The short answer is, "whatever the market will bear". I once put a property under contract, found a tenant and assigned my contract for a $100,000 profit. Never took title.
For as much as you want it to. If there is enough room left for investor to make profit, than your fee should not concern them.
What you do is tell them to go drive by the property, come back and tell you if they want it and how much they're going to pay for it. Than you tell them how much they can have that property for.
From my own experience: some investors don't like hearing that you're going to make 50K on one wholesaling deal
The short answer is, "whatever the market will bear". I once put a property under contract, found a tenant and assigned my contract for a $100,000 profit. Never took title.
For as much as you want it to. If there is enough room left for investor to make profit, than your fee should not concern them.
What you do is tell them to go drive by the property, come back and tell you if they want it and how much they're going to pay for it. Than you tell them how much they can have that property for.
From my own experience: some investors don't like hearing that you're going to make 50K on one wholesaling deal