You don't need money to find a great real estate deal. You need a system, some hustle, and the public data that's already sitting there for free. Money comes later — once you've actually got something worth funding.
This is the honest version: no "secret list," no guru course required. Just the moves that work.
First, a real-talk disclaimer
Finding a deal and closing one are different things. Nothing here is legal, tax, or investment advice — we're a software platform and a community, not your attorney or your broker. Laws around wholesaling, marketing to homeowners, and assigning contracts vary by state (some require a real estate license for certain activity). Before you knock a door or sign a contract, talk to a local real estate attorney. Do it right and you build something that lasts.
What "off-market" actually means
An off-market property is one that isn't listed on the MLS or the big portals. There's no agent, no bidding war, no sign in the yard. You're talking directly to an owner who may not have decided to sell yet — which is exactly why the margin is there.
The whole game is: find owners with a reason to sell, reach them before anyone else, and make a fair offer they'd rather take than deal with the hassle.
Step 1 — Mine free public data (this is the unfair advantage)
Counties publish a staggering amount of property data for free. You just have to know where to look:
- County assessor / recorder sites — ownership, mailing address (find absentee owners), last sale date and price, and assessed value. The county recorder also holds recorded deeds, mortgages, liens, and the lis pendens (a pre-foreclosure notice).
- Tax delinquency lists — owners behind on property taxes are highly motivated. County treasurers / tax collectors commonly publish these, and unpaid taxes can lead to a tax lien or tax sale (Investopedia explains the tax lien and lis pendens concepts in plain English).
- Code-violation and pre-foreclosure notices — public distress signals from municipal code-enforcement records. On the foreclosure side, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) notes that federal mortgage-servicing rules generally restrict servicers from making the first foreclosure filing until a borrower is more than 120 days delinquent — so there's a real window before a property hits a sale.
- Census + market data — the U.S. Census Bureau and the Federal Reserve's FRED data help you read which neighborhoods are actually moving, and the National Association of Realtors (NAR) publishes broad housing-market context.
The pattern that finds deals: absentee owner + long ownership + signs of distress. An out-of-state landlord who's owned a tired rental for 20 years and is tired of the 2 a.m. calls is your customer. (The classic absentee tell: the owner's mailing address in the assessor's records differs from the property address.)
Step 2 — Drive for dollars (free, and it works)
Pick a target neighborhood and literally drive (or walk) it. You're looking for the tells of a property the owner has checked out on: overgrown yards, boarded windows, full mailboxes, a pile of newspapers, deferred maintenance. Log the address, then cross-reference it against the assessor data from Step 1 to find the owner.
It costs nothing but time, and it surfaces deals the data alone misses.
Step 3 — Build a simple, repeatable outreach system
A deal you can't reach isn't a deal. Pick one channel and run it consistently — but know the rules before you touch a phone:
- Direct mail — a plain, handwritten-style letter to the owner's mailing address. It carries the lightest regulatory burden of the channels, which is why it's the safe default to start.
- Door knocking — the highest conversion, the most hustle.
- Phone / text — only where it's legal and compliant. Calls and texts are governed by the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), with rules set by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC); the TCPA restricts autodialed and prerecorded calls/texts and in many cases requires prior express consent, so cold-texting a number you skip-traced can be a real violation. The National Do-Not-Call (DNC) Registry, run by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), restricts telemarketing calls to registered numbers — scrub your list against it. If you email, the FTC's CAN-SPAM Act requires honest subject lines, a real physical address, and a working opt-out. When in doubt, don't.
Across every channel, keep your marketing neutral: the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) enforces the Fair Housing Act, so never target or exclude anyone based on a protected class.
Consistency beats volume. Twenty thoughtful, compliant touches a week, every week, beats one frantic blast.
Step 4 — Know your numbers before you offer
The fastest way to lose money you don't have is to overpay. Learn one formula cold: the Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO). A common starting frame is:
MAO = (After-Repair Value × 0.70) − Estimated Repairs − Your Spread
The 70% and the spread are levers you adjust to your market and risk — they are not gospel. The point is to never make an offer you can't back with comps and a repair estimate.
Step 5 — Then bring in the money
Once you've got a property locked up at the right number, that's when capital shows up — private lenders, partners, or a buyer you assign the contract to. Money chases real deals. Your job with no budget is to manufacture the deal first.
The ethics: treat sellers like humans, not marks
A lot of the most motivated owners are in hard moments — grief, a foreclosure, a property they can't keep up. The line between a real estate investor and a predator is whether you make an honest, fair offer with full disclosure, or you squeeze someone in distress. We don't do the second one, ever. If you plan to assign the contract to another buyer, say so in writing to everyone involved. Never pressure, never mislead, and never tell a seller something false about their situation. You're taking the block back from Wall Street — not running the same play on your neighbors. (For more on where these sellers actually are and how to reach them right, read where motivated sellers actually are.)
Sources
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — mortgage servicing rules and the general 120-day delinquency window before a first foreclosure filing
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — the National Do-Not-Call Registry and the CAN-SPAM Act
- Federal Communications Commission (FCC) — Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) rules on autodialed and prerecorded calls and texts
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) — the Fair Housing Act
- County recorder, assessor/appraiser, and treasurer/tax-collector offices — public property, ownership, deed, lien, and tax-delinquency records
- U.S. Census Bureau and the Federal Reserve (FRED) — neighborhood and housing-market data
- National Association of Realtors (NAR) — housing-market context
- Investopedia — definitions of off-market property, motivated seller, lis pendens, and tax lien
Where Squatters fits
Squatters pulls those free public-data signals into one place (we call it Recon), scores the opportunity, and gives you a crew that's done this before — so you're not casing the block alone. The data's so good it almost feels like squatting. Except you actually own it.
Ready to run the playbook? Drop in and start sourcing on Squatters →
Squatters is a software platform and community for real estate investors — not a law firm, broker-dealer, or investment adviser. Nothing here is legal, tax, or investment advice. Always comply with the Fair Housing Act, marketing/contact laws, and your state's licensing rules, and consult a local attorney.