"I have no capital but I'm willing to work hard." · "I've heard about wholesaling but I don't know if it's legal." · "I don't know how to find motivated sellers."
Wholesaling is the fastest way to generate real estate income with almost no upfront capital. The catch: it's not as simple as the YouTube videos suggest. You need systems, proper contracts, a buyer's list, and a mentor who has closed wholesale deals in your market.
Real estate wholesaling works by finding discounted properties, putting them under contract, and assigning that contract to another investor for an assignment fee of $5,000–$25,000+. You never take ownership. A wholesaling mentorship teaches you how to find motivated sellers, calculate the Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO), use proper contracts and legal disclosures, and build a buyer's list of investors who close fast.
Most free wholesaling content covers the concept and skips the legal details. Florida has specific requirements around assignment disclosures, contract language, and the difference between assignment and double-close transactions. Getting this wrong can void a deal — or worse.
Our mentorship covers Florida-specific contract templates reviewed by real estate attorneys, the full legal framework for wholesale assignments, MAO calculation, and how to build a buyer's list of investors who actually close — not tire-kickers who waste your time.
Assignment disclosures, contract language, and deal structure all affect legality. Our mentorship includes attorney-reviewed Florida contract templates and covers the exact disclosure requirements for your deal type. Don't skip this part.
Six core skills — all taught with real Florida deal examples:
No single strategy fits everyone. Here's how the four main options compare in Florida right now:
From identifying your first motivated seller to cashing your first assignment fee:
In most situations, no. But Florida has specific disclosure requirements. Our mentorship covers the legal requirements in detail — including when a license is and isn't needed based on how you're structuring deals.
Assignment fees typically range from $3,000 to $25,000+ depending on the property value and spread between your contract price and ARV. Our Florida students regularly close $8,000–$15,000 deals.
MAO = (ARV × 70%) minus repair costs minus your desired assignment fee. This ensures the investor buying your contract can still profit. Our mentorship teaches accurate MAO calculation using real Florida comps.
Most mentored students close their first deal within 60–90 days. The key variables are how aggressively you work your lead pipeline and how fast you build your buyer's list.
Yes. Wholesaling is legal in Florida when done correctly — with proper contracts, required disclosures, and the right structure for your deal type. Our mentors cover exactly what this means in practice.
Book a free discovery call. Your mentor will assess your market, timeline, and goals — and tell you honestly whether wholesaling is the right first step for your situation.