Private
Lender Note Clauses That
Make You Money!
One
of the most important documents you will ever sign with a
private lender
is the actual Note that creates the loan obligation. In
a typical private lender transaction, you
the real estate investor (borrower) borrow money from a private
individual
(private lender) and that transaction is documented by a Note and
Mortgage.
The
Note lays out the terms and conditions under which the private lender
is
willing to lend you money and under which you are willing to borrow
money.
The Mortgage is the security document for the
borrower’s performance
under the Note and usually is secured by a piece of real estate you own
or are
about to purchase.
The
Note is where you want to control the private lending process in your
favor and
give you the borrower the control and flexible you may need in the
future. If the Note
does not have the right clauses
contained within it, you are potentially giving away tremendous control
to your
private lender and tying your hands.
When dealing with private lenders it is critically important that you
remain in
control of your future options.
If
you were to go to your local Staples and buy one of those template note
forms
you are potentially leaving your future control over to your private
lender
without even knowing what is happening.
We recommend the following two clauses in any Note with a private
lender.
Prepayment
Penalty Clause
"The
Borrower reserves the right to prepay this Note (in whole or in part)
prior to
the due date with no prepayment penalty"
The
prepayment penalty clause allows you the borrower the right to pay off
a Note
prior to maturity without a prepayment penalty. Without this
clause, you
may not be able to pay off a Note early or worse yet you may have to
pay a
large penalty for the right to prepay the Note.
For
example, if you have a three year Note secured by a piece of real
estate you
own and you get a great offer to sell the property.
You see a big pay day in your future. But without the above
clause you may have to
pay the lender their full interest for the three years for the right to
pay off
early or the lender may require a penalty of several percentage points
to allow
you out of the Note.
With
the prepayment penalty clause outlined above you have the full right to
pay the
Note off early with no prepayment or interest penalty.
The benefits of this clause can be very
powerful and beneficial to you the borrower.
Substitution
of Collateral Clause
"Borrower has
the right to substitute like collateral of equal or greater value"
The
substitution of collateral clause allows you to sell the underlying
real estate
without paying off the private lender Note by substituting the
collateral with
a different piece of real estate of equal or greater value.
With
this clause you can flip a property without having to pay off your
private lender
every time you sell a property. Imagine
the work and inconvience to you and your private lender if every couple
months
you sell a property and have to them off.
Then a couple weeks later you call them to reborrow
the money and now you
have to sign all new paper work. This
can be real burden on both of you and eventually the private lender
will tired
of the process.
A
much better solution is to use the above clause and every time you want
to flip
a property you have the right to transfer the Note to another property
of equal
or greater value without paying off the private lender.
The private lender is much happier because his
money is always working without any inconvenience of new documents
every couple
months.
Be
sure to use these two clauses and months or years down the road when
you have a
big payday coming by selling a piece of real estate you will have the
flexibility and ability to realize that payday.
Download
your FREE eBook titled "Discover the
Secrets of How to Fund Your Real Estate Deals with Private Lenders" and learn how to fund your real estate deals with Private lenders!
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