How To Do Your Own Title Search (With or Without Title Insurance) - Training Tutorial
http://REtipster.com/how-to-do-your-own-title-search/
One of the most crucial steps to closing on any real estate transaction is the title search. As an investor, you need to do prudent research and be 100% sure that the person you're buying from has a clear title to the property. You need to ensure that you're getting a deed and paying the actual property owner (not somebody else who thinks they own the property, or is lying to you and claiming that they own it). When I bought my first house, this whole concept really confused me and if you're new to real estate, it may seem confusing to you too...
Why A Clear Title Matters
In a lot of ways, it's a similar process to buying an car.
Suppose you see a car parked in someone's driveway with a "FOR SALE" sign in the window. The car looks nice, so you walk up to the house, knock on the door and say "I saw this car parked in your driveway, is it yours?" The person replies, "No, but I'll sell it to you for $10,000!"
There's obviously something wrong with this picture. A person can't sell something they don't legally own -- and while it sounds like a ridiculous conversation, you'd be surprised at how often I've come across situations just like this in the real estate business.
How does this kind of issue come up in the first place? There are a lot of ways but most often, I come across people who have inherited property from their parents or relatives and somewhere along the way, the proper paperwork was never filed to give them the legal right to sell the property. Other times, people buy properties without doing their own due diligence and then THEY get stuck with a property without a clear title. One way or another, people can end up with their name on the tax bill (and in some cases, on the actual deed), but somewhere in the "chain of title" (as recorded in the county's historical documentation of the property) the property wasn't transferred correctly from seller to the buyer.
Another key reason you'll want to do a title search is to make sure there aren't any liens or mortgages on the property. Especially when you're offering people a very small amount of cash for their property (like I tend to do), there will be times when they conveniently neglect to mention that they have a $100,000 mortgage or $20,000 construction lien that is still tied to that property. If you fail to catch this in your title search before closing on the deal, these issues will fall into your lap along with the property.
If you make enough offers and buy enough properties, you will eventually run into this issue. When you do, it's usually a problem that doesn't have a quick or easy solution.
Knowing When It's Worth The Price
Admittedly, doing your own title search will open you up to some risk. There is always the possibility that you'll miss some crucial piece of information along the way. However, I have done a few dozen title searches on my own over the years and I have never been burned by it. As a personal rule -- the only time I do my own title searches is when the expected market value of the property is less than $10K (i.e. -- we're talking exclusively "rinky dink" properties here). As soon as I start dealing with substantial deals in the tens of thousands, I never leave it to chance. At that point, the cost of a full-blown title insurance policy is more than worth the cost. #retipster #sethwilliams #landinvesting #realestateinvesting #realestate
Видео How To Do Your Own Title Search (With or Without Title Insurance) - Training Tutorial канала REtipster
One of the most crucial steps to closing on any real estate transaction is the title search. As an investor, you need to do prudent research and be 100% sure that the person you're buying from has a clear title to the property. You need to ensure that you're getting a deed and paying the actual property owner (not somebody else who thinks they own the property, or is lying to you and claiming that they own it). When I bought my first house, this whole concept really confused me and if you're new to real estate, it may seem confusing to you too...
Why A Clear Title Matters
In a lot of ways, it's a similar process to buying an car.
Suppose you see a car parked in someone's driveway with a "FOR SALE" sign in the window. The car looks nice, so you walk up to the house, knock on the door and say "I saw this car parked in your driveway, is it yours?" The person replies, "No, but I'll sell it to you for $10,000!"
There's obviously something wrong with this picture. A person can't sell something they don't legally own -- and while it sounds like a ridiculous conversation, you'd be surprised at how often I've come across situations just like this in the real estate business.
How does this kind of issue come up in the first place? There are a lot of ways but most often, I come across people who have inherited property from their parents or relatives and somewhere along the way, the proper paperwork was never filed to give them the legal right to sell the property. Other times, people buy properties without doing their own due diligence and then THEY get stuck with a property without a clear title. One way or another, people can end up with their name on the tax bill (and in some cases, on the actual deed), but somewhere in the "chain of title" (as recorded in the county's historical documentation of the property) the property wasn't transferred correctly from seller to the buyer.
Another key reason you'll want to do a title search is to make sure there aren't any liens or mortgages on the property. Especially when you're offering people a very small amount of cash for their property (like I tend to do), there will be times when they conveniently neglect to mention that they have a $100,000 mortgage or $20,000 construction lien that is still tied to that property. If you fail to catch this in your title search before closing on the deal, these issues will fall into your lap along with the property.
If you make enough offers and buy enough properties, you will eventually run into this issue. When you do, it's usually a problem that doesn't have a quick or easy solution.
Knowing When It's Worth The Price
Admittedly, doing your own title search will open you up to some risk. There is always the possibility that you'll miss some crucial piece of information along the way. However, I have done a few dozen title searches on my own over the years and I have never been burned by it. As a personal rule -- the only time I do my own title searches is when the expected market value of the property is less than $10K (i.e. -- we're talking exclusively "rinky dink" properties here). As soon as I start dealing with substantial deals in the tens of thousands, I never leave it to chance. At that point, the cost of a full-blown title insurance policy is more than worth the cost. #retipster #sethwilliams #landinvesting #realestateinvesting #realestate
Видео How To Do Your Own Title Search (With or Without Title Insurance) - Training Tutorial канала REtipster
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
How To Find Out If There Is A Lien On A PropertySecrets to Foreclosure Auctions and Tax Deed SalesHow to Read a Preliminary ReportHow to do a Real Estate Title Search, Taught by a Professional Title ExaminerHow To Check Who Owns A Property for FREEHow to Read a Title Insurance Commitment (Preliminary Title Report)How to Draft a Warranty Deed or Quit Claim DeedTax Deed Title Search | Full Process | Watch me Go Through It LIVE!Deed VS Title: What's the difference? | Real Estate Exam Topics ExplainedSCR Form 310 - Agreement To Buy and Sell - January 2020How To Do A Property Title SearchTitle Insurance 101: What is Title Insurance & What Does it CoverLearn Real Estate Title Searching by a Professional Title CompanyTax Lien & Tax Deed Training: Researching County Records!How to Buy Real Estate without Cash or CreditHow to look up property information online free - Subject To Investing SeriesTitle FRAUD: Can Someone Steal Your Property & How To Protect YourselfHow to Read a Title Search (Tony Spagnuolo, Spagnuolo & Company Real Estate Lawyers)How to Create a Quit Claim Deed