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New Missouri Law - Wholesale Disclosure Required - SB 973 What Investors Must Know - MAREI
Important Notice: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Nothing here creates an attorney-client relationship. Real estate law is fact-specific. Consult a qualified Missouri real estate attorney before modifying your business practices in response to this legislation.

In the final hours of Missouri's 2026 legislative session, Senate Bill 973 cleared both chambers and is now on its way to the Governor's desk. For real estate wholesalers operating in Missouri, this is the most significant change to transaction law in years โ€” and the clock is already running.

For the full legislative history of how SB 973 developed from introduction through final passage, see our ongoing bill tracking post.

What Just Passed

SB 973 is a sweeping real estate transaction bill that touches dozens of sections of Missouri law. For investors, three provisions matter most:

  • Mandatory disclosure requirements for real estate wholesalers โ€” including a 14-day waiting period before any contract can be signed
  • Consumer protections for sale leaseback transactions โ€” including a hard 30-day waiting period before title can transfer
  • Reforms to delinquent property tax procedures โ€” including changes to redemption rights on vacant residential properties

When Does It Take Effect?

As of this writing, SB 973 has passed both the Missouri House and Senate in its truly agreed to and finally passed form. It now awaits the Governor's signature. Once signed, the law should take effect on August 28th under Missouri's standard effective date rules.

โš  Awaiting Governor's Signature SB 973 passed both chambers on the final day of the 2026 Missouri legislative session. Governor Kehoe has until July 15, 2026 to sign, veto, or allow the bill to become law without signature. If signed or allowed to become law, the effective date is August 28, 2026 โ€” giving Missouri wholesalers and investors roughly three months to get compliant. We will update this box as soon as the Governor acts. Follow the MAREI blog or sign up for our email list below to be notified the moment this becomes law.

Why Was This Law Introduced?

The wholesaling industry in Missouri โ€” like in most states โ€” has seen a significant increase in activity over the last decade, along with a corresponding increase in consumer complaints. The concerns that drove this legislation centered on a few recurring patterns:

  • Sellers โ€” often elderly, financially distressed, or unfamiliar with real estate transactions โ€” entering contracts with wholesalers without fully understanding that the person they are dealing with is not buying the property themselves, but rather intends to profit by selling the contract to someone else
  • Purchase prices significantly below market value, agreed to by sellers who did not know they had other options
  • Contracts assigned to third parties without the seller's knowledge or consent
  • Affidavits of equitable interest filed against properties to cloud title when deals fell through
  • Predatory or unconscionable contract clauses buried in purchase agreements
  • Properties being marketed publicly โ€” on social media and elsewhere โ€” by wholesalers who do not yet own or control the property, in potential violation of real estate license law

It is worth noting that some larger wholesale-model companies were reportedly engaged in the legislative process around this bill, traveling to Jefferson City to testify on behalf of this bill.


๐Ÿ“‹ Full Client Advisory Brief

We worked with Claude AI to produce a detailed legal-style advisory brief on SB 973 โ€” covering the wholesaler disclosure requirements, sale leaseback provisions, and delinquent tax changes in plain language with defined terms, step-by-step compliance workflows, and investor-specific checklists.

Download the Client Advisory Brief (Word Doc)

What This Means for Missouri Wholesalers

The Core Requirement: A Mandatory 14-Day Disclosure Window

Under SB 973, anyone who meets the definition of a wholesaler must now provide a written disclosure to the seller at least 14 calendar days before any purchase contract is executed. The disclosure must be:

  • A separate, standalone document โ€” not embedded in or attached to the contract
  • Printed in boldface type at a minimum 12-point font size
  • Signed and dated by both parties at the time of delivery

The disclosure must tell the seller, in plain terms: who the wholesaler is, that the wholesaler represents themselves (not the seller), that the contract can be assigned to a third party without the seller's consent, that the wholesaler intends to profit from the assignment, and that the agreed price may be below market value.

โš  The Old Model No Longer Works The prior practice of sitting at a kitchen table, presenting an offer, and leaving with a signed contract the same visit is no longer legally compliant on residential 1โ€“4 unit properties in Missouri. This law mandates a two-step process with a hard 14-day gap in between.

The Practical Workflow Going Forward

  1. Visit 1: Meet the seller, discuss the property, present the standalone disclosure form. Both parties sign and date it. Leave a copy. Document the date.
  2. Wait: A minimum of 14 full calendar days must pass. Do not rush this. The date is your legal protection.
  3. Visit 2: Return no earlier than Day 15. Execute the purchase contract. It is now legally binding.

Who Is โ€” and Is Not โ€” a Wholesaler Under This Law

The law defines a wholesaler as any person or entity that, for compensation or the expectation of compensation, enters into a purchase contract for residential real property and then either assigns the contract to another buyer or novates the contract to another buyer without ever holding legal title.

Two quick definitions that matter here:

Assignment of Contract The wholesaler transfers their contractual rights under an existing purchase contract to a third-party buyer. The original contract stays intact โ€” the wholesaler steps out and the new buyer steps in. The wholesaler may retain some residual liability depending on the contract language.
Novation The original contract is completely replaced with a new agreement, substituting the incoming buyer as if they were the original party from the beginning. The wholesaler is fully released from all obligations. Novation requires agreement from all three parties: seller, wholesaler, and incoming buyer.

Both structures are explicitly covered by this law. A wholesaler cannot avoid the disclosure requirement by choosing one method over the other.

Who Is Exempt

The following are explicitly excluded from the definition of wholesaler:

  • Assignments to a family member within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity
  • Assignments to a parent company, subsidiary, affiliate, or entity under common control โ€” meaning if you assign a contract to an LLC you own, a company that owns you, or a sister company under the same ownership umbrella, the disclosure requirements do not apply to that transaction
๐Ÿ’ก Investor Note โ€” Assigning to Your Own Entities If you are assigning a contract to one of your own LLCs or to a company within your ownership structure, you are not a wholesaler under this law for that transaction. Make sure the ownership relationship is genuine and documentable.

What Happens If You Don't Comply

Before closing: If the wholesaler failed to provide the required disclosure, the seller can cancel the contract at any time before the close of escrow โ€” penalty-free, no deadline, no permission needed from the wholesaler. And here is the part that should get every wholesaler's attention โ€” upon cancellation, any earnest money the wholesaler deposited goes to the seller, not back to the wholesaler. The escrow or closing agent is directed to disburse those funds to the seller within 30 days of the cancellation.

After closing: The seller can pursue a civil claim under the Missouri Merchandising Practices Act โ€” one of Missouri's broadest consumer protection statutes โ€” for actual damages, punitive damages in willful cases, and attorney fees. The Missouri Attorney General can also independently pursue enforcement.

โš  The Earnest Money Risk โ€” If the Seller Cancels In a normal transaction, earnest money protects the seller from a buyer who walks. Under SB 973 it works the other way โ€” if you skipped the disclosure and the seller cancels before closing, your earnest money deposit goes to the seller, not back to you. The escrow agent is directed to pay it out within 30 days of cancellation. You lose the deposit and the deal.

Does This Apply to Double Closes?

This is the question generating the most conversation in the Missouri investor community right now, and it is a fair one.

Note: We are not attorneys. What follows is how investors and practitioners are reading the statute, not legal advice. Confirm with your attorney before relying on any interpretation.

In a true double close, the investor actually takes title to the property โ€” even if only briefly โ€” before selling to the end buyer. That is two separate, sequential purchase transactions. The investor holds legal title, however momentarily, between the two closings.

The wholesaler definition in SB 973 specifically covers someone who assigns or novates a contract without holding legal title. A double close investor does hold legal title, which on a plain reading of the statute appears to take that transaction structure outside the definition of wholesaler entirely.

It is also notable that some larger companies operating on a double close model were reportedly engaged in the legislative process around this bill. Whether or not that influenced the final language, the practical result appears to be that the double close structure โ€” where the investor actually buys and then sells โ€” lands differently under this law than a straight assignment does.

๐Ÿ’ก The Bottom Line on Double Closes Based on the plain language of the statute, a true double close where the investor takes title โ€” even briefly โ€” appears to fall outside the wholesaler definition and the disclosure requirements. However, this interpretation has not been tested in a Missouri court. If the double close is your model, talk to your attorney about documenting the transaction structure clearly.

Sale Leaseback Transactions: The 30-Day Rule

For investors who purchase a seller's home as part of a transaction where the seller simultaneously agrees to lease the property back and remain in it, SB 973 creates a separate and significant set of requirements.

The core rules:

  • A written disclosure must be provided to the seller at least 14 days before signing the sale leaseback agreement
  • Both parties must sign the disclosure at the same time they sign the agreement
  • The seller must receive a copy of the signed disclosure within 5 days of execution
  • No title can transfer for at least 30 days after the agreement is signed โ€” no exceptions, no waivers, no contracting around it

The 30-day title transfer delay has a practical downstream effect: because the buyer cannot take legal ownership until Day 31 at the earliest, the leaseback tenancy itself cannot legally commence until then either. The buyer is not a landlord until they own the property.

Penalties for violation are steep: up to $10,000 per violation in civil penalties, plus the seller can sue for actual damages plus an additional $10,000 in automatic statutory damages on top of those, plus attorney fees.

โš  The Real Timeline โ€” 44 Days Minimum, Not 30 Read together, the two mandatory waiting periods in SB 973 create a combined minimum timeline that most investors have not yet calculated. The disclosure must be delivered at least 14 days before the sale leaseback agreement is signed. The 30-day title transfer prohibition then begins on the day the agreement is signed. That means from first disclosure to earliest possible closing is a mandatory minimum of 44 calendar days โ€” with no exceptions and no ability to contract around either window. Investors structuring sale leaseback deals need to build this full 44-day runway into every transaction from the first conversation with the seller.

Delinquent Tax Sales: A Change That Matters

Buried in the tax sale provisions of SB 973 is one change that tax sale investors should pay close attention to. Under the new law, a property owner loses their right of redemption entirely โ€” with no waiting period before the sheriff's sale โ€” if two conditions are both met:

  • The property is assessed as residential, and
  • The property has been vacant for at least six months prior to the foreclosure judgment

Previously, owners typically retained a redemption period after judgment. This change removes that window on qualifying vacant residential properties and allows a sale under execution to proceed immediately once the judgment is final. For investors pursuing vacant residential properties through the tax sale process, this is a meaningful efficiency gain.


What the Industry Is Saying

The reaction inside Missouri's real estate investor community has been pointed and the debate reflects some genuinely unresolved questions about what this law actually accomplishes. Three themes keep surfacing in the conversation โ€” and each one is worth sitting with.

The Legitimate Operator Problem

๐Ÿค” The Question Being Asked Does the 14-day mandatory waiting period unfairly burden the investor who fully intends to close โ€” who found the lead, negotiated the deal, and has a qualified buyer network ready โ€” while doing nothing to stop the bad actors this law was supposedly designed to address? The friction lands entirely on the assignment model.

If you are a cash buyer purchasing for your own account with no intent to assign or novate the contract to another party, our reading of this law is that id does not apply to you. You are not a wholesaler under the statute and no disclosure is required. The 14-day waiting period, the standalone disclosure form, and the earnest money forfeiture risk are all irrelevant to your transaction.

Turf War or Consumer Protection?

๐Ÿค” The Question Being Asked Some in the Missouri investor community are asking whether this law is less about protecting sellers and more about competitive positioning between wholesale models โ€” particularly given that certain larger companies operating on a double close model were reportedly engaged in the legislative process. The practical effect of the 14-day window is that the traditional same-day assignment model faces new friction, while the double close model โ€” on a plain reading of the law โ€” does not. Whether that outcome was intentional is a fair question.

Did the Law Miss the Real Problems?

๐Ÿค” The Question Being Asked The conduct that most serious investors agree actually harms consumers โ€” affidavits of equitable interest filed to cloud title on deals that never close, unconscionable contract clauses buried where sellers won't find them, and properties marketed publicly before the investor owns or controls them โ€” may not be meaningfully addressed by a disclosure form and a 14-day waiting period. Whether SB 973 addresses those real problems, or simply adds compliance friction around the edges, is a legitimate debate.

We are not taking a position on any of these questions โ€” but they deserve to be asked, and the Missouri investor community is already asking them. Add your voice to the conversation below.


What You Need to Do โ€” At a Glance

Requirement What It Means for You
14-Day Disclosure Window Deliver a standalone boldface disclosure to the seller at least 14 days before any contract is signed. Both parties sign it at delivery. No more same-visit contracts on residential 1โ€“4 unit deals.
Separate Document The disclosure cannot be part of the purchase contract or an addendum to it. It must be its own standalone document.
Earnest Money Risk If you skip the disclosure and the seller cancels before closing, your earnest money goes to the seller โ€” not back to you.
Common Control Exemption Assigning to your own LLC or affiliated entity under common ownership is exempt. Document the relationship.
Double Close Appears to fall outside the wholesaler definition based on plain language โ€” you hold title. Confirm with your attorney.
Sale Leaseback The real minimum timeline is 44 calendar days โ€” 14 days mandatory disclosure period before signing the agreement, then a hard 30-day waiting period before title can transfer. No exceptions, no waivers, no contracting around either window. $10,000 statutory damages per violation plus actual damages and attorney fees.
Commercial Property These rules apply to residential 1โ€“4 unit properties only. Commercial deals are not covered.

๐Ÿ“‹ Download the Full Client Advisory Brief

MAREI worked with Claude AI to produce a detailed plain-language advisory document covering all three major provisions of SB 973 โ€” with defined terms, compliance checklists, and investor-specific guidance. Download it free below.

Download the Client Advisory Brief
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Kim tucker

Kansas City-based real estate investor and the Director of the Mid-America Association of Real Estate Investors (MAREI), a trade association serving real estate investors in the Kansas City metro area and across Missouri. MAREI provides education, networking, and legislative advocacy for the Missouri investor community.

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