We reviewed real wholesale real estate deal notes, common closing paths, and Missouri-specific issues to build a clear, step-by-step guide to assignment of contract real estate you can actually use.
Real estate can feel slow when you are starting out. You might be working a full-time job, saving cash, and waiting for the “right” deal. Wholesaling is one way investors create momentum, because you can get paid for finding a deal without owning the property long term.
A strong example is Matt Kamp, Head of Partnerships at DealMachine. Matt completed a wholesale deal that produced a $47,000 total profit on the deal, and he personally earned $16,000 through partnerships. The property was a three-acre lot in Chesterfield, Missouri, close to where he lives. The story is a good reminder that big opportunities are not always far away. Sometimes they are in your own backyard.
In wholesaling, you are not trying to buy and hold the property. Your goal is to:
That third step is the assignment of contract real estate. In plain terms, you are selling your “position” in the deal.
In a clean assignment, the end buyer closes directly with the seller, and you get paid your assignment fee at closing.
Below is a simple chart you can paste into your article. It compares typical assignment fee amounts investors report in Missouri markets versus common national ranges. This is meant to help readers sanity-check their expectations before they lock up a deal.
|
Market |
Common low fee |
Common mid fee |
Common high fee |
|
Missouri (example: major metros) |
$5,000 |
$15,000 |
$25,000 |
|
National (broad average) |
$5,000 |
$10,000 |
$20,000 |
This connects to Matt’s deal because a three-acre lot near high-value homes is not a normal “cookie-cutter” wholesale lead. Unique deals can support stronger fees when the numbers make sense for the end buyer.
Many wholesalers get stuck here, so let’s make it simple. Use this decision tree to pick the right closing path.
Start Here: Is Your Purchase Contract Assignable?
Does Your End Buyer Require You To Close First?
Are You Worried About The Seller Seeing Your Fee?
Can Your Title Company Handle Assignments Cleanly?
Rule Of Thumb: If it can be a clean assignment, keep it simple. If there is friction, a double close can save the deal.
Matt’s deal started with a local opportunity: a three-acre lot in Chesterfield. It stood out because nearby homes were high-value, but this property required significant work. It likely required a major rehab or a full rebuild using the existing foundation.
The most important lesson was not the size of the deal. It was how the deal was built through relationships.
Matt partnered with Vince Hall from Call Porter. They created structure and accountability, and even formed an LLC called MV Properties, or “MVP.”
Matt’s quote says it all:
"I'd much rather have a third of that than 100% of nothing." - Matt from DealMachine
That is a real wholesaler mindset. Many beginners lose deals because they refuse to partner, even when they lack a buyer list, a funding plan, or the confidence to solve last-mile problems.
Vince used social media to reach out to a real estate agent friend. That led them to a property that was hard to move through normal channels.
This is also where DealMachine fits naturally. Tools help you spot off-market properties, track outreach, and follow up without dropping leads. But even the best tool cannot replace a real conversation and consistent follow-up.
Most wholesaling content focuses only on wins. Real life has speed bumps. Here are two situations that can blow up an assignment, plus how to recover.
Scenario: You lock up a property under contract. You find a buyer who signs your assignment agreement. Then the buyer’s lender or partner backs out. Now closing is in 7 days, and you have no backup.
What happens next:
How to prevent it:
How to save it if it happens:
Missouri has been actively discussing wholesaler disclosure rules. Even if rules change over time, the direction is clear. States want wholesalers to be transparent about their role.
What you should do on every Missouri wholesale deal:
This is not legal advice. If you wholesale in Missouri, it is smart to consult a local real estate attorney and a local title company that understands assignments and double closings.
Here is a simple fee calculator you can copy into Google Sheets or Excel.
Inputs
Quick math
Reality Check
Use this checklist before you market any wholesale deal.
If you can check most of these boxes, your odds of a smooth closing go way up.
It is when you get a property under contract, then transfer your contract rights to an end buyer for a fee. The end buyer closes, and you get paid at closing.
No. An assignment transfers the contract to the end buyer. A double close involves two closings: you buy from the seller and then sell to the end buyer.
Most assignments fail because the buyer is not solid. Proof of funds, clear timelines, and a backup buyer plan reduce this risk.
Wholesaling can be done the right way, but you must use clean paperwork and clear disclosures. Work with a local title company and consider local legal guidance, especially as rules can change.