Virtual Wholesaling

How to Wholesale Vacant Properties

Vacant homes attract less competition, carry more motivated owners, and often have the best margins in the market. Here is exactly how to find them and close deals.

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8 min read

A vacant house is a problem for its owner. Every month it sits empty, it costs them in taxes, insurance, and maintenance. Vandalism risk goes up. Neighbors complain. The property deteriorates. Most owners of vacant properties want out, and they have often been thinking about it for longer than they will admit.

That is what makes vacant properties some of the most reliable wholesale leads available. The motivation is baked in. You are not trying to create urgency. The situation creates it on its own.

Why Vacant Properties Are Good Wholesale Targets

Vacant properties tend to cluster at the intersection of two things wholesalers look for: motivated owners and distressed condition. The same circumstances that leave a house sitting empty (owner moved away, inheritance, financial hardship, divorce) often also leave the house in below-market condition. That is exactly the profile of a deal that works.

A few other advantages specific to vacant properties:

How to Find Vacant Properties

Driving for dollars

The classic method. Drive neighborhoods and look for signs of vacancy: overgrown grass, newspapers or packages piling up, boarded windows, no curtains, mail slot overflowing, utilities disconnected (look for missing meter). Take down the address, pull the owner from county records, and add them to your list.

Apps like DealMachine let you photograph the house, pull owner info, and add them to a marketing campaign without stopping the car. For volume targeting of a specific area, this is still one of the most effective methods available.

County tax delinquency records

Properties with delinquent taxes are often vacant or owned by someone in distress. Most counties publish tax delinquency lists, either online or by request. These lists include the property address and the mailing address for the owner (which is often different from the property address, a strong signal of an absentee owner). Pull the list, filter for residential properties in your target areas, and skip trace the owners.

Absentee owner lists

An absentee owner is someone whose mailing address does not match the property address. This is a proxy for non-owner-occupied properties, many of which are vacant. You can pull absentee owner lists from list providers like ListSource, PropStream, or BatchLeads. Filter by your target zip codes and property type, and you will have a list of potential leads to work through.

USPS vacancy data

The USPS tracks vacant and abandoned addresses for mail delivery purposes. Some list providers resell access to this data. It is not always current, but it is a useful filter to combine with absentee owner data to prioritize your outreach.

Probate records

When someone dies, their estate goes through probate. Properties in probate are often vacant while heirs decide what to do with them. Many heirs live out of state, have no use for the property, and want to convert it to cash as quickly and simply as possible. Probate leads require a slightly different approach (see our guide to wholesaling probate properties), but vacant probate properties are among the most motivated leads you will find.

How to Find and Reach the Owner

Once you have an address, you need to find the person who owns it and a way to contact them. This is skip tracing.

Start with county records

Every property has an owner of record on file with the county assessor or recorder. Most counties have this data online. Search the property address and you will find the owner name and the mailing address on record. Sometimes that is all you need.

Skip trace for phone and email

If the county record gives you a name and a mailing address but no phone number, run a skip trace. Services like BatchSkipTracing, Skip Genie, or IDI Data take a name and address and return associated phone numbers and email addresses. Most wholesalers skip trace in bulk, uploading a list of properties and getting contact info back for all of them at once.

Outreach sequence

The most effective outreach for vacant property owners combines multiple channels. A common sequence:

  1. Send a handwritten or typed letter to the mailing address on file. Keep it short: you buy houses, you are interested in theirs, here is your number.
  2. Follow up with a text to the best phone number from skip trace a few days later. Reference the letter if possible.
  3. Call directly. Many owners of vacant properties have been sitting on the decision for a long time. A direct call from a real person, not a robocall, often gets a better response than any mailer.
  4. If no response after 2 to 3 attempts, add to a longer-term follow-up sequence and move on. Some of your best deals come from owners who were not ready the first time you contacted them.

The Seller Conversation for Vacant Properties

Vacant property owners are different from a typical motivated seller who is still living in the house. A few things to keep in mind when you get them on the phone:

They may feel embarrassed

Owning a vacant house that has fallen into disrepair can carry a sense of guilt or shame, especially if it was a family home. Open the conversation with empathy. You are not there to judge the condition of the property. You are there to solve a problem for them.

They have often already decided to sell

Unlike a seller who is "thinking about it," many vacant property owners have been meaning to do something with the house for months or years. They just have not pulled the trigger. Your call gives them a reason to finally act. Do not oversell. Ask questions and let them talk.

Access for photos may require coordination

If the owner is out of state or does not have a key handy, getting photos of the interior requires a plan. Options include asking if a neighbor, friend, or family member has access; hiring a local contact to do an exterior walkthrough and photograph what they can see; or using your exterior photos and condition information to build an initial estimate while you arrange interior access.

For owners who have a key but are out of state, you can send them a SellerSubmit link and ask them to arrange access with a local contact or to visit themselves if they are planning a trip. Many out-of-state owners are willing to coordinate a visit specifically to get the property sold.

Do not make an offer on a vacant property without interior photos. The exterior may look manageable while the interior has significant water damage, animal intrusion, or structural issues. Vacant properties deteriorate faster than occupied ones. What you see from the street is not the whole story.

Unique Challenges with Vacant Properties

Condition is often worse than expected

Vacant properties deteriorate. No one is catching the small problems before they become large ones. A roof that was leaking slowly gets much worse over two years of vacancy. Factor this into your repair estimates. When in doubt, add a contingency buffer.

Utilities may be disconnected

If the water and electricity are off, your end buyer's contractor cannot do a proper inspection without reconnecting them first. This can add time and cost to the due diligence process. Know this going in and factor it into your timeline expectations with buyers.

Multiple heirs or owners

Inherited vacant properties often have more than one owner. All owners need to agree to sell and sign the contract. Find out early how many people are on the title and whether they are all aligned. Deals with disagreeing heirs can drag on for months or fall apart entirely.

Title complications

Vacant properties, especially those tied to estates or long-term delinquency, are more likely to have title issues: unpaid liens, code violations, back taxes owed. Always use a reputable title company and get a title search done before you present the deal to your end buyer.

Wholesaling Occupied Properties vs. Vacant Properties

Factor Occupied Property Vacant Property
Owner motivation Variable, depends on situation Often high: carrying costs with no income
Competition from retail buyers Higher, especially in good condition Lower, condition deters most buyers
Access for photos Seller is present, easy to coordinate May require coordination or local contact
Property condition Maintained to a livable standard Often deteriorated, higher repair budget needed
Title complexity Usually straightforward Higher chance of liens, back taxes, or estate issues
Closing timeline flexibility Depends on seller's move-out situation High, no one needs to move out
Negotiating leverage Moderate Strong, owner wants to stop the carrying cost bleed

Pursuing a Vacant Lead Without a System vs. With One

Without a System

🏠

Spot a vacant house while driving, write the address on your handDay 1

🔍

Look up owner manually in county records. Takes 20 minutes per address.Day 2

📞

Call with no phone number found. Send a letter and wait.Day 3: silence

🤔

Owner calls back two weeks later. You make an offer without photos or interior condition info.Day 17: blind offer

😱

Buyer walks the property, repair cost is double your estimate. Deal collapses.Day 30

With a System

📱

Add vacant house to DealMachine while driving. Owner info pulled automatically.Day 1: lead captured in seconds

📊

Bulk skip trace the week's leads. Get phone numbers back overnight.Day 2

📞

Call owner. Confirm interest. Arrange interior access for photos.Day 3

📷

Owner (or local contact) submits photos via SellerSubmit link. Complete interior and exterior photos in under 10 minutes.Day 4

Run MAO formula with real condition data. Make a confident offer. Buyer closes on grounded numbers.Day 5 to 21

Close More Vacant Property Deals

Get interior photos from any vacant property, even when the owner is out of state. SellerSubmit works on any phone, no app download required.

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