Mark Monroe is a real estate investor, private equity professional, developer, consultant, best-selling author of Creative Real Estate Investing, and business coach with over 25 years of expertise in seller financing strategies.
Over his career, he has been involved in more than $500 million worth of real estate transactions.
Watch the full interview with Mark Monroe to hear his personal journey, real deal examples, and actionable seller financing tips in his own words.
His journey is a testament to perseverance. Monroe grew up in Vermont in a household struggling with poverty. At one point, his family survived for months on boxed macaroni and cheese, slept on the kitchen floor for heat, and couldn’t afford propane fuel in the winter.
On top of these challenges, Monroe also lived with ADHD and dyslexia. In school, he was pulled out for special education because teachers didn’t yet recognize dyslexia. Despite the setbacks, Monroe learned to channel his energy and determination into work.
By age 15, he was working at McDonald’s, where his ability to multitask led him into management before he even graduated high school. By his mid-20s, he was overseeing close to 100 stores. But a spark from a late-teen side project would eventually pull him away from corporate life into real estate investing.
At just 19, Monroe bought a Carlton Sheets course on real estate investing. Without much money, he improvised marketing by tearing up cardboard boxes, writing “We Buy Houses” in marker, and nailing the signs to telephone poles.
One of those signs led to his first deal — a mobile home worth $21,000. The seller’s asking price dropped from $18,000 to $15,000, then to $12,000, and eventually to $6,000. Monroe held firm, eventually buying it for $3,000.
Before even finalizing the purchase, Monroe placed a classified ad offering the mobile home for $25,000 with owner financing and a $3,000 down payment. The first interested couple brought him the $3,000 down, which he used to pay the seller. He created a seven-year note with $300 monthly payments, enough to cover his car payment and insurance.
“I literally got this deal with no money out of my own pocket,” Monroe recalls. “That was my first real taste of what was possible.”
Despite the success of that first deal, Monroe continued climbing the corporate ladder until age 25, when he switched into real estate banking. Working as a loan officer, he met seasoned investors daily, reviewing their applications and learning how they structured creative seller financing strategies before the internet made this information easy to find.
These relationships shaped his investing style, and he started experimenting with a variety of approaches, beginning with the sandwich lease option — a way to control a property without owning it by renting from a seller and subletting to a tenant-buyer for profit.
Monroe mastered a range of creative financing methods over the years:
When homes sat unsold for months, Monroe offered to rent them with an agreement to purchase later. He covered repairs and maintenance, placed tenant-buyers in the homes, and profited from the monthly spread.
In the late ’90s, he began acquiring properties “subject to” the existing mortgage — taking ownership while keeping the seller’s loan in place.
These allowed him to sell properties while retaining the title until the buyer completed all payments.
Monroe learned each approach by partnering with more experienced investors.
“A lot of times, people were my mentors and didn’t even know it,” he says. “I’d bring them deals, they’d show me how to structure them, and I’d take the good from each experience.”
For Monroe, seller financing isn’t just about numbers, it’s about building trust and rapport.
“When you do seller financing, it’s more about the art of building relationships,” he explains. “Think of it like a marriage. These deals can last 3, 5, 10, even 30 years. People are going to do business with you because they like and trust you.”
He spends 80% of conversations building rapport before talking numbers, asking about the neighborhood, local landmarks, or shared interests.
Monroe also uses creative ways to find opportunities. “Some of my best deals came from hospice nurses. Others came from trash collectors, landscapers, even Uber drivers. They know the neighborhoods and see what’s going on before anyone else.”
Monroe often sees wholesale real estate investors leave money on the table. One example: a student planned to wholesale a property for a $15,000 assignment fee. After Monroe helped restructure it as a seller financing deal, the student earned $171,000 instead — with $12,000 upfront, $750 monthly cash flow, and a large back-end payout.
Here’s his typical approach:
“All you need is three to five well-structured deals like this a year,” Monroe says. “That can generate $300,000 to $500,000 over time.”
Monroe knows that beginners often feel overwhelmed by seller financing. His advice:
By combining relationship-building skills in real estate with a variety of seller financing structures, investors can create win-win solutions for sellers while generating long-term passive income.
Monroe’s career proves that you don’t need dozens of transactions to succeed.
“You only need a few good deals a year,” he says. “Stack them year after year, and your pipeline will produce huge results down the road.”
1. What is seller financing in real estate?
Seller financing (also called owner financing) is when the seller acts as the lender. The buyer makes payments directly to the seller instead of getting a traditional mortgage.
2. Is seller financing a good investment strategy?
Yes. It offers flexibility, faster closings, and higher profits compared to conventional deals, especially in competitive markets.
3. How do I find seller financing opportunities?
Look for listings with “owner will carry” terms, contact motivated sellers, or use tools like Deal Machine to pull targeted property lists.
4. What are the risks of seller financing?
Possible risks include buyer default, legal disputes, or overpaying for a property. Protect yourself with proper contracts and legal guidance.
5. Can beginners use seller financing?
Absolutely. With the right education, mentorship, and smaller starter deals, even first-time investors can succeed.