New Hampshire: No Wholesaling-Specific Law
State: New Hampshire | Status: No wholesaling-specific statute as of July 7, 2026 | Bottom line: Wholesale here the normal way. The contract is yours to assign. Cross into unlicensed agent territory and you have a problem, stay out of it and you do not.
What This Means
There is no New Hampshire statute that singles out wholesalers. No special disclosures, no state registration, no seller cancellation window, no restriction on assigning a purchase contract. General contract law applies, and it says a contract is assignable unless its own terms say otherwise.
So the standard sequence is fully available: sign a purchase agreement with an assignment clause, find your end buyer, assign your position, collect the fee at closing.
The rule that does apply, in New Hampshire and everywhere else, is that brokering real estate without a license is illegal. Practically:
- Market your contract position, not the house. "I have an assignable contract on a 3-bed in Manchester" is selling something you own. Listing the property itself as if you were the seller or their agent is not.
- Only work deals where you are a party to the contract. Introducing someone else's buyer to someone else's seller for a fee is licensed activity.
- Want to advertise properties directly? Get licensed. That closes the exposure completely.
Watch Out For
- Unlicensed brokerage is the single risk that exists here today. Keep your ads about the contract, and keep proof of your equitable interest (your signed purchase agreement) organized in case anyone ever asks.
- Our source reports found no New Hampshire wholesaling bill of any kind. That said, New England neighbors and half the country are actively debating this, so silence now is not a guarantee for next session.
- Check back. We update this page when anything is filed in Concord.
This is analysis, not legal advice. Confirm anything you rely on with a New Hampshire real estate attorney.