Buying A Home On Contract – Free Access

That’s how they ended up on the porch of Arthur Vance, a retired clockmaker who had owned the Maple Street house for forty years. The Handshake and the Paperwork

But in the shadows of the contract, the risks were breathing. The Turning Point buying a home on contract

They spent those final twelve months living like monks. Elias took on night shifts at a factory; Sarah picked up telehealth consulting. They polished the house until it shone, praying that a bank inspector would see the value Elias had added with his bare hands. The Final Exchange That’s how they ended up on the porch

Arthur, usually a kindly old man, called them three times a day. Under a standard mortgage, a bank has to go through a lengthy, months-long foreclosure process if you miss payments. But under their specific contract—which had a "forfeiture clause"—if they defaulted, Arthur could technically cancel the contract, keep their down payment, keep all the monthly installments they’d paid, and keep the house. Elias took on night shifts at a factory;

They had bypassed the system, but they had walked a tightrope to do it. As they watched Arthur walk down the driveway for the last time, Elias looked at the porch he’d rebuilt. He knew every nail in those boards—and now, he finally owned them.

Their contract was "amortized" over thirty years to keep payments low, but the entire remaining balance—roughly $210,000—was due in full at the end of year seven. The plan was always to refinance with a traditional bank once their credit improved and the house increased in value.