Double-Close Funding for Land Flips: How It Actually Works
Double-close funding sounds exotic but the mechanics are simple: you close on a property and immediately sell it to your end buyer the same day, using short-term capital that's on the books for hours, not months. Here's how it works in land specifically — and why it's a smaller part of most operators' playbook than they expect.
What a double close actually is
A double close is two transactions, back to back, often within minutes of each other:
- Closing A: You buy the property from the seller using transactional funding (your name on the deed for a moment).
- Closing B: You sell the property to your end buyer for a higher price (your name comes off the deed, end buyer's name goes on).
The transactional funder gets their money back from the proceeds of Closing B, plus a fee — typically 1–2% of the purchase price, or a flat $1,500–$3,000 depending on the funder.
The point of a double close: You never have to put your own money in the deal, and the seller doesn't see what you sold the property for. That second piece is why some operators prefer double closes over assignments — it keeps your spread private.
How a double close differs from an assignment
The other way to wholesale land without using your own capital is an assignment — you sign a purchase agreement with the seller, then assign that contract to your end buyer for an assignment fee. No closing on your end. The seller and the end buyer both see the assignment fee on the closing documents.
Double-close funding solves three problems assignments don't:
- Privacy: The seller never sees what the end buyer paid. If you bought for $30K and sold for $80K, the seller's HUD shows them selling to you for $30K. Closing B is a separate transaction.
- End-buyer financing: Some end buyers can't or won't take an assignment of contract — they want a clean title coming from a single seller. Double close gives them that.
- Legality in restrictive states: A handful of states have wholesaling regulations that complicate assignments. Double closes are unambiguous transactions.
Double-close funding vs. JV funding vs. hard money
| Capital type | How long the money is tied up | Typical cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Double-close funding (transactional) | Hours | 1–2% of purchase or $1.5K–$3K flat | Same-day resale to a known end buyer |
| JV funding | 30 days to 6+ months | 50% of net profit (no interest) | Deals where you'll hold and resell over weeks/months |
| Hard money | Weeks to months | 10–15% APR + 2–4 points | Operators with cash reserves who want to keep the profit |
When you'd actually use a double close in land
Honest answer: less often than you'd think. Most land deals don't have a same-day end buyer ready to close. You buy the property, then you market it, then you wait for someone to want it. That's a hold period — which is the JV-funding or hard-money use case, not the double-close use case.
Double-close funding fits when:
- You have a hot deal where your end buyer is already lined up and ready to fund (often another land investor or developer)
- You don't want the end buyer to see your spread
- You're in a state where assignments are awkward
- The end buyer needs clean title from a single seller for their financing
If you're holding the property for any length of time, double-close funding is the wrong tool. Use JV funding instead — no interest clock, no daily holding cost.
The mechanics: what a double close looks like at the title company
The title company runs both closings as a coordinated event. Step by step:
- You sign a purchase agreement with the seller (Contract A) and a separate sales agreement with the end buyer (Contract B). Both contracts close at the same title company.
- On closing day, the transactional funder wires the purchase amount + fees to the title company.
- Closing A executes: you sign as buyer, seller signs as seller, deed records to you (or your entity).
- Closing B executes immediately after: you sign as seller, end buyer signs as buyer, deed records to the end buyer.
- Out of Closing B's proceeds, the title company pays back the transactional funder + fee, then disburses your net profit to you.
Most title companies have done this hundreds of times. A few are uncomfortable with it (they call it "dry funding" concerns) — if your closer balks, find a different one.
What it costs to use a transactional funder
The pricing structure varies but typical ranges:
- 1.5–2% of the purchase amount for deals over $100K
- Flat $1,500–$3,000 for smaller deals where percentage would be trivial
- Same-day or 24-hour rates are standard — these aren't loans you carry for days
- End buyer's funds must be verified before the funder wires — no funder lends transactional money against a maybe-buyer
The bottom line
Double-close funding is a niche tool. It's powerful when you need it — privacy, clean title, restrictive-state compliance — but most land operators do five or fewer double closes a year. The bread and butter is JV funding for actual hold deals, with the occasional double close for that specific situation when your end buyer is already in hand.
If you're trying to figure out whether your deal needs a double close or a JV partner: submit it for review. We'll tell you which structure actually fits.
Funding for your next land deal
We've funded 848+ deals across 34 states. JV partner, no points, no junk fees.
Submit a deal →