How to Price a Novation Deal to Trigger Multiple Offers

The key to a successful novation deal is pricing it in a way that triggers multiple offers, without undercutting yourself.

Austin Beverigde

Tennessee

, Goliath Teammate

Novation is becoming the go-to strategy for flippers and wholesalers looking to maximize profits without owning the property.

But here’s the catch: your pricing has to be perfect.

Price is too high, and buyers ignore you.

Price is too low, and you kill your upside.

The key to a successful novation deal is pricing it in a way that triggers multiple offers, without undercutting yourself.

This guide shows you exactly how to do that.

Quick Refresher: What Is a Novation Deal?

If you’re new to novations, here’s the quick version:

  • A novation lets you replace the original purchase agreement with a new one, between the seller and your end buyer.

  • You don’t need to double-close or assign anything.

  • The seller gets paid. The buyer gets the house. And you get paid from the spread.

Novations are perfect for retail buyers, FHA or VA loans, and properties that don’t need deep rehab. You market it like a listing, but without being a realtor.

Why Pricing Makes or Breaks a Novation

In a cash deal, you market to investors. They're used to seeing spreads. But in a novation?

You’re pricing to attract retail buyers who are shopping on Zillow, Redfin, and realtor.com.

They’re comparing your property to dozens of others, and your price is the first (and maybe only) reason they click.

So your goal is simple: create urgency by making your price look like a deal, without leaving money on the table.

The Novation Pricing Framework

Let’s break it down into a 3-step pricing process:

  1. Understand your buyer pool

  2. Benchmark the neighborhood

  3. Price to create urgency, not greed

Step 1: Understand Your End Buyer Pool

Your buyer isn’t an investor. It's a family. A couple. A first-time buyer.

So you have to price the home based on retail psychology, not wholesale math.

Ask yourself:

  • Who will buy this home? First-timers? Upsizers? Retirees?

  • What financing will they use? FHA? VA? Conventional?

  • What condition is “good enough”? Novation buyers want livable, not perfect.

Your price has to reflect the financing limits and expectations of your likely buyer.

Example:

If your buyer is likely using FHA financing, you need to stay under key loan limits for your county. Price $1 over, and your deal loses 70% of its buyer pool overnight.

Step 2: Benchmark the Neighborhood Like a Listing Agent

You’re not pulling comps like a flipper. You’re pulling comps like a realtor.

That means looking at:

  • Active listings: What are buyers seeing right now?

  • Pending listings: Where’s the market actually moving?

  • Sold listings: What closed in the last 90 days?

Use tools like:

Look for pricing clusters

Are most comparable homes priced at $324k–$329k? If so, pricing at $319k puts you on top of the stack without looking suspiciously underpriced.

If comps are scattered, anchor your price to the lowest pending property that’s in similar condition. That’s your competition.

Step 3: Price to Create Urgency (Without Looking Desperate)

Here’s the trick: You want to look fairly priced, not like a fire sale.

Retail buyers get spooked by low prices. They think:

  • “What’s wrong with it?”

  • “Why is it so much lower than others?”

So your goal is to price just below the active competition, while looking clean, turnkey, and mortgage-ready.

The 2% Rule of Thumb

If your comps cluster around $330k, try pricing at 2–3% below that, so $319k–$323k.

That gives you:

  • Multiple offers

  • Bidding war potential

  • FHA/VA buyer appeal

  • Room to negotiate up instead of down

How to Justify Your Price to the Seller

This is where a lot of novation deals fall apart. The seller says:

“You told me it was worth $330k… why are you listing it at $319k?”

Here’s how to position it:

Use the “Floor to Ceiling” Analogy

“Mr. Seller, pricing at $319k gives us a floor, not a ceiling. That price attracts the biggest buyer pool. From there, we let the market tell us what it’s really worth.”

Then back it up with:

  • Active comp screenshots

  • Days on market data

  • Loan eligibility price thresholds

Reassure the seller: you’re not lowering the value, you’re widening the funnel to bring in more eyes and better offers.

Pro Tips for Getting Multiple Offers

These little moves can turn a quiet listing into a bidding frenzy.

Use Price Psychology

  • $329,900 beats $330,000

  • $319,000 looks better than $321,750

  • Stay under major psychological thresholds ($325k, $300k, etc.)

List on a Thursday or Friday

Maximize weekend traffic and drive immediate showings. Buyers who visit the first weekend are more likely to offer quickly.

Run a “Best & Final” Window

If you get 3+ interested buyers in 48 hours, send a message:

“We have strong interest, please submit best and final offers by Monday at 5pm.”

This creates urgency without being aggressive.

Offer Incentives

Retail buyers love bonuses. Consider:

  • Closing cost credits

  • Home warranty coverage

  • Flexible move-in dates

These extras can justify a higher final offer, even if your list price was lean.

Avoid These Pricing Mistakes

Even one of these can kill your novation upside.

1. Using investor comps

If your price is based on distressed or off-market sales, you’ll undervalue the property and turn off retail buyers.

2. Pricing too high “just in case”

Hoping for a lucky buyer at $339k instead of $324k? You’ll likely get crickets, and lose momentum.

3. Ignoring loan limits

FHA, VA, and USDA have strict limits by county. Know them. Price around them. Or lose your whole buyer pool.

4. Skipping staging or photos

Retail buyers are emotional buyers. They click based on how it looks. Spend $250–$500 on professional photos or staging, it’s worth every penny.

When to Raise or Drop the Price (Fast)

Retail buyer activity gives you live feedback. Watch these signs:

Raise the price if:

  • You get 5+ showings/day for 3+ days

  • You get multiple offers above asking

  • Appraisals or agents suggest underpricing

Drop the price if:

  • No offers in 7 days

  • 20+ showings with no offer

  • Buyers say “It’s overpriced for the area”

Use this info to adjust fast, before the listing goes stale.

Sample Pricing Scenarios (Before & After)

Let’s look at two real-world examples.

Example 1: 3-Bed in Dallas, TX

  • Comps: $310k–$325k

  • Most listings: $319k

  • Strategy: Price at $314,900

  • Result: 9 showings in 3 days, 4 offers

  • Accepted: $326k with 10-day close

Example 2: 4-Bed in Tampa, FL

  • Comps: $379k–$399k

  • Tried $395k first: no offers

  • Dropped to $385k: offer at $388k

  • Final price: $388k with $5k in seller credits

What Happens If You Price Too Low?

Let’s say your comps support $339k but you price at $299k thinking it’ll drive a frenzy.

It might.

But here’s what often happens:

  • You get cash offers at asking

  • Retail buyers question the condition

  • Appraisers flag it as under market

If your price is too far below the cluster, buyers assume something’s wrong.

Instead, skim the bottom of the comp stack, don’t drop out of it.

You’re Playing the MLS Game Now

A novation isn’t a wholesale hustle. You’re in the retail market, where presentation and pricing are everything.

That means:

  • Think like a listing agent

  • Price like a retail strategist

  • Present like a marketing pro

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