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Updated about 2 years ago on . Most recent reply
![Saba Motakef's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/2649278/1694956373-avatar-sabam5.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/cover=128x128&v=2)
1% rule—how much flexibility is allowed?
I am bit of a beginner located in Southern California and was looking at rental properties in the Orange County area. I am having a hard time finding properties that satisfy the 1% rule (whereby monthly rent should be >/= 1% of purchase price).
Most decent properties are at least $500-600,000, and these properties are unlikely to rent for more than $3K/month in this area. Many resources have suggested using the 1% rule to analyze rental properties, but most properties are closer to 0.5-0.75% in this area. Any thoughts on the 1% rule in this type of market? Is this a hard and fast rule or is some flexibility allowed in different markets? In this situation, would it be better to place a larger down payment to ensure that my mortgage payment is low enough to ensure that I am cash flow positive?
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- Rental Property Investor
- Hanover Twp, PA
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@Saba Motakef, the 1% rule isn't for analyzing deals. Its for screening/filtering.
If you look at 100 listings, you can't physically go look at 100 listings today. So, you want to filter them down to the ones that are likely to cash-flow. So, if you only look at the ones that meet the 1% rule you might cut that number to 15 deals and then you can look deeper into those.
If a deal meets the 1% rule there is a fair chance it will generate positive cash-flow. At least a small amount.
In more expensive markets, sometimes people aren't investing for cash-flow. They are investing for market appreciation, mortgage pay down, and since they might have negative cash-flow, a loss they can harvest for their taxes.