A short sale is when a lender agrees to accept less than the mortgage balance so the home can sell. In this guide, you’ll learn how investors use short sale investing to turn underwater “dead leads” into closable deals, ethically and step-by-step.
Have you ever had to walk away from a deal because the seller owed more than the house was worth, and you didn’t know what to do next? This is one of the most common “dead lead” moments in real estate investing. A homeowner is underwater, your cash offer can’t work, and the deal feels impossible.
But those leads aren’t always dead. In a real-world training breakdown, veteran investor Jiries Dawaher (1,000+ deals) explained how to turn upside-down properties into real profits using short sales, as long as you follow a clean, ethical, repeatable process.
This strategy matters for two reasons:
In an episode of the DealMachine REI Podcast, veteran investor Jiries Dawaher breaks down how to turn dead leads into profitable short sales, step by step. Want the full breakdown? Watch the full episode here:
If you prefer reading, the guide below breaks the episode into a step-by-step short sale process you can use on your next underwater lead.
\To turn dead leads into short sales, you qualify the seller (negative equity + hardship), price using as-is comps, submit a complete package, and follow up weekly.
That’s the repeatable core of the real estate short sale process.
A short sale is when the lender accepts a discounted payoff so the home can sell instead of going through foreclosure. Investors use short sales when a normal deal can’t happen, usually because the seller has an upside-down loan and can’t bring cash to closing.
When done correctly, short sale investing can create:
Here’s the part most investors miss: short sales are a tool, not a strategy you force on every lead. Your first goal is still to buy traditionally whenever equity exists.
Distress tends to increase when homeowners get over-leveraged, payment burdens rise, or certain pockets of a market cool. That can lead to more people:
This doesn’t have to be fear-based. It’s preparation. When more homeowners need options, investors who understand short sales can help more people and unlock a lane of deals others avoid.
In many underwater situations, a short sale creates a cleaner finish line because the lender approves the payoff and the seller can move forward with fewer long-term loose ends.
With “subject-to,” the loan can remain tied to the seller’s credit and future liability. That can complicate their next steps, especially if they want to rebuild and buy again later. With a short sale, the goal is a cleaner exit, and the credit impact is often less severe than foreclosure.
If the seller is upside down, forcing a structure just to lock up a deal is how investors get stuck with stress instead of profit.
A common scenario:
Here’s what to do instead: recognize the situation early and move to the right tool. If negative equity and hardship exist, short sale investing becomes a real option.
You don’t need a new business model. You keep your current lead generation and add a few targeted sources that surface distress.
Best sources for short sale leads
The difference is what happens when you discover negative equity. Instead of walking away, you shift into a short sale conversation and explain the path calmly.
Most sellers in distress don’t need pressure, they need clarity. Your goal is to start a real conversation, book the visit, and build trust.
Simple opener (empathetic and direct):
“Hi, my name’s Kevin. I know this is out of the blue, and I’m not even sure I can help, but I noticed your property may be facing foreclosure. Would you be open to hearing a way to avoid foreclosure and limit the damage to your credit?”
Then:
Should you argue price with a seller on the first call?
No. Don’t argue on the first call. Acknowledge what they believe, book the visit, and review the condition in person before you talk numbers.
This is where deals either move forward, or die. Keep your answers calm, honest, and simple.
“Will this ruin my credit?”
A short sale can still impact credit, but it’s often less damaging than foreclosure. The bigger goal is avoiding a worse outcome and creating a clear path forward.
“Can you guarantee the bank will approve it?”
No one can guarantee approval. What you can do is submit a complete file with a clear hardship and strong as-is value support, then follow up weekly.
“Why would the bank accept less?”
Banks compare your offer to the cost, time, and uncertainty of foreclosure. A clean short sale can reduce delays, legal costs, and property deterioration.
“How long will this take?”
Most short sales take 3–9 months, depending on the lender and how clean the paperwork is. Weekly follow-up helps keep the file from stalling.
“Why can’t you just buy it normally?”
If the loan balance is higher than the home’s current value, a normal purchase often doesn’t work unless someone brings cash to closing. A short sale is the tool designed for that gap.
Most short sale deals come down to three simple checks.
What’s the #1 reason a short sale gets approved?
A clear, truthful hardship paired with a well-documented as-is value case gives the bank a strong reason to approve.
Most short sales take 3 to 9 months. Some move faster. Some take longer. The difference usually comes down to the lender, the quality of your submission, and follow-up consistency.
What slows a short sale down the most?
Missing documents and inconsistent follow-up. A clean package plus weekly follow-up prevents most stalls.
Short sale negotiations usually run through the lender’s loss mitigation department. The lender will review your file, compare it to their foreclosure alternatives, and decide whether to approve, counter, or decline.
Here’s what the lender typically wants to see:
This is where persistence matters. Weekly follow-up keeps your file from getting stuck in a queue.
“Arm’s length” means the transaction is legitimate, transparent, and not set up to benefit undisclosed parties through hidden relationships or side deals. Lenders use this requirement to reduce fraud risk.
If the bank asks for an arm ’s-length certification, read it carefully and follow it. Keep everything clean, honest, and documented.
In many cases, you don’t need a real estate license to help assemble a short sale package or negotiate the process as an investor or facilitator, but rules vary by state and situation. The safe approach is to follow lender requirements, disclose properly, and use qualified professionals (title, attorney, agent) when needed.
Here’s what the bank needs to see: the property’s as-is reality, not a best-case retail story.
If the home needs work, comps should match that condition. Support your case with:
Investor pricing can be lower than retail because you’re cutting out overhead and middlemen. But your numbers still have to be believable in your market. If your estimate looks fake, the whole file loses trust.
Many investors start with:
ARV × 70–75% = Max all-in
Then subtract:
This helps you set your max purchase price and your walk-away number.
Most short sales follow the same structure, even though lender packets vary.
Keep your marketing consistent. This is a tool you use when you discover an upside-down loan.
Confirm negative equity, hardship, and the seller’s timeline readiness.
Pull as-is comps, estimate repairs credibly, set your max, and gather documentation.
Request the lender’s packet and submit a complete file.
This is where deals stall. Pick one follow-up day and stick to it.
The bank approves, counters, or declines. If the counter breaks your model, walk away. If it works, close cleanly and confirm terms in writing.
A typical short sale submission may include:
What’s the fastest way to ruin a short sale file?
Submitting an incomplete package and failing to follow up weekly are the fastest ways to stall or lose a short sale.