Discover creative real estate strategies like owner financing, subject-to, and lease purchases to build cash flow in any market, without bank loans.
Creative real estate strategies are ways to buy or control property using terms instead of bank loans, like owner financing, subject-to deals, and lease purchases. They work in any market because they solve real seller and buyer needs, even when rates rise or headlines get noisy.
There’s one constant in real estate: the market changes. The media may call the current moment “bad,” but for creative investors, change often creates opportunity. When lending tightens or buyers pause, more sellers become open to options that the traditional market doesn’t offer.
That’s the core idea behind creative real estate investing. Instead of waiting for the “perfect” market, you build a skill set that helps you structure deals in almost any conditions, without depending on banks or perfect timing.
This blog is from a DealMachine REI Podcast interview with Chris Prefontaine, and the ideas below are organized into a step-by-step framework you can use. Want to hear the full conversation? Watch the full episode below:
Chris Prefontaine is the founder of Smart Real Estate Coach and the Wicked Smart Real Estate Community. After taking major losses in the 2008 crash, he rebuilt using creative financing strategies that do not rely on banks or personal guarantees.
Chris has been in real estate for over three decades. In the 1990s, he built homes and unknowingly used “creative” terms before he had a name for them. He asked landowners and subcontractors to wait to get paid until the house was done, and they agreed.
He later bought a real estate brokerage franchise and sold it to a national brand in 2000, even though people told him it couldn’t be done.
Then the 2008 crash hit. Like many operators, he experienced the pressure that comes with being personally tied to bank debt. He described that period as brutal, financially and mentally. But that pain shaped the rules he lives by today.
After several hard years, he had no money, no credit, and no ability to qualify for traditional loans. So he had to rebuild using strategies like owner financing, lease purchase, and subject-to, anything that didn’t require banks or personal guarantees.
That shift became the foundation for how he teaches investors now: learn creative deal structures, protect your downside, and build a model that can pivot when the market shifts.
The most important mindset habit is building belief through action, supported by mentorship, community, and realistic expectations.
Chris is direct about mindset: he calls it “the whole game.” Many new investors don’t stall because they lack talent. They stall because they don’t believe they can do the deals yet.
He also points to a specific pattern he noticed in his own career: the hardest stretches were the times he didn’t have a mentor or advisor. Being alone in your own head can make a market downturn feel like a personal failure.
A simple way to stay steady is to build support and feedback early:
Real skills take time. But once you learn them, no one can take them away.
The strongest creative financing methods for today’s market are owner financing (especially free-and-clear properties) and subject-to deals (especially low-rate mortgages). Lease purchases are also powerful when paired with a rent-to-own exit.
Chris focuses on three strategies that help investors buy or control homes without a new bank loan. These methods are also easier to explain to sellers when you keep the conversation grounded in goals: price, timing, and certainty.
Owner financing is when the seller acts like the bank and you pay them monthly. It often works best when the property is free and clear, because the seller doesn’t have a mortgage payment forcing a fast cash sale.
Owner financing means the seller accepts monthly payments from the buyer instead of requiring a new mortgage.
Chris and his team niche down further: they look for free-and-clear homes that are often off-market. These sellers aren’t always distressed. Many simply want the best price and a smooth plan.
Here’s the key structure he emphasizes:
Principal-only payments do something powerful: they pay down the balance every month and build equity steadily. That can act as a hedge when the market slows, because you’re not betting everything on price growth.
A subject-to deal is when you take ownership of the property while the seller’s existing mortgage stays in place, and you make the payments going forward.
Subject-to means you take title while the seller’s existing mortgage stays in place, and you make the payments moving forward.
Subject-to deals matter right now because there are still many mortgages with interest rates below today’s levels, some below 6% and even below 4%. For an investor, taking over an older low-rate payment can create a better spread and lower friction than trying to qualify for a brand-new loan.
The basic idea is simple:
A lease purchase lets you control a property now and sell it later, often to a rent-to-own buyer who needs time to qualify for a mortgage.
A lease purchase gives you control now and a planned purchase later, often through a rent-to-own buyer.
Lease purchases work well when timing is the problem. A seller wants price and certainty, but the retail market isn’t cooperating. Or a buyer wants a home now, but needs time for credit repair or income seasoning.
This method is especially effective when it fits into a clear exit plan, like the 3-Payday System below.
The 3-Payday System is a rent-to-own strategy that pays an investor three ways: upfront cash, monthly cash flow, and long-term equity on the back end.
Chris created this model after realizing that getting paid only once per deal can feel like a job. The goal was to build a business that pays:
Here’s how it works:
Payday 1: Upfront down payment
A tenant-buyer (someone who can’t qualify today) puts real money down to move in. This is typically nonrefundable and shows commitment.
Payday 2: Monthly cash flow
You earn the monthly spread between what you pay (seller payment, taxes, insurance, etc.) and what the tenant-buyer pays you. These spreads add up quickly across a small portfolio.
Payday 3: Back-end equity
Over time, principal gets paid down, often by the tenant-buyer’s payments. When they refinance or buy, you capture the equity built during the term.
This is why many investors like rent-to-own: it’s not just one payday. It’s a system that builds stability.
Lead with simple questions about goals and timing. Then ask one clear qualifier: do they need cash now, or are they open to terms if they can get their price?
Chris keeps seller conversations human, more like a neighbor checking in than a salesperson pitching. The goal is not to convince someone to do owner financing or a lease purchase. The goal is to discover whether a terms solution fits what they want.
Here’s the seller script:
That last question does the heavy lifting. If they need all cash for a down payment on another house, terms may not fit. If they want price and flexibility, you may have a real opportunity.
This approach also frames you as a problem-solver, not a lowball investor.
Trust increases when you explain terms in plain English, show clean paperwork, and demonstrate you’re trained, especially with certification or documented education.
Creative deals can feel unfamiliar to sellers. So credibility matters.
Chris points to a simple credibility boost: accreditation or certification that signals you’ve actually learned the process. Even if you’re not using the same association he mentioned, the principle is the same:
In practice, your credibility comes from being prepared and transparent.
The biggest pitfalls are mismanaged expectations, chasing too many strategies at once, and trying to force deals instead of solving a real problem.
Chris sees two common mistakes:
Pitfall #1: Expecting quick wins
Social media makes it look like you can do a deal in 30 days and become “set.” When that doesn’t happen, people blame themselves. Creative finance is not a quick fix, but it is a long-term skill set.
Pitfall #2: Chasing shiny objects
Trying five strategies at once is like drilling wells everywhere and never hitting water. Pick one niche and commit long enough for skill to compound.
His simple framework:
That’s how you get consistent results, and avoid the emotional rollercoaster.
Use data to find sellers more likely to accept terms, especially free-and-clear owners and properties with older low-rate mortgages. Then let the conversation do the real work.
Tools can speed up lead targeting by helping you identify:
But the data doesn’t close the deal. The questions do. Your job is to find people the traditional market isn’t serving well, and offer a clean, fair alternative.
Learn one creative strategy, practice seller conversations weekly, and build a repeatable system that creates upfront cash, monthly income, and long-term equity.
If you’re newer, keep it simple:
Markets will constantly change. But creative financing skills make you flexible—and that flexibility reduces risk.
Creative real estate strategies are methods for buying or controlling property using terms instead of traditional bank loans.
The most common include owner financing, subject-to deals, and lease purchases. These strategies work in any market because they focus on solving seller needs like timing, certainty, and monthly income.
Owner financing is when the seller accepts monthly payments from the buyer instead of requiring a bank loan. It often works best on free-and-clear properties, where the seller has no mortgage payment forcing a fast cash sale.
Investors can negotiate terms such as payment amount, timeline, and structure.
A subject-to deal is when an investor takes ownership of a property while the seller’s existing mortgage stays in place, and the investor makes the payments. Subject-to can be attractive when the existing loan has a lower interest rate than current market rates, but it must be documented carefully.
Subject-to investing can be risky if it’s done without clear documentation or full transparency. The safest approach is to use written agreements, communicate openly with the seller, and set up a reliable payment process that protects both parties throughout the term.
A lease purchase is a strategy where the investor controls a property through a lease and creates a future purchase plan, often through a rent-to-own buyer. It’s commonly used when the buyer needs time to qualify for a mortgage or improve credit, while the seller wants a clear path to a sale.
Yes. Many investors use creative financing methods like owner financing, subject-to deals, and lease purchases to buy or control property without getting a new mortgage.
These strategies can reduce reliance on lending approvals and can also lower risk when paired with clear paperwork and conservative deal terms.