Deal Finding

How to Find Off-Market Properties: 12 Proven Strategies

PropertyCEO Team · Mar 8, 2026 · 20 min read

The best real estate deals never hit the MLS. While most investors fight over the same publicly listed properties — bidding them up and squeezing margins thin — savvy investors build systems to find off-market deals where there's less competition, more room to negotiate, and significantly better returns.

Off-market properties (also called pocket listings, quiet listings, or pre-market deals) are properties that are for sale but not publicly advertised on the MLS, Zillow, Realtor.com, or any other listing platform. Finding them takes more effort than scrolling Zillow, but the payoff is worth it — off-market deals typically sell for 10-30% below market value.

In this guide, we'll cover 12 proven strategies that professional investors use to find off-market properties consistently. Whether you're looking for your first rental or scaling a portfolio, these methods will give you a competitive edge that most investors simply don't have.

Why Off-Market Deals Are Better

Before diving into the strategies, let's understand why off-market properties are so valuable:

FactorMLS ListingsOff-Market Deals
CompetitionHigh — multiple offers commonLow — often you're the only buyer
PriceMarket value or above10-30% below market typical
Negotiation leverageLow (seller has options)High (seller has fewer options)
Time pressureDays to decideWeeks to negotiate
Due diligenceRushedThorough
Creative termsRare (seller expects conventional)Common (seller financing, sub-to)

💰 Real numbers: A 2024 study by Auction.com found that off-market single-family properties sold at an average 14% discount to after-repair value compared to 6% for MLS listings. That's $28K more equity on a $200K property.

Strategy #1: Driving for Dollars

Driving for dollars is one of the oldest and most effective off-market strategies. The concept is simple: physically drive through target neighborhoods and identify properties that show signs of distress or neglect — then contact the owners directly.

What to Look For

How to Execute

  1. Choose your target neighborhoods. Focus on areas where you want to invest — near schools, transit, employers, or in gentrifying corridors.
  2. Use an app to track properties. Apps like DealMachine, PropStream, or even Google Maps can help you log addresses, take photos, and look up owner info on the spot.
  3. Drive systematically. Cover every street in your target area. Do this on weekday mornings when vacancy is most obvious.
  4. Skip trace the owners. Use services like BatchSkipTracing, TLO, or PropStream to find the owner's phone number and mailing address.
  5. Make contact. Call, text, or send a handwritten letter. Many investors use all three in sequence.

📊 Success rate: Experienced "dollar drivers" typically find 1 deal per 200-400 properties logged. At an average assignment fee of $10K or equity spread of $30K+, the ROI on time is excellent.

Strategy #2: Direct Mail Campaigns

Direct mail is a numbers game with predictable results. Send targeted letters or postcards to property owners who match your buying criteria. The key is consistency — most deals come from follow-up mailings, not the first touch.

Best Mailing Lists to Target

Direct Mail Best Practices

Sample Letter Approach

Keep it simple and personal. Something like: "Hi [Name], I noticed you own the property at [Address]. I'm a local investor and I'd love to make you a fair cash offer — no repairs needed, no agent commissions, and we close on your timeline. If you're interested, call me at [Number]." Authenticity beats flashy marketing every time.

Strategy #3: Networking with Real Estate Agents

The best real estate agents have pocket listings — properties they know are available but haven't been listed on the MLS yet. Building relationships with agents is one of the fastest ways to access off-market inventory.

How to Build Agent Relationships

💡 Pro tip: Target agents who specialize in expired listings. These are properties that failed to sell during their listing period — the owners are still motivated but haven't relisted. An agent who works this niche is a goldmine for off-market leads.

Strategy #4: Wholesalers

Wholesalers find distressed properties, put them under contract, and then sell (assign) the contract to an investor like you for a fee. Working with good wholesalers is like having a deal-finding team you only pay on success.

Finding Reliable Wholesalers

Evaluating Wholesale Deals

Strategy #5: Probate and Estate Sales

When someone passes away and owns property, that property often goes through probate court. The heirs frequently want to sell quickly — they don't want to manage, repair, or pay taxes on a property they inherited. These are some of the most motivated sellers you'll find.

How to Find Probate Properties

  1. County courthouse: Probate filings are public record. Visit or search online for your county's probate court records.
  2. Probate attorneys: Build relationships with attorneys who handle estates. They know which properties are being sold.
  3. Online databases: Services like USLeadList or AllTheLEads.com provide pre-compiled probate lead lists.
  4. Obituaries: Cross-reference obituaries with property records to identify properties that may enter probate.

Approaching Probate Leads

Sensitivity is critical. These leads involve grief and loss. Your approach should be helpful, not predatory:

Strategy #6: Pre-Foreclosures

Pre-foreclosure properties are owned by people who have fallen behind on mortgage payments but haven't been foreclosed on yet. These sellers are under time pressure and are often willing to sell below market value to avoid foreclosure on their credit.

Finding Pre-Foreclosure Leads

Working Pre-Foreclosure Deals

Strategy #7: Tax Lien and Tax Deed Sales

When property owners don't pay their property taxes, the county can place a lien on the property and eventually sell either the lien (tax lien sale) or the property itself (tax deed sale). Both present opportunities to acquire properties at steep discounts.

Tax Lien Sales

You buy the right to collect the overdue taxes plus interest. If the owner doesn't pay you back within the redemption period (typically 1-3 years), you can potentially foreclose and take ownership.

Tax Deed Sales

The county sells the property itself to recover unpaid taxes. These are often sold at auction, and prices start at the outstanding tax amount — sometimes just a few thousand dollars for properties worth $50K+.

⚠️ Warning: Tax sales are complex and vary significantly by state and county. Some states have lengthy redemption periods, and properties may have additional liens, occupants, or environmental issues. Do thorough due diligence and consult a local attorney before your first tax sale purchase.

Strategy #8: Pocket Listings and Coming-Soon Listings

Pocket listings are properties that agents have agreed to sell but haven't put on the MLS yet (or never will). "Coming soon" listings are a softer version — they'll hit the MLS eventually, but you can make an offer before they do.

How to Access Pocket Listings

Strategy #9: Social Media Prospecting

Social media has become a legitimate lead generation channel for off-market properties. Here's how to use each platform effectively:

Facebook

Instagram

LinkedIn

Strategy #10: Bandit Signs

Those "We Buy Houses" signs you see on street corners? They work. Bandit signs are cheap, effective, and generate inbound leads from motivated sellers who need to sell fast.

Best Practices

⚠️ Legal note: Bandit signs are technically illegal in many municipalities (they violate sign ordinances). Fines range from $25-500 per sign. Many investors accept this as a cost of doing business, but know the rules in your area. Some investors use temporary signs on private property (with permission) or car magnets as legal alternatives.

Strategy #11: Door Knocking

Door knocking is old-school and uncomfortable — which is exactly why it works. Most investors won't do it, so the competition is essentially zero. If you're willing to get out there and have conversations, you'll find deals nobody else knows about.

When to Door Knock

Door Knocking Tips

Strategy #12: Building Relationships with Property Managers

This might be the most underrated off-market strategy of all. Property managers know exactly which landlords are burned out, which properties are losing money, and which owners are ready to sell. They're sitting on a goldmine of off-market intelligence.

Why Property Managers Are Goldmine Contacts

How to Approach Property Managers

Building a Systematic Off-Market Pipeline

Finding one off-market deal is luck. Finding them consistently is a system. Here's how to build one:

The Off-Market Deal Machine

  1. Lead generation (choose 3-4 strategies): Don't try all 12 at once. Pick the ones that match your market, budget, and personality. Master those before adding more.
  2. CRM tracking: Use a CRM (Podio, REI BlackBook, or even a spreadsheet) to track every lead, touchpoint, and status.
  3. Follow-up system: 80% of deals come from follow-up, not first contact. Build a sequence: Day 1 (call), Day 3 (text), Day 7 (mail), Day 21 (call again), Day 45 (mail again), and continue monthly for 12 months.
  4. Disposition: When a lead becomes a deal, have your process ready: make offer → get under contract → due diligence → close (or assign to another investor).

Recommended Starting Stacks

Budget LevelBest StrategiesMonthly Cost
Bootstrapping ($0-100/mo)Driving for dollars, door knocking, networking, social media$0-100 (gas + phone)
Growing ($100-500/mo)Direct mail + driving for dollars + agent relationships$300-500
Scaling ($500-2000/mo)Direct mail + bandit signs + online marketing + wholesaler network$1,000-2,000
Professional ($2000+/mo)All channels + virtual assistants for lead management$2,000+

Analyzing Off-Market Deals

Finding an off-market deal is only half the battle. You need to analyze it quickly and accurately to determine if it's worth pursuing. Here's a quick-analysis framework:

The 5-Minute Analysis

  1. ARV (After-Repair Value): What's the property worth in good condition? Pull 3-5 comparable sales from the last 6 months.
  2. Repair estimate: What will it cost to get the property to ARV condition? Use $15-25/sqft for cosmetic, $30-50/sqft for moderate, $50-75/sqft for heavy renovation.
  3. Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO): For flips: MAO = ARV × 70% - Repairs. For rentals: Work backwards from target cash-on-cash return.
  4. Rent estimate: If holding as a rental, what's the market rent? Check Zillow Rent, Rentometer, or local listings.
  5. Decision: Does the asking price (or your offer price) leave enough margin? If yes, proceed. If no, counter or walk away.

🎯 Rule of thumb: For off-market flips, target a minimum profit of $25K per deal. For rentals, target a minimum 12% cash-on-cash return. If the deal doesn't hit these thresholds, keep looking. There are always more deals.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Tools for Finding Off-Market Properties

ToolBest ForCost
PropStreamAll-in-one: lists, skip tracing, comps$99/mo
DealMachineDriving for dollars + skip tracing$49/mo
BatchLeadsSkip tracing + direct mail$79/mo
REISiftList stacking and lead management$49/mo
PodioCRM for investor pipelineFree-$24/mo
CallRailCall tracking for marketing$45/mo
ListSourceTargeted mailing listsPay per list
County websitesPublic records, tax, probateFree

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to find an off-market deal?

With consistent effort, most investors find their first off-market deal within 60-90 days. Some get lucky in the first week; others take 6 months. The key variables are: how many marketing channels you're using, how consistent you are with follow-up, and how competitive your market is.

How much should I budget for off-market marketing?

Start with $300-500/month for direct mail and marketing materials. As you close deals, reinvest 10% of profits back into marketing. One deal can fund an entire year of marketing.

Are off-market deals always cheaper?

Not always. Some off-market sellers have unrealistic expectations. The advantage of off-market is less competition, which gives you more room to negotiate — but you still need to run your numbers and walk away from bad deals.

Can I find off-market deals in competitive markets?

Absolutely. In fact, competitive markets are where off-market strategies shine brightest. When MLS properties have 20 offers, the investor with an off-market pipeline has a massive advantage. Focus on direct mail, driving for dollars, and agent relationships in hot markets.

Is cold calling sellers legal?

Yes, with restrictions. The federal Do Not Call (DNC) registry prohibits calling numbers on the list for commercial purposes. However, many states have exemptions for real estate investors contacting property owners directly. Consult a compliance attorney and always scrub your lists against the DNC registry before calling.

Build Your Deal-Finding Machine

Off-market deals are the foundation of every successful real estate portfolio. Our Growth Playbook shows you how to build a complete deal pipeline from scratch.

Get the Growth Playbook →

Bottom Line

Finding off-market properties is a skill that separates average investors from exceptional ones. While everyone else fights over MLS listings, you'll be building relationships, running systems, and closing deals that nobody else even knows about.

Start with these steps today:

  1. Pick 2-3 strategies from this list that match your budget and personality
  2. Set up a CRM (even a spreadsheet) to track leads and follow-ups
  3. Commit to consistency — at least 5 hours per week on deal finding for 90 days
  4. Follow up relentlessly — your first deal will likely come from the 3rd or 4th contact
  5. Run the numbers on every deal — off-market doesn't mean automatically profitable

The hardest part is starting. The second hardest part is staying consistent. But once your off-market pipeline is running, you'll wonder why you ever bothered competing on the MLS.