Balloon Payment
A large lump-sum payment due at the end of a note's term, after a series of smaller payments that did not fully pay off the loan.
A balloon payment is a single large payment due at the end of a loan's term to pay off the remaining balance. Many owner-financed notes are structured this way: the monthly payments are calculated on a long amortization schedule (say, 30 years) so they stay affordable, but the loan actually matures much sooner (say, in 5 or 7 years). At maturity, the borrower owes everything that is left — the balloon.
A simple example
A seller finances $150,000 at 8% with payments amortized over 30 years but a 7-year balloon. The borrower makes 84 affordable monthly payments, but because a 30-year schedule pays down principal slowly, roughly $138,000 is still owed at the end of year 7. That ~$138,000 is the balloon, typically satisfied when the borrower refinances or sells the property.
Why notes use balloons
- Lower monthly payments make the home easier to sell on terms.
- A defined exit lets the seller plan to be cashed out within a few years rather than waiting decades.
- Refinance runway gives a borrower time to build credit or seasoning so they can qualify for a conventional loan to pay off the balloon.
How a balloon affects note value
When you sell a note, a balloon is a meaningful chunk of value — but it arrives in the future and depends on the borrower actually refinancing or selling. A note buyer discounts the balloon back to today's dollars at their required yield and weighs balloon risk: what happens if the borrower cannot pay the lump sum at maturity? In a partial purchase, the parties must explicitly agree on who receives the balloon, which can swing pricing significantly.
Things to watch
- Balloon risk: If the borrower can't refinance, the options are an extension, a modification, or foreclosure. Buyers price this in.
- Consumer-protection rules: Owner-financed notes on a borrower's primary residence are subject to federal lending rules (such as the ability-to-repay requirements under Dodd-Frank), and some balloon structures are restricted. Many sellers use a licensed residential mortgage loan originator (RMLO) to keep owner-financed notes compliant.
- Disclosure: A clearly disclosed, well-documented balloon is far easier to sell than a surprise one.