Mortgage Note Capital vs First National Acceptance
First National Acceptance Company (FNAC) is one of the oldest and largest direct note buyers in the country — a bank subsidiary that has been buying seller-financed notes since 1974. Here's an honest comparison for a note holder weighing a long-standing institution against a focused, modern buyer.
| Feature | Mortgage Note Capital | First National Acceptance (FNAC) |
|---|---|---|
| What they buy | Performing & non-performing notes, owner-financed notes, land contracts, promissory notes | Seller-financed, performing, first-lien notes; SFH, multifamily, land, commercial |
| Non-performing notes | Yes — we buy non-performing notes | Focus is performing notes |
| Track record | Founded by Adam Lambert; direct buyer | Buying since 1974; subsidiary of First National Bank of America; one of the largest direct buyers |
| Reported closing speed | Typically 14–30 days | Reports closings in roughly 23 days |
| Closing costs | Disclosed up front in your quote | Markets that it pays closing costs |
| Servicing | We arrange servicing as needed | Markets that it services notes for life |
| Geography | Nationwide; deep Texas & Southeast focus | All 50 states |
An institution with a 50-year history
First National Acceptance Company (FNAC) is about as established as note buyers get. As a subsidiary of First National Bank of America, it has been buying seller-financed notes since 1974, operates in all 50 states, and is widely regarded as one of the largest direct buyers in the industry. It buys performing, first-lien seller-financed notes across property types — single-family, multifamily, land, and commercial — and markets that it pays closing costs and services notes for life, with closings in roughly 23 days. For a note holder who values the comfort of a bank-affiliated counterparty, FNAC's longevity is a real selling point.
The trade-offs of size
A large, bank-owned buyer has clear strengths, but there are trade-offs worth knowing:
- Performing-note focus. FNAC concentrates on performing first liens. If your borrower has fallen behind, a performing-paper buyer may not be the right fit.
- Institutional process. Bank-affiliated buyers often run a more standardized, committee-driven process. That's reassuring, but it can feel less personal than working directly with the decision-maker.
Where Mortgage Note Capital fits
We're a focused, modern buyer built for individual note holders. Three differences matter most:
- We buy non-performing notes. Unlike a strictly performing-paper buyer, we'll look at notes where the borrower is behind and value them on the property and recovery — see non-performing notes.
- Transparency up front. Our note value calculator gives you an estimated range before any conversation, and our how-we-value page explains the math. Your quote discloses costs clearly.
- A single point of contact. You work directly with us through closing, not a queue.
Like FNAC, we operate nationwide, with particular depth in Texas and the Southeast, where fast non-judicial foreclosure and heavy owner-finance activity support strong note values.
How to decide
- A clean performing first lien, and you want a 50-year-old bank-affiliated buyer? FNAC is a credible, reputable choice — get their quote.
- A non-performing note, or you want a transparent, direct, walked-through sale? That's our lane.
Whatever you decide, get more than one quote and compare. We welcome it.
Institutional process vs. direct relationship
The real choice here is about experience, not legitimacy — both are credible buyers. A 50-year-old bank subsidiary like FNAC brings scale, standardized procedures, and the reassurance of an institution that has bought tens of thousands of notes. That structure is a genuine comfort to many sellers. The flip side is that a large institution's process can be more rigid and less personal — your file moves through a system rather than across one person's desk. A focused buyer like Mortgage Note Capital trades institutional scale for a direct relationship, a transparent valuation you can verify yourself, and flexibility on note types FNAC's performing-paper focus may exclude.
Preparing for either buyer
Both buyers run similar diligence, so prepare once: the original promissory note, the recorded deed of trust or mortgage, the closing statement, a documented payment history (seasoning helps), proof of insurance, and current title. Both are direct buyers, so neither charges a broker spread. As always, the right move is to get quotes from more than one buyer and measure each against the range from our note value calculator, so you can judge offers on equal terms and choose with confidence.
Longevity vs. flexibility: which matters more for your note?
FNAC's five-decade history is a real asset for a certain kind of seller — someone who places a premium on dealing with a long-established, bank-affiliated institution and has a clean performing first lien that fits squarely in FNAC's wheelhouse. There's genuine peace of mind in that. But longevity isn't the only thing that matters, and for many notes it isn't the deciding factor. If your borrower has stopped paying, a non-performing note needs a buyer who actively purchases distressed paper. If you want to understand exactly how your offer was calculated, a transparent valuation beats institutional brand. And if you'd rather have one person own your deal from quote to close, a focused buyer delivers that more reliably than a committee. We compete by being clear, flexible, and direct — and by encouraging you to compare us against FNAC or anyone else. Whatever you decide, the combination of a fair, well-explained offer and your own homework (starting with our calculator) is what ensures you sell with confidence rather than on faith.
The bottom line
First National Acceptance offers the reassurance of a 50-year-old, bank-affiliated institution and is a solid choice for a clean performing first lien. Mortgage Note Capital competes on transparency, a direct single point of contact, and a broader appetite that includes non-performing notes. If your note is current, compare both; if it's non-performing, we're the natural fit.