Comparison

Mortgage Note Capital vs NoteBuyer.com

NoteBuyer.com — operated by Investment Capital Corporation out of Boston — is a long-running direct buyer that markets a no-broker-fee purchase of real estate notes and mortgages. Here's an honest, side-by-side look for a note holder deciding where to sell.

FeatureMortgage Note CapitalNoteBuyer.com
What they buyPerforming & non-performing private mortgage notes, owner-financed notes, land contracts, promissory notesReal estate notes and mortgages; focus on performing paper
Non-performing notesYes — we buy non-performing notesPrimarily performing notes
Direct buyer or brokerDirect buyerDirect buyer; markets no broker fees
Reported funding speedTypically 14–30 daysMarkets roughly a 14-day timeline
HeadquartersNationwide; deep Texas & Southeast focusBoston, Massachusetts; buys nationwide
Transparency toolsFree note value calculator and clear how-we-value pageQuote-by-request

Two direct buyers, no middleman either way

Both Mortgage Note Capital and NoteBuyer.com are direct note buyers, which is the first thing any seller should confirm. When you sell to a direct buyer, you're dealing with the party that actually holds the note afterward — not a broker who locks up your note, shops it to a third party, and pockets the spread. NoteBuyer.com is explicit about this: it markets no broker fees, and it's been buying real estate notes and mortgages for years out of Boston, advertising a roughly 14-day funding timeline. That's a credible, established option, and a note holder with a clean performing first lien should feel comfortable requesting a quote.

Where NoteBuyer.com stands out

NoteBuyer.com's strengths are its longevity and its no-fee positioning. For a seller whose primary worry is getting nickel-and-dimed by a broker, that clarity is reassuring. Its Northeast base also means it's comfortable with paper across the country, and a fast advertised timeline appeals to anyone who needs cash quickly. If your note is a straightforward, performing, first-lien residential mortgage, NoteBuyer.com is a reasonable buyer to include in your comparison set.

Where Mortgage Note Capital fits

We're a direct buyer built around the individual note holder — the person who sold a property on owner financing and now wants a lump sum. Three things distinguish how we work:

  1. We buy across the spectrum. Performing or non-performing, first lien or (case-by-case) second, clean payer or a note that needs a workout. If your borrower has fallen behind, we'll still value the note on the property and the recovery path rather than turning you away.
  2. Transparency before the conversation. Our free note value calculator gives you an estimated offer range before you ever pick up the phone, and our how-we-value page explains the math. You don't have to request a quote blind.
  3. Texas and Southeast depth. Most owner-financed notes in the country are created in Texas and the Southeast, where fast non-judicial foreclosure supports strong collateral values. That regional focus helps us price owner-financed paper competitively.

How to decide

  • Clean performing first lien and you like the no-fee positioning? Get NoteBuyer.com's quote and compare it.
  • Note that's non-performing, a second lien, a land contract, or otherwise outside a narrow box? That's exactly the kind of note we're built to buy.

Either way, the single smartest move is to get more than one quote. Because we're a direct buyer and we lead with transparency, we actively encourage you to compare us against NoteBuyer.com or anyone else.

What both buyers will ask for

The diligence is similar wherever you sell, so prepare once and you're ready for any buyer. Expect to provide the original promissory note, the recorded mortgage or deed of trust, the original closing statement, a payment history (ideally from a licensed servicer), proof of insurance, and current title. Both buyers will price the note on the present value of its remaining payments, then weigh the interest rate, seasoning, borrower equity (loan-to-value), lien position, the property condition, and the state's foreclosure timeline. A clean, complete file speeds either path and usually improves your offer.

Reading two offers fairly

When NoteBuyer.com's number and ours land on your desk, look past the headline figure. Ask each buyer: Are you the actual buyer or will you re-sell my note? Is the offer firm or subject to repricing after diligence? Who pays closing costs? How fast can you fund? A no-broker-fee promise is good, but the structure of the offer matters just as much as the absence of a fee. Run both numbers against the range from our note value calculator so you can judge them on the same footing — that independent benchmark is the fairest way to decide, and it's the kind of homework we always encourage before you sign anything.

The bottom line

NoteBuyer.com is a credible, established direct buyer with a clear no-broker-fee message — a fine choice for a clean performing first lien. Mortgage Note Capital competes on the same direct-buyer footing while adding a broader appetite (including non-performing and second-lien notes), upfront transparency tools, and deep Texas/Southeast pricing. Get a quote from both and compare.

Note: Competitor details are drawn from each company's public materials and may change. This comparison reflects our understanding and is offered for general information, not as an endorsement or a statement of any competitor's current terms. Verify specifics directly with each company.

Frequently asked questions

Does NoteBuyer.com charge broker fees?

NoteBuyer.com markets itself as a direct buyer with no broker fees, meaning it purchases your note for its own book rather than brokering it to a third party. Mortgage Note Capital is also a direct buyer, so you won't pay a broker spread to either.

Which buyer is better for a non-performing note?

NoteBuyer.com focuses primarily on performing paper. If your borrower has fallen behind, Mortgage Note Capital actively buys non-performing notes and values them on the property and the recovery path. Get quotes from both and compare against our note value calculator.