hold works

    Buy and hold works best in landlord-friendly markets with strong rental demand, job growth, and population stability. The property does not need to be deeply discounted — it needs to cash flow after all expenses including vacancy, maintenance, property management, and debt service.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • Monthly rent should cover PITI (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) plus a 10% vacancy allowance and 10% maintenance reserve
    • Target cash-on-cash return of at least 8–10% on capital deployed
    • Cap rate should meet or exceed local market benchmarks — typically 5–8% for single-family residential
    • DSCR (debt service coverage ratio) of at least 1.25 for financing purposes

    4. BRRRR

    BRRRR stands for Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat. You purchase a distressed property at a discount, renovate it, place a tenant, then refinance based on the new appraised value — pulling out most or all of your invested capital to redeploy into the next deal.

    When BRRRR works

    BRRRR works best when you can acquire and rehab a property for significantly less than its stabilized appraised value, and when the rental market supports rents that cover the refinanced mortgage. It is the most capital-efficient strategy for scaling a rental portfolio quickly.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • All-in cost (purchase + rehab) should be 70–75% of ARV or less to leave room for a profitable refinance
    • Post-rehab appraised value should support a 70–75% LTV cash-out refinance that returns most of your capital
    • Stabilized rent must cover the new mortgage payment plus expenses with positive cash flow remaining
    • The deal fails if rents don't support the refinanced debt — model this before you buy
    BRRRR is the only strategy that lets you build a rental portfolio without permanently tying up capital in each property. The math on the refinance is everything — get it wrong and your capital is stuck.

    5. Subject-To

    Subject-to means acquiring a property while the seller's existing mortgage stays in place. You take title and make payments on a loan that remains in the seller's name. No new financing required.

    When subject-to works

    Subject-to works best when the seller's existing mortgage has a lower interest rate than current market rates, when the seller is motivated to exit quickly (pre-foreclosure, divorce, relocation), and when the existing payment is low enough to support positive cash flow as a rental. In a high-rate environment like 2026, inheriting a 3–4% mortgage on a property that would otherwise require 7%+ financing is an enormous advantage.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • Existing mortgage payment plus taxes and insurance should leave positive cash flow at market rents
    • Remaining loan balance should be low enough relative to ARV to protect your equity position
    • Model the due-on-sale risk — most lenders do not exercise it when payments are current, but it must be factored
    • Have an exit plan if you need to sell or refinance before the loan is paid off

    6. Lease Option

    A lease option gives a tenant-buyer the right to purchase the property at a predetermined price within a set timeframe, while they pay above-market rent in the interim. You collect an upfront option fee, monthly rent premium, and either sell at the option price or retain the property if the tenant does not exercise.

    When lease option works

    Lease options work best with properties in good condition in stable neighborhoods, and with tenant-buyers who have the income to qualify for a mortgage but need time to repair credit or save a larger down payment. They produce strong monthly cash flow and a large payday if the tenant exercises.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • Option fee: typically 3–5% of the purchase price, non-refundable
    • Monthly rent: 10–20% above market rate, with a portion credited toward the purchase price
    • Option purchase price: set at or slightly above current ARV to allow for appreciation upside
    • Term: typically 2–3 years to give the tenant-buyer time to qualify for conventional financing

    7. Seller Finance

    Seller financing means you act as the bank. Instead of selling the property for cash, you sell it on terms — the buyer makes monthly payments to you at an agreed interest rate and amortization schedule. You hold the note and receive passive income for years or decades.

    When seller finance works

    Seller financing works best after a rehab when you want ongoing cash flow rather than a lump sum, when the buyer pool includes people who cannot qualify for conventional financing, or when selling on terms lets you command a higher sale price than a cash sale. It is also a powerful tax strategy — installment sale treatment spreads capital gains over the life of the note.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • Down payment: 10–20% of sale price to ensure the buyer has skin in the game
    • Interest rate: typically 1–3% above conventional rates — you are taking on lender risk
    • Amortization: 15–30 years with a balloon payment at 5–7 years is the most common structure
    • Sale price: seller-financed properties can typically command 5–10% above cash value due to favorable terms

    8. Novation

    Novation is one of the least understood but most powerful exits in the modern investor's toolkit. In a novation, you partner with the seller to renovate their property and list it on the MLS at retail price. When it sells, you and the seller split the proceeds according to a pre-agreed formula. You never take title — you replace yourself in the seller's listing contract with the end buyer.

    When novation works

    Novation works best when a seller wants retail price but cannot afford repairs, when the property is in a location that attracts retail buyers (not cash investors), and when the spread between distressed value and retail ARV is large enough to cover repairs and leave profit for both parties. It lets you access retail buyer pools — FHA, VA, and conventional financed buyers — without wholesaling to another investor at a discount.

    What the numbers need to look like

    • Repair cost must be covered by the spread between distressed value and retail ARV
    • Your profit share should be clearly defined in the novation agreement before work begins
    • Title must be clean — novation requires a cooperative seller and a clear path to MLS listing
    • Requires a licensed real estate agent to list on the MLS in most states
    Novation monetizes leads that most wholesalers throw away. If a seller wants retail but you can only offer wholesale, novation turns a dead lead into a profitable deal.

    How to Know Which Exit Fits Your Deal

    The right exit strategy depends on four variables that are specific to every deal: the property's condition, the market's buyer pool, your available capital, and your timeline. Here is a simple decision framework:

    • Need fast cash with no capital at risk? Wholesale first, novation second.
    • Have rehab capital and want the highest cash profit? Fix and flip.
    • Want long-term cash flow and equity? Buy and hold or BRRRR depending on whether you need capital back.
    • Found a motivated seller with a low-rate existing mortgage? Subject-to, then rent or wrap with a lease option.
    • Want passive income without managing tenants? Seller finance after a rehab.
    • Seller wants retail but can't make repairs? Novation.

    The problem with making this decision manually is that you are evaluating one exit at a time against a property whose numbers are changing as you negotiate. By the time you have run all 8 scenarios in a spreadsheet, the deal is gone or your assumptions are stale.

    The Case for Modeling All 8 Simultaneously

    The most profitable investors do not pick a strategy and hunt for deals that fit it. They find undervalued properties and let the analysis determine which exit produces the best outcome. That requires a tool that models all 8 exits on the same property at the same time, with the same comps, the same repair estimates, and the same market data.

    Appraize does exactly that. Enter any US property address and get all 8 exit strategies modeled simultaneously in under 30 seconds — with real MLS comps, line-item repair estimates calibrated to local costs, and an AI Deal Chat that can walk you through why one exit outperforms another on that specific property.

    The first 3 analyses are free. No credit card required.

    Start Analyzing Deals the Right Way

    Stop leaving exits on the table. Every deal you analyze with only one strategy is a deal where you might be missing the most profitable path. Run all 8 exits on your next property and let the numbers make the decision for you.

    Written by

    Appraize Team

    Editorial

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