# How Buying From Diamond Works — The Complete Investor Process, End to End

> The complete investor buy process at Diamond — free portal, in-deal calculators, submitting an offer, single-closing assignment, and a 1–4 week close.

**Author:** [Michael Luthanen](https://diamondacquisitions.biz/team/michael-luthanen) — Director of Sales
**Published:** 2026-06-16
**Category:** For investors
**Canonical:** https://diamondacquisitions.biz/insights/how-buying-from-diamond-works

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The question I get most from investors before they sign up isn't about price. It's some version of *"okay, but how does this actually work — and where's the catch?"* Fair question. The off-market space is full of operators who promise deal flow and deliver a renegotiation at hour 89, and buyers have learned to read every "free" as a setup for a fee somewhere downstream.

So this is the whole process, start to finish, with the catch addressed head-on (there's a spread — I'll explain exactly how it works). I run sales at Diamond and I've been involved in over a thousand DFW transactions. The walkthrough below is the same one I'd give a buyer sitting across the desk from me.

## What off-market and assignment deal flow actually is

A retail house hits the MLS, gets shown fifty times, and sells to whoever wins the bidding war. An *off-market* deal never touches the MLS. Diamond sources properties directly — sellers in situations where speed and certainty matter more than squeezing the last dollar out of a 60-day listing — and locks them up under contract.

Once a property is under contract, Diamond doesn't buy it and resell it to move it to an investor. We *assign* the purchase contract. You step into our position as the buyer and close directly with the seller. I'll cover the mechanics — and why the single-closing version matters — below. For now: the deal flow is properties already under contract, priced for an investor, that you'd never find searching Zillow.

Across the platform that's roughly **8 to 12 new deals a week, sourced from five Texas metros**, with over **1,000 properties brought under contract** to date. That's the top of the funnel you're getting access to.

## Getting access — the free portal, and the honest catch

Step one is requesting access to the portal. It's free. Specifically:

- No subscription or membership fee
- No monthly minimum or quota
- No exclusivity clause locking you to Diamond
- No hidden charges to view deals or use the tools

Investors are conditioned to distrust "free," so let me be precise about how Diamond gets paid, because there *is* an answer and it isn't a buyer fee.

Diamond has a property under contract with the seller at one price. It assigns that contract to you at your offer price. **The difference between those two numbers — the spread — is Diamond's compensation, and it's settled at the title company at closing.** It's a line on the settlement statement, inside regulated escrow, not a side check you write. Your purchase price is the number you agreed to and the number that funds. There's no buyer-side fee stacked on top.

This is the same economic model a wholesaler uses. I won't pretend otherwise. What's different is everything around it — the volume of vetted deal flow, the underwriting tools built into each deal, and a transaction coordinator whose job is to get the file to the closing table. I cover that distinction in more depth in the breakdown of [how Diamond differs from a typical wholesaler](/compare/diamond-vs-wholesaler), because the model is identical but the reliability is not.

And to clear up the most common gating question: **you do not need to be an accredited investor.** Accreditation applies to securities — funds, syndications, SEC-regulated offerings. Buying a house is a real-estate transaction. There's no net-worth test to get in the door. One thing to keep separate: buying the property itself isn't a securities transaction, but if you're pooling other people's money — passive partners or fractional interests in an LLC — to fund the purchase, *that* structure is its own question. Confirm it with a Texas attorney. It doesn't change anything on the Diamond side; it's about how you raise your capital.

## How deals are presented — and the tools built into every one

When you open a deal in the portal, you're not looking at a teaser with the address blurred out. Each deal page carries the property details, the photos, the location, the condition notes, and — this is the part investors react to — **the analysis tools pre-populated with that specific deal's numbers.**

| Tool | What it does | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Flip calculator | After-repair value, rehab budget, holding and selling costs, against the purchase price | Free, pre-filled per deal |
| Rental calculator | Rent, expenses, cash flow, and return on the same property | Free, pre-filled per deal |
| Rehab calculator | Scope and budget the renovation line by line | Free, pre-filled per deal |
| Vetted contractor list | Contractors who've done work on these properties | Free |
| Vetted lender list | Hard-money, DSCR, and conventional lenders | Free |
| Transaction coordinator | A real human who manages your file to close | Included |

The calculators matter because the friction in evaluating an off-market deal is usually data entry — pulling numbers, plugging them into a spreadsheet, reconciling the rehab estimate. Here the deal's numbers are already in the model when you open it. You adjust the assumptions you disagree with (your rehab number, your ARV, your rate) and read the result. If you want to dig into reading the same deal as a flip versus a hold, I wrote a full breakdown on [fix-and-flip versus buy-and-hold strategy in Texas](/insights/fix-and-flip-vs-buy-and-hold-texas).

The vetted lender list is worth flagging for newer buyers: it includes hard-money, DSCR, and conventional options, so financing your purchase doesn't have to be a separate scramble after you've found the deal.

## Making an offer — inside the portal

When a deal pencils, you submit your offer **inside the portal**. The offer captures:

- **Amount** — your purchase price
- **Close date** — when you can realistically perform
- **Financing** — cash, hard money, DSCR, conventional
- **Notes** — anything Diamond should know to evaluate it

Then Diamond responds, in the portal, **usually within four business hours.** That speed is deliberate. Off-market deals move, and a buyer who waits two days for a response on every offer loses deals to buyers who don't. The four-hour target keeps the back-and-forth tight enough that you can actually compete.

A note on the offer itself: the close date and financing aren't throwaway fields. They're terms Diamond weighs alongside the amount. An all-cash offer at a slightly lower number with a one-week close can beat a financed offer at a higher number on a four-week timeline, because certainty and speed have value to the seller. Submit terms you can perform on.

## Single-closing assignment and the Texas title company

Here's the structural piece that separates a clean assignment from a sketchy one.

Diamond has the property under contract. There are two ways to get it to you:

1. **Double close.** Diamond buys the property from the seller, then sells it to you — two separate closings, often the same day. Two sets of title and closing fees. Two transfers on the chain of title. It's a legitimate structure that plenty of operators use, but it costs more and adds a same-day transfer a later appraiser or lender can ask about.
2. **Single-closing assignment.** Diamond assigns its purchase contract to you. **You close directly with the seller** through a Texas-licensed title company. The deed transfers seller-to-you. One closing. One set of fees.

Diamond chose the single-closing assignment. **No double closings.** That choice means, for you:

- **One set of fees** — you're not paying title and closing costs on two transactions.
- **Clean title** — the property changes hands once, seller to you. There's no same-day flip on the chain of title for an appraiser, a lender, or a future buyer to question.
- **A licensed, regulated escrow** — a Texas-licensed title company runs the closing and holds earnest money. Diamond's spread is disbursed there, on the settlement statement, in the open.

This is the same trust question every off-market buyer should ask, and it's the same answer I give sellers in the breakdown of [what a cash buyer actually is in Texas](/insights/what-is-a-cash-buyer-for-houses-texas): a legitimate operator closes through a reputable, established title company and doesn't hide the structure. If anyone pushes you toward a no-name title company or a structure they won't explain, walk.

Through the whole closing, a **real transaction coordinator** — a person, not a status email — manages the inspection window, the lender deadlines, and the title documents. On a one-to-four-week timeline, somebody has to be chasing the appraisal and confirming the title commitment, and that's the coordinator's job.

## The realistic timeline — one to four weeks

Closings typically run **one to four weeks** from accepted offer. What sets your spot in that range is mostly financing:

| Buyer type | Typical close | Paced by |
|---|---|---|
| All cash | ~1–2 weeks | Title work clearing |
| Hard money | ~2–3 weeks | Lender appraisal + draw setup |
| DSCR / conventional | ~3–4 weeks | Appraisal + underwriting |

These are typical ranges, not promises — a title issue, a probate file, or a lender hiccup can move them. The point is that this is a fast, defined process, not the 60-to-110-day slog of a retail purchase. You pick the close date when you submit your offer; the coordinator's job is to make that date real.

## What's expected of you

The process is light on you, but not zero. Two things matter:

**Proof of funds.** Whether it's a bank statement showing liquid cash, a hard-money or DSCR pre-approval, or a line-of-credit letter, be ready to show the money exists and is committed. This is standard on any cash or near-cash transaction, and a serious buyer has it ready. (It's the same test I tell sellers to apply to *their* buyers — proof of funds is a five-minute ask that separates real buyers from hopefuls.)

**Closing on time.** When you submit a close date, you're committing to it. The coordinator will keep your file on track, but the buyer has to perform — funds wired, lender conditions cleared, documents signed. If something threatens the date, the move is to flag it to the coordinator early, while it's still fixable. Repeatedly tying up deals you can't close burns your standing fast; in off-market, reputation is the whole game.

If you want the wider context on who Diamond's deal flow is built for and how to request access, the [investor overview page](/investors) lays it out, and you can [browse the live deals on the marketplace](https://marketplace.diamondacquisitions.biz) directly. You can also read more about [my background and the rest of the team](/team/michael-luthanen) if you want to know who you're transacting with — in YMYL real estate, knowing the operator matters.

## The bottom line

The catch everyone braces for — a buyer-side fee buried in the fine print — isn't there. Diamond makes its money on the spread between its contract price and your purchase price, disbursed at the title company in the open. You access the portal free, evaluate deals with calculators pre-filled with each property's numbers, submit your offer in-portal with a roughly four-hour response, and close directly with the seller through a Texas-licensed title company on a single-closing assignment — one set of fees, clean title, no double close — typically in one to four weeks.

What's expected of you is straightforward: have proof of funds, submit terms you can perform on, and close on the date you committed to. Do that, and the deal flow keeps coming. The structure is honest, the title is clean, and the only "catch" is the one that's true of any direct-buyer relationship — you have to actually close.