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Finding Missing Owners Of
Abandoned Properties
By Omar Johnson
The author has permitted the reprinting and redistribution of this
article.
A common source of leads for the quick-turn real estate investor that
exists practically everywhere is abandoned properties. There are
several advantages to pursuing these types of properties that are known
to investors. One is that if a property is abandoned there is a good
chance that the owner is disinterested in the property and might be
willing to sell it.
Another is that since the property is not actively listed for sale
there is likely to be little competition from other potential buyers.
If you can contact the owner you will probably be the only investor
they are speaking with. Yet another is that abandoned properties are
readily available in most areas.
There are, of course, a few potential drawbacks to abandoned properties
as well. One of these is the trouble it takes to find the owner, which
is what this article is about. Another is that it is very common for
abandoned properties to have title issues which may be troublesome or
impossible to fix. And finally, since the owner is often disinterested
in the property it may have severe defects that will require a thorough
inspection to reveal. However, if you design a business model to handle
these requirements effectively and efficiently, abandoned properties
can be an effective source of deals.
Lists of abandoned properties can best be obtained by canvassing a
neighborhood street by street with a digital camera. This will provide
you with the most accurate picture of the neighborhood you have chosen
to work in. You can also work with lists acquired in other ways, such
as the notice of default list, published monthly, of properties with
defaulted mortgages, lists of condemned properties, lists of properties
with absentee owners, or lists of fire damaged properties. These types
of owners can all be located using the same methods and all have a
potential to result in workable deals.
There are several different basic methods available for contacting
missing owners given only a property address and the owner's name
(starting with just the property address the owners name can be
discovered from the county appraisal district records). The most
relevant factors are time and budget constraints. If you are farming a
neighborhood you can leave notices on the doors of target properties on
a regular interval of once or twice a month perhaps.
You can also send a piece of mail to a property with the words do not
forward, return receipt requested, which will cause the post office to
return it to you with the previous occupant's forwarding address. You
can use the services of a private eye who does this sort of thing in
your area, or you can do the same work the private eye would do and use
a skip tracing service to find phone numbers and relative's phone
numbers for the person of interest, making as many calls as you have to
until you get who you're looking for.
You can also use a specialty service like find the seller which
specializes in providing this service to real estate investors.
The best way to approach the owner when you make contact is with
honesty. Tell them you are an investor interested in buying the
property, and tell them how you got their number if they ask. Get the
relationship off to the right start and the work of closing the deal is
halfway done.
Omar Johnson is a successful real estate investor and author of the
home study course Renegade Stealth Marketing For The Savvy Real Estate
Entrepreneur For more info visit
httpwww.renegadestealthmarketing.com
If
you would like to take advantage of the market and learn how to invest
in real estate and you are local to the Dallas Fort Worth area, I know
a really great teacher and mentor here in Arlington Texas. Please take
a look at his web site: DennisJHenson.com,
Dennis has a great Mentoring and training program, I know because I am
one of his former students. I learned a lot from his one on one
teaching technique. - Michael Harman 817-457-7572
mchfun.business@gmail.com
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