CASH VS SELLER FINANCE · RV PARK CALCULATOR SUITE
Use our free cash offer vs seller financing calculator to compare a lump-sum RV park cash offer against seller financing. Estimate your upfront proceeds, monthly payments, total payout, interest earned, and the break-even point where seller financing may pay more than cash.
$10.9B Industry Revenue
7–12% Cap Rate Range
16,200+ U.S. Parks
Direct buyer network
1,200+ Parks Acquired
When selling an RV park, the highest purchase price is not always the best offer. A cash sale may provide speed, certainty, and immediate liquidity. Seller financing may create a higher total payout over time, but it also keeps the seller tied to the buyer’s performance after closing.
This calculator provides an educational estimate only and is not a formal appraisal, broker opinion of value, or offer to purchase. Estimated values
are based solely on the figures you enter and may differ materially from actual market value. Investorade is a direct buyer. No information submitted through this calculator constitutes a binding offer or obligation by either party. Consult a licensed real estate professional or certified appraiser for a formal valuation.
Cash offers and seller-financing structures solve different seller problems.
A cash offer gives the seller immediate proceeds at closing. Once the transaction closes, the seller can move on without waiting for future payments, managing a note, monitoring the buyer, or taking collection risk.
Seller financing may increase the total payout through interest, but the seller receives payments over time and remains exposed to buyer performance risk.
The best choice depends on what matters most to the seller: certainty, speed, total payout, tax planning, monthly income, or risk reduction.
Cash Offer Formula
Net Cash Offer = Cash Offer Amount – Closing Costs – Mortgage Payoff
Seller Financing Total Payout Formula
Total Payout = Down Payment + Monthly Payments + Interest Earned + Balloon Payment
Example:
If you receive a $2,000,000 cash offer, your proceeds are available at closing after normal closing costs and debt payoff.
If you accept a $2,200,000 seller-financed sale with $400,000 down, 7% interest, and monthly payments over several years, your total payout may be higher over time. However, you receive less cash upfront and carry the risk that the buyer may miss payments or default before the note is fully paid.
A cash offer may be attractive when the seller wants a simple and timely transaction.
A cash sale may be especially useful for owners who are retiring, dealing with deferred maintenance, managing low occupancy, or trying to avoid a long sale process.
Seller financing may be attractive when the seller wants income over time and is comfortable carrying risk.
Seller financing may work best when the buyer is financially strong, the down payment is meaningful, the legal documents are well prepared, and the seller is comfortable with long-term repayment risk.
Seller financing can make a purchase price look stronger on paper. But sellers should compare the structure, not just the headline number.
A seller-financed offer may include a higher purchase price because the buyer is asking the seller to provide financing. In exchange, the seller accepts delayed payment and repayment risk.
A cash offer may be lower than a seller-financed price but provide more certainty, fewer moving parts, and a clean exit.
Each calculator digs deeper into one component of your valuation. Use them individually or together.
Break down every revenue source and operating expense line by line to compute your true net operating income — the single number that drives your valuation.
Enter your location type, utility infrastructure, occupancy, and maintenance level to determine the most defensible cap rate range for your specific market.
Calculate your park’s estimated value on a per-site basis and compare it against the $15,000–$40,000 industry benchmark range buyers use when evaluating deals.
Estimate your potential annual gross revenue by site count, average daily rate, occupancy rate, and stay-type mix — useful if your records are incomplete or informal.
Enter your deferred maintenance cost estimate and see exactly how much it reduces your property value through cap rate adjustment — and whether fixing it before selling makes financial sense.
Enter your estimated sale price and compare net proceeds after a 6–10% broker commission versus a direct no-commission sale — and see the dollar difference on your specific deal.
Compare a lump-sum cash offer against seller financing — monthly income, total payout over time, interest earned, and the break-even point where seller financing pays more than cash.
Seller financing means the seller allows the buyer to pay part of the purchase price over time. Instead of receiving the full amount at closing, the seller receives a down payment and future payments based on agreed loan terms.
A cash offer may be better if you want certainty, speed, and immediate proceeds. Seller financing may produce a higher total payout over time, but it also creates buyer default risk and delays full payment.
A seller may choose seller financing to earn interest, create monthly income, attract more buyers, or structure a higher total purchase price. However, the seller must be comfortable with repayment risk.
Risks include buyer default, late payments, legal costs, foreclosure, property decline, insurance issues, tax issues, and uncertainty around balloon payments. Sellers should get professional legal and financial advice before agreeing to seller financing.
The break-even point is the time when total payments received from seller financing exceed the amount you would have received from a cash offer. This depends on the down payment, interest rate, monthly payment, term, and balloon payment.