Most brokers default to fresh leads and pay a premium. Some specialise in aged inventory and quietly close at higher margins. Neither approach is wrong. The question is which fits your operation.
Defining the terms
Fresh: Submitted within 24 to 72 hours. Borrower remembers the form. Intent at peak.
Aged: Submitted seven days to several months ago. Intent has decayed but may not have disappeared.
Anything in between behaves more like aged than fresh once you cross the one-week mark.
Why fresh dominates the conversation
Fresh leads close at materially higher rates. For a single-broker shop with limited follow-up capacity, fresh is almost always the right answer.
The math: a fresh exclusive DSCR lead at $100 closing at 12 to 18 percent produces cost per closed loan of $560 to $830. The same broker buying aged at $25 closing at 2 to 4 percent produces $625 to $1,250 per closed loan. Fresh wins on a per-loan basis even while losing on per-lead price.
When aged actually wins
Operation built specifically for aged. Brokers with three to five callers running structured callback cadences can work aged inventory at volumes single brokers can't touch. Aged at $5 to $25 per lead, properly worked, can produce closed loans at $400 to $700 cost per acquisition.
Off-season niche where fresh supply thins. In specific state markets during specific months, fresh DSCR supply dries up. The brokers who succeed build aged programs to bridge those windows.
Refinance-specific outreach. Aged purchase leads convert poorly. Aged refinance leads convert surprisingly well, particularly DSCR rate-and-term refi candidates who didn't pull the trigger when rates spiked.
Cash flow constraint. A broker who can't afford $5,000/month on fresh but can afford $1,200 on aged plus 15 weekly hours of follow-up is making the rational choice.
Where aged quietly destroys pipelines
Treating aged like fresh in the CRM. Aged needs a different cadence: longer, more education-heavy, more patience for second and third calls.
Not pricing the inventory as aged. Some marketplaces sell aged for $30 to $50 when it should be $5 to $15. The inventory isn't bad; the price is wrong.
Skipping verification. Aged has higher rates of disconnected phones and borrowers who already closed elsewhere. A quick verification step at the top of the funnel is non-optional.
How to evaluate aged before buying
- What was the original lead source? Form-fill on a real property listing site beats generic mortgage form-fill
- What was the original quoted DSCR target or loan amount?
- How recent is the most recent verification step?
- Is the lead still being shopped elsewhere?
- What's the duplicate-sale clause in the vendor contract?
The marketplaces that score well on these are the same ones that score well on fresh-inventory diligence.
A practical hybrid
The brokers running both tend to do it this way:
- 70 to 80 percent of spend on fresh, exclusive, recent inventory through reliable marketplaces. Leedwallet is one example where lead specs are published before purchase
- 20 to 30 percent on aged refinance inventory specifically, worked through a dedicated cadence
- Strict separation in the CRM so the cadences don't bleed
This produces closed loan volume from fresh and cost-base optimisation from aged.
What's happening in 2026
The aged market is healthier than it was three years ago because the dominant fresh marketplaces have improved their data quality, which means their aged castoff is also better. Trade outlets like HousingWire cover broader non-QM lead market dynamics worth keeping current on.
For a broker building new: start with fresh. Master the cadence, hit your first 50 closed DSCR loans, then evaluate whether adding aged adds margin or complexity. Most should leave aged alone until they've stabilised fresh.
Editorial note: figures and benchmarks referenced in this article are estimates synthesised from industry observations, broker reports, and publicly available trade reporting. They are intended to illustrate market dynamics and should not be cited as primary research without independent verification.



