Comparison

Note Buyer vs Note Marketplace

You can sell your mortgage note to a direct buyer who makes you a firm offer, or list it on a note marketplace where investors bid or shop your listing. One offers certainty and a guided sale; the other offers price discovery and self-service. Here's an honest comparison so you can choose the right venue.

FeatureDirect note buyerNote marketplace
ModelA buyer makes you a firm offer and purchases the noteA platform where you list your note for investors to buy or bid on
Who runs the processThe buyer — guided, with one point of contactYou — list, field offers, manage diligence and closing tools
CertaintyHigh — a firm number you can acceptVariable — depends on investor demand and timing
Price discoveryOne offer (compare by getting several quotes)Multiple investors can compete, potentially lifting price
FeesBuilt into the offer; disclosed up frontOften a platform/closing fee (e.g., around 1% on some platforms)
Best forSellers who want a certain, hands-off sale; non-performing or unusual notesHands-on sellers with clean performing paper seeking price discovery

Certainty vs. discovery — the fundamental choice

A direct buyer and a marketplace solve the same problem in opposite ways. A direct buyer (like Mortgage Note Capital) evaluates your note and hands you a firm offer — accept it and the sale proceeds, with the buyer running diligence and closing. A marketplace (platforms such as Paperstac or auction venues like Debexpert) is a venue where you list your note and investors buy or bid on it, with the platform providing escrow, document tools, and sometimes eNotary, usually for a fee. The direct buyer gives you certainty and a guided experience; the marketplace gives you price discovery and control — but asks you to run the process. Neither is better in the abstract; the right one depends on your note and how hands-on you want to be.

When a marketplace is the better venue

A marketplace can genuinely shine for the right seller and the right note:

  • Clean, performing, well-documented paper. Investors compete hardest for pristine performing notes with good seasoning and strong equity — exactly the paper that benefits from an auction or open listing.
  • A hands-on seller. If you're comfortable assembling a data room, listing your note, fielding offers, and managing closing tools, the platform's infrastructure works in your favor.
  • A desire for price discovery. Exposing your note to many buyers at once can surface a strong number that you'd never know about by getting a single offer.

The trade-offs: you do the work, you accept some timing uncertainty (a listing can sell fast or sit), and you typically pay a platform or closing fee.

When a direct buyer is the better venue

A direct buyer is the better fit when:

  • You want certainty. A firm offer you can accept beats a listing that might sell. You know your number.
  • You want it handled. One point of contact runs the diligence, paperwork, and timeline. You don't manage bidders or closing software.
  • Your note is non-performing or unusual. Open marketplaces favor clean paper; investors cherry-pick. A distressed note, an odd property, or a tricky structure can sit unsold on a platform but still get a real offer from a direct buyer who'll value it on the property and recovery path.
  • You value time over a possible marginal premium. Listing takes effort and patience; a direct offer is immediate.

A good direct buyer narrows the marketplace's main advantage — price discovery — by encouraging you to get several quotes and by showing an estimated range up front via a note value calculator. Comparing three direct offers is its own form of price discovery, without the listing effort or fee.

The honest comparison

Think of it as a trade between effort + uncertainty + potential upside (marketplace) and convenience + certainty + a known number (direct buyer). For a confident seller with a pristine performing note, a marketplace's competitive dynamic can be worth the work and the fee. For a seller who wants the sale handled, who values certainty, or whose note is anything other than textbook-clean, a direct buyer is usually the smoother path. And these aren't mutually exclusive: many sellers get a direct quote as a firm benchmark and also check marketplace pricing, then take the better real outcome. We encourage that — a direct offer in hand makes you a sharper marketplace seller, and marketplace interest makes you a more informed negotiator with a direct buyer.

What you'll need either way

The file is identical: the original promissory note, the recorded deed of trust or mortgage, the closing statement, a documented payment history, proof of insurance, and current title. Marketplace investors and direct buyers weigh the same drivers — interest rate, equity (loan-to-value), lien position, the property, and state foreclosure speed — so a complete, organized file improves your result on either path.

Where we stand

Mortgage Note Capital is a direct buyer built for certainty and a guided sale, with deep Texas and Southeast focus and a broad appetite that includes non-performing paper. We think that serves most individual sellers best — especially anyone who'd rather not run an auction. But we're candid about the marketplace's strengths: if you have a pristine performing note and you enjoy the process, listing it can be a smart move, and you should benchmark our offer against what a marketplace might bring. Start with our calculator for a fair-value estimate, get our quote, and compare. Whichever venue you choose, the goal is the same — a fair price you can verify.

The bottom line

A note marketplace rewards hands-on sellers with clean, performing paper who want price discovery and will accept process and a platform fee. A direct buyer rewards sellers who want certainty, a guided sale with one point of contact, or who hold non-performing or unusual notes that marketplaces underserve. Consider getting a direct quote as a benchmark and checking marketplace pricing — then take the better real outcome.

Note: Competitor details are drawn from each company's public materials and may change. This comparison reflects our understanding and is offered for general information, not as an endorsement or a statement of any competitor's current terms. Verify specifics directly with each company.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a note buyer and a note marketplace?

A note buyer (like Mortgage Note Capital) makes you a firm offer and purchases the note itself, running diligence and closing for you. A note marketplace is a platform where you list your note for investors to buy or bid on, usually for a platform or closing fee. The buyer offers certainty; the marketplace offers price discovery but asks you to run the process.

Can a marketplace get me a higher price than a direct buyer?

Sometimes — competitive bidding on a clean, performing note can lift the price. But marketplaces underserve non-performing or unusual notes, charge a fee, and add timing uncertainty. A practical approach is to get a firm direct quote as your benchmark and also check marketplace pricing, then take the better real outcome. Benchmark both against our note value calculator.