Best Wholesale Real Estate Dispo Platforms 2026

Six platforms ranked, honestly. Pricing, business model, who each is best for, and where each genuinely wins.

Disclosure: this is the DispoBridge website. We rank ourselves #1 because we believe the math favors performance-fee over subscriptions for most wholesalers. For each competitor below, we name where they genuinely beat us. The decision framework after the rankings is the honest answer for your specific situation.

#1

DispoBridge that\'s us

Pricing: $0 upfront + assignment-fee split on close Model: Done-for-you disposition Best for: Wholesalers wanting performance-aligned dispo without monthly fees

Strengths

  • Zero upfront cost — no subscription, no listing fee
  • Done-for-you marketing + buyer matching (not self-serve)
  • 500+ verified cash buyers nationwide
  • 800+ US cities covered
  • No exclusivity — list elsewhere too

Weaknesses

  • Newer brand than InvestorLift / Connected Investors — less name recognition
  • Fee split rather than 100% to wholesaler
  • Not optimized for high-volume self-serve workflows
Pricing: $300-1,500+/mo subscription tiers Model: Self-serve marketplace Best for: High-volume wholesalers (5+ deals/mo) comfortable with self-serve

Strengths

  • Largest national buyer marketplace
  • Strong institutional-buyer relationships
  • Self-serve speed for experienced operators
  • Integrated tools and analytics

Weaknesses

  • Monthly subscription regardless of deals closed
  • You do the marketing and buyer outreach
  • High annual cost for low-volume wholesalers
Read full InvestorLift comparison →
Pricing: $50-100+/mo subscription tiers Model: REI social network + marketplace Best for: New wholesalers who value education + community alongside deals

Strengths

  • Lower subscription tier than InvestorLift
  • Strong educational content + community
  • PIN data for sourcing leads

Weaknesses

  • Marketplace listings compete with feeds, ads, and courses for attention
  • Less focused on pure disposition
  • Self-serve — wholesaler still does the marketing
Read full Connected Investors comparison →
Pricing: No subscription — they buy at a discount Model: Brokerage that buys deals from wholesalers Best for: Wholesalers in core markets who value certainty over maximum payout

Strengths

  • Guaranteed buyer if they accept the deal
  • Fast close — they decide quickly because they're buying
  • No marketing risk to the wholesaler

Weaknesses

  • They buy at a discount and capture the resale spread
  • Limited geographic footprint (select metros only)
  • Stricter deal-acceptance criteria
  • You assign the deal away rather than splitting a fee
Read full New Western comparison →
Pricing: $0 to list Model: Free self-serve marketplace Best for: Budget-conscious wholesalers with clean residential deals in major metros

Strengths

  • Free to submit — same upfront pricing as DispoBridge
  • No subscription required

Weaknesses

  • Smaller buyer pool than InvestorLift / Connected Investors
  • Self-serve listing — you do the marketing and buyer qualification
  • Limited deal-type coverage (primarily residential)
  • Geographic depth varies by market
Read full OfferMarket comparison →
#6

Sundae

Pricing: No fee to seller; investor side fees Model: Marketplace with managed seller acquisition Best for: Sellers (not traditional wholesalers) — Sundae is more focused on direct seller acquisition

Strengths

  • Strong consumer-facing brand for seller-side acquisition
  • Managed bidding process for end buyers

Weaknesses

  • Less suited for traditional wholesalers with deals already under contract
  • Geographic coverage limited compared to nationwide platforms
  • Different model — solves seller acquisition more than B2B disposition

Decision framework: which platform should you pick?

Match your scenario to the recommendation. None of these require exclusivity, so picking 2 is also fine.

Doing 1-3 deals/month
→ DispoBridge or OfferMarket. Subscription platforms cost more than the assignment fees you'd save.
Doing 5+ deals/month, want full self-serve
→ InvestorLift. The subscription pays back at volume, and self-serve is faster than coordination calls.
New wholesaler, still learning
→ Connected Investors for education + community. Move to performance-fee or direct platforms once you have a deal flow.
In a New Western core market with a deal that fits their profile
→ Get a New Western quote AND a DispoBridge quote. Compare the net to you. Often DispoBridge wins because you keep the spread.
Distressed property, niche deal type, or secondary market
→ DispoBridge. Our 500+ buyer network includes specialists in distressed, multi-family, land, probate, and pre-foreclosure profiles.
You want to list on multiple platforms simultaneously
→ Mix: DispoBridge + InvestorLift + Connected Investors. None require exclusivity. First buyer to close wins.

FAQ

Why is DispoBridge ranked #1?

Honest disclosure: this is the DispoBridge website, so we're biased. We rank ourselves #1 because for the most common wholesaler profile (1-4 deals/month) the performance-fee model nets more cash kept than subscription platforms. For high-volume operators, InvestorLift is genuinely a better fit and we say so. The decision framework section above is the honest answer for your specific situation.

How do I pick between performance-fee and subscription?

Run the math. If you're paying $500/mo for InvestorLift Pro ($6,000/year), you need to close enough additional deals through their buyer network — beyond what you'd close on a free or performance-fee platform — to make $6,000+ more net than the alternative. For low-volume wholesalers, the math rarely works. For high-volume, it usually does.

Are there other platforms missing from this list?

We covered the six most-asked-about. Other smaller or specialized platforms exist (PropStream is more sourcing than dispo; Real Estate Bees is more directory/lead gen; some local marketplaces serve specific metros). For most wholesalers, the six listed cover 95%+ of the practical comparison.

Can I use multiple platforms at the same time?

Yes. None of the major platforms require exclusivity. Many wholesalers post on 2-3 platforms simultaneously and let whichever buyer closes first win the deal. The downside is buyer-side conflicts (the same buyer may see your deal multiple times), so disclose your strategy if asked.

What about iBuyers (Opendoor, Offerpad) for wholesale dispo?

iBuyers are not wholesale-dispo platforms — they buy directly from homeowners. They're relevant if you're a homeowner-seller, not a wholesaler with a contract to assign. Our sister brand Oxbow Home Solutions competes with iBuyers for direct-from-seller acquisitions; DispoBridge is downstream of that.

Is this list updated?

This page reflects 2026 comparisons based on publicly available pricing and feature information. Subscription tiers change quarterly at most major platforms — verify current pricing on each platform's site before final decisions.

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