What is wholesaling real estate? (the honest, legal version)

A clear, disclosure-first explanation of how real estate wholesaling actually works, what makes it legal vs. risky, and how to get started the right way.

June 19, 2026 · The Squatters Crew

#wholesaling#beginners#real-estate#legal

Wholesaling is one of the most-hyped and most-misunderstood ways into real estate. Done right, it's a legitimate way to earn by connecting motivated sellers with buyers. Done wrong, it's a fast way into legal trouble. Here's the straight version.

The honest version, up front

Wholesaling laws vary a lot by state, and several states have tightened the rules in recent years — states including Illinois, Oklahoma, and South Carolina have enacted laws regulating who can market, advertise, or assign property under contract without a real estate license. Real estate licensing is governed at the state level by each state's real estate commission (the broad framework for state licensing of real estate brokers and salespersons is laid out in references like Cornell Law School's Legal Information Institute), so the rule that binds you is the one where the property sits. Some activity can require a real estate license. This article explains the concept — it is not legal advice, and we're not your attorney. Before you wholesale a single deal, talk to a local real estate attorney about what's allowed where you operate. We mean it.

What wholesaling actually is

In a wholesale deal you:

  1. Find an off-market property and a motivated seller.
  2. Get it under contract to buy at a price that leaves room (you're the buyer on paper).
  3. Assign that contract — your right to buy — to an end buyer (often a cash investor or flipper) for a fee.

You never take title. You don't fix the house. You're paid an assignment fee for finding and tying up a deal someone else wants. That's the whole model. The mechanism that makes it work is the assignment of contract — transferring your rights and obligations under a contract to another party — a long-standing principle of contract law (see Investopedia's explanation of assignment of contract and the assignment fee).

A simple example

Say you find a tired single-family home an out-of-state owner wants gone. You agree to buy it at $150,000 and sign a purchase contract with an assignment clause. You then find a flipper who'll pay $160,000 for that same contract. You assign it, the flipper closes the purchase, and you're paid a $10,000 assignment fee at closing.

You brought the deal. They brought the capital and the renovation. Everybody who did real work got paid.

What makes it legal — and what makes it risky

The line is mostly about disclosure and intent:

Transparency is the whole defense. If every party knows exactly what you're doing and agrees to it in writing, you're on solid ground. If you're hiding something, you're not.

Why people start here

The skills that actually matter

  1. Sourcing — finding off-market, motivated sellers (public data + driving for dollars + consistent outreach).
  2. Analysis — knowing your After-Repair Value, your repair estimate, and your Maximum Allowable Offer cold.
  3. Negotiation — a fair offer the seller would rather take than not.
  4. A buyer network — the cash buyers who actually close.

Master those four and you have a real skill, not a get-rich-quick story.

Sources

Where Squatters fits

Squatters is built for exactly this come-up. Recon surfaces off-market signals from free public data. Bandit, our AI deal agent, helps you draft compliant outreach and pressure-test the numbers. And the Block is a crew that's run these deals before — so you learn from people who've actually done it, not a $2,000 course.

You drop in at the bottom and climb. Squat it. Fund it. Own it.

Want to learn it the right way? Start 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. Wholesaling rules vary by state and some activity may require a license; always consult a local attorney and comply with all applicable laws.

Ready to run the playbook?

Drop in at the bottom, case off-market deals, and climb. The come-up is the point.

Start on Squatters →