Note Pricing

Equity

The portion of a property's value above the debt against it — the cushion that protects a note holder and drives note value.

Equity is the portion of a property's value that exceeds the debt secured against it — the owner's true ownership stake. If a home is worth $250,000 and has a $160,000 loan, there is $90,000 of equity. In note buying, equity is the cushion that protects the note holder: it is what stands between the loan balance and a total loss if the borrower defaults and the property must be sold. More equity means a safer, more valuable note, which is why equity sits at the heart of how a note buyer prices your note.

Equity and the key ratios

Equity is the flip side of the ratios buyers use:

  • Loan-to-value (LTV): loan ÷ value. A 64% LTV ($160k on $250k) means 36% equity.
  • Investment-to-value (ITV): the buyer's price ÷ value. Because notes are bought at a discount, the buyer's effective equity cushion (1 − ITV) is even larger than the borrower's.

The larger the equity, the lower the LTV/ITV, and the more protected everyone is.

Why equity drives note value

Equity matters for two reasons that reinforce each other:

  1. Borrower behavior. A borrower with substantial equity has a powerful incentive to keep paying — walking away means losing that stake. Higher equity correlates with lower default rates.
  2. Recovery protection. If default happens anyway, equity is the buffer that lets the property cover the loan balance through foreclosure and resale, even after costs. A note with a thick equity cushion can be recovered with little or no loss; a note with thin equity can leave the holder short.

Both lower the buyer's risk, reduce the required yield, and raise the price of the note.

How equity grows over time

Equity is not static — two forces increase it in the holder's favor:

  • Amortization: every payment reduces the loan balance, growing equity.
  • Appreciation: if the property's value rises, equity grows even without principal reduction.

A note that started at a modest equity position can become well-protected after a few years of payments and appreciation — improving both its risk profile and the offer a buyer will make.

Equity vs. down payment

The initial equity usually comes from the down payment: a 25% down payment creates 25% starting equity. From there, amortization and appreciation build on it. So a strong down payment plus time produces the deep equity cushion buyers prize.

What it means when you sell

Know your property's current value and the equity behind your note — it is one of the most important inputs to a quote. A note with substantial, well-documented equity (a low LTV/ITV) supports the strongest pricing. If you have a recent appraisal, tax value, or comparable sales, provide them; an accurate, favorable equity picture directly supports a better offer. Our note value calculator lets you see how the equity cushion influences the estimated lump sum.

Questions about equity

Why does equity matter when selling my note?

Equity is the cushion protecting the note if the borrower defaults. More equity means lower default risk and a property that comfortably covers the balance through foreclosure and resale. That reduces the buyer's risk and supports a higher price for your note.

Does equity in the property change over time?

Yes. Equity grows as the borrower pays down the loan (amortization) and as the property appreciates. A note that started with modest equity can become well-protected after a few years, improving both its risk profile and the offer a buyer will make.

Selling a note with these terms?

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