Sell Your Mortgage Note in the Inland Empire
The Inland Empire is one of California's highest-volume seller-financed note markets. From Riverside and Temecula to San Bernardino, Ontario, and Victorville — our team can review your note and tell you exactly what it's worth. No pressure, no obligation. Call 954-466-7111 or request a free review below.
Inland Empire, California
Inland Empire Sell Mortgage Notes — Seller-Financed & Owner-Financed Notes — What You Need to Know
The Inland Empire — Riverside County and San Bernardino County — is one of California's highest-volume seller-financed note markets. Because home prices here are more affordable than the coast, owner financing is far more common throughout Riverside, Temecula, Palm Springs, Corona, Murrieta, San Bernardino, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Victorville, and Fontana. The region also has a large investor market centered around Victorville and Apple Valley, retirement community notes near Palm Springs, and many notes originally carried by first-generation homeowners who financed the sale themselves. California ranks 3rd in the nation with over 7,000 seller-financed notes annually, and the Inland Empire accounts for a meaningful share of that volume. California requires a Seller Financing Disclosure Statement (Cal. Civ. Code §2956) for all seller-financed transactions involving 1–4 residential units. Note holders ready to sell should gather your mortgage or deed of trust (depending on your state) before contacting our team for a review.
How to Sell Your Inland Empire Mortgage Note in 4 Steps
Gather Your Documents
Promissory Note, your mortgage or deed of trust (depending on your state), and the closing statement from the original sale. Call 954-466-7111 if you need help locating them.
Request a Free Review
Submit your note details below for a free, no-obligation review. Click HERE to Request a FREE Note Review
Review Your Offer
Compare the purchase price and structure — full purchase, partial sale, or split buyout. No pressure to decide immediately.
Close & Get Paid
We handle underwriting, title check, and closing costs. Funds are wired directly to your bank account in 3–5 weeks when all documents are received and title is clear.
We Buy Mortgage Notes Throughout Riverside & San Bernardino Counties
Sell Your Mortgage Note in Riverside County
Riverside, Temecula, Palm Springs, Corona, and Murrieta generate a steady flow of seller-financed and owner-financed notes. Riverside County's affordability compared to coastal California makes owner financing far more common here.
Sell Your Mortgage Note in San Bernardino County
San Bernardino, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Victorville, and Fontana form one of the region's most active note markets, including a large investor presence around Victorville and Apple Valley.
Palm Springs & Retirement Community Notes
The Palm Springs area holds a significant number of retirement community notes, many carried by longtime residents who financed the sale themselves as they downsized or relocated.
Los Angeles Note Holders — See Our Dedicated Page
If your note is secured by property in Los Angeles County rather than the Inland Empire, visit our Los Angeles mortgage note page for market details specific to LA.
Don't see your area? We buy notes throughout all of California. Call 954-466-7111 or submit your note details below.
Request a FREE Note ReviewFree — No Obligation
Ready to Find Out What Your Note Is Worth?
Our team reviews your note and responds within one business day — no fees, no pressure, no obligation.
What Note Buyers Are Actually Evaluating
When our team reviews your note, here is what we are looking at — and how each factor affects your offer:
The creditworthiness of the borrower making payments on your note. A stronger credit score signals lower default risk and directly improves your offer. Even a rough credit range — strong, fair, or weak — helps us evaluate the note before a full review.
The larger the original down payment, the more skin in the game the borrower had from day one. A 10%+ down payment is a strong signal of borrower commitment and significantly reduces default risk — making your note more attractive to note buyers.
The remaining loan balance divided by the current property value. Lower LTV means more equity in the property — the single biggest pricing factor. Inland Empire appreciation over the past decade often produces favorable LTV ratios.
How many consecutive on-time payments the borrower has made. 12+ months of clean payment history significantly improves your offer.
First position notes are far easier to sell than second position notes. A second lien means another lender has priority claim on the property — that adds risk and typically reduces the offer significantly.
Higher interest rates on your note generally mean a better yield — and therefore a better offer — for the note buyer.
Single-family residential notes in desirable markets command better pricing than rural land or commercial notes. Growing Inland Empire markets like Riverside, Ontario, and Rancho Cucamonga are favorable.
Deed of trust states with faster non-judicial foreclosure timelines are generally more favorable for note buyers — and that can translate into a slightly better offer for you.
How long ago the note was created. Very new notes with under 6 months of payment history are harder to price — but once seasoning builds, age alone is rarely a deciding factor.
Whether the property is owner-occupied, tenant-occupied, or vacant. Owner-occupied is the preferred scenario, but tenant-occupied notes are still purchasable. Vacant properties carry the most risk.
The price the property sold for when the note was created. Helps verify the transaction was arm's length and the original LTV was reasonable — useful context but rarely changes the offer on its own.
Note balances are typically $100,000 and above, though smaller notes are still reviewed. Very small balances can be harder to sell because transaction costs consume more of the yield.
Whether the note is fully amortizing, interest-only, or has a balloon payment. Standard amortizing notes are the easiest to price. Balloon, interest-only, and all-inclusive trust deed (AITD/wraparound) structures are purchasable but require additional analysis.
Want to know exactly what documents we need? See our full Note Documents Checklist for a step-by-step breakdown of everything to gather before your review. For more on how note pricing works, visit our Moxxie blog.
Seller-Financed Notes Go by Many Names in the Inland Empire
Whether you call it a seller financed note, an owner financed note, or a private mortgage note — it's the same instrument and we buy them all. Inland Empire note holders also hold deeds of trust, all-inclusive trust deeds (AITDs/wraparounds), and land contracts. We buy all types.
Owner-Financed Mortgage Note
Same as a seller-financed note — the property seller acts as the bank, accepting monthly payments directly. We buy owner-financed notes throughout the Inland Empire and all of California.
All-Inclusive Trust Deed (AITD / Wraparound)
A wraparound financing structure used in some Inland Empire transactions, where the seller-financed note "wraps" around an existing underlying loan. We review and purchase AITDs regularly.
We Buy Deeds of Trust & Land Contracts
Sell your deed of trust or land contract for a lump sum. We buy all types of seller-financed instruments in the Inland Empire — deeds of trust, all-inclusive trust deeds, private mortgage notes, and land installment contracts.
Why Inland Empire Note Holders Choose Moxxie Asset Group
Selling a mortgage note is a one-time decision for most note holders. Our team is experienced with California deed of trust notes — including the high-volume Inland Empire market — and focused on giving you an honest, no-pressure review so you can make the best decision for your situation.
We Know Inland Empire Notes
Our team understands the local market, the deed of trust structure used in this state, and what makes an Inland Empire note trade at full value. We review Riverside and San Bernardino County notes regularly and can give you an honest, informed assessment — not a lowball offer.
Honest, No-Pressure Process
Our team reviews your note and responds within one business day. We walk you through exactly how we arrived at our offer — no mystery pricing, no bait-and-switch, no pressure. If a full sale isn't right for you, we'll tell you. A partial note purchase may be a better fit.
Free Review — No Fees, Ever
There are no upfront fees, no application costs, and no obligation attached to your review. We cover our costs at closing — only if you decide to sell. Call 954-466-7111 or request your free review below.
Request a FREE Note ReviewCalifornia Mortgage Note Law — What Inland Empire Note Holders Need to Know
California Note Law Summary
California uses deed of trust instruments (not mortgages) and a non-judicial trustee sale foreclosure process — typically ~120 days under Civil Code §2924. California's one-action rule (CCP §726) requires lenders to pursue the security (the property) before any other remedy, and strong anti-deficiency protections apply to purchase-money notes (CCP §580b). The Seller Financing Disclosure Statement (Cal. Civ. Code §2956) is required for all seller-financed 1–4 unit residential transactions. Inland Empire note assignments are recorded with the applicable county recorder — Riverside County or San Bernardino County.
Documents Required to Transfer Your Note
- Original promissory note (wet-ink)
- Recorded Deed of Trust assignment
- Allonge or endorsement of the note
- Settlement statement / HUD-1 from original closing
- Payment history records
- Title insurance policy
This information is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Source: California Statutes.
Inland Empire Mortgage Note Holder FAQ
Can I sell my seller-financed note in Riverside or San Bernardino County?
Yes. The Inland Empire — Riverside County and San Bernardino County — is one of California's highest-volume seller-financed note markets. More affordable pricing than the coast means owner financing is far more common here, from Riverside and Temecula to San Bernardino, Ontario, and Victorville. Our team reviews Inland Empire notes at no cost. California uses deed of trust instruments — transferring your note requires an endorsed promissory note and a recorded Assignment of Deed of Trust.
Are Inland Empire investment property notes eligible?
Yes. The Inland Empire has a large investor market, particularly in and around Victorville and Apple Valley, and we regularly review seller-financed notes on investment and rental properties. Retirement community notes around the Palm Springs area are also common. Whether the property is owner-occupied or tenant-occupied, our team can review your note and provide an honest, no-obligation assessment.
What documents do I need to sell my Inland Empire mortgage note?
To get started, gather your mortgage or deed of trust (depending on your state) — California uses deeds of trust — along with the original promissory note, your closing statement or HUD-1, and payment history. A title insurance policy is helpful but not required to begin your review. Our team can tell you what your Inland Empire note is worth with just the basics. See our full checklist at /what-documents-do-i-need-to-sell-my-mortgage-note.
Real Feedback From Real People
“I highly recommend Dawn for her exceptional expertise in seller financed notes. She provided invaluable guidance, clarifying the process and offering insights into structuring deals for maximum return. Her assistance was clear, concise, and instrumental in structuring successful deals.”
“I was pleasantly surprised that you were willing to give me advice as a newer investor from an objective position trying to help me move forward. Free advice, no expectations, and a kind demeanor. You were knowledgeable, patient, and definitely have an abundance mindset!”
“I had a very informative conversation with Dawn that will be extremely helpful in my journey as a real estate agent focusing on seller financing. Dawn is super knowledgeable in structuring seller notes so they can sell at top dollar. I highly recommend connecting with her.”
Find Out What Your Inland Empire Note Is Worth
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Prefer to talk? Call us at 954-466-7111
No pressure or obligation offer · We Buy Notes Nationwide · Sell all or part of your note · Response usually within 1–3 business days