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Updated over 1 year ago, 06/26/2023

User Stats

4
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1
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Ronnie Wainaina
1
Votes |
4
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Too broke to start investing?

Ronnie Wainaina
Posted

I'm confused about the best way to get started in real estate, I'm currently living with my parents and my original plan was to buy a multi-family house and house hack it, I wanted to put in 20% down payment looking for a house that costs at most 250,000. The problem is that It seems like it will take a long time to get enough money to even put in a competitive offer currently have around 10k in emergency fund and about 20k just set aside. 

Also, the criteria for the type of house will make it challenging as well with the price and looking for specifically multifamily. The money that I set aside was ment to pay my student loans off that have been deferred should I just be patient and try to save up more or just use a different strategy.

User Stats

254
Posts
173
Votes
Ran Iarovich
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington
173
Votes |
254
Posts
Ran Iarovich
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington
Replied

Being in a rush always puts you in a tough spot. I would say to give yourself a little bit of time and relax to be able to save up more. You are young and you need to realize that real estate is a long-term strategy. If you put yourself in a crunch and start the game off at a bad start you will be at a far worse position than if you saved for 1 - 3 years and invested then. Understand the dynamics of real estate and the expenses, get your dream team around you of trustful lenders, agents, and mentors, and work for a little bit more to be able to get in when you are more comfortable investing your cash. 

User Stats

304
Posts
184
Votes
Josh Bowser
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Atlanta, Ga
184
Votes |
304
Posts
Josh Bowser
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Atlanta, Ga
Replied

Hey Ronnie - there is no shame in building at the speed of cash on hand. My guess is that you are already living for pretty cheap which is the whole idea of house hacking! 

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User Stats

583
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355
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Dan Sheeks
Pro Member
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Denver, CO
355
Votes |
583
Posts
Dan Sheeks
Pro Member
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Denver, CO
Replied

Hey @Ronnie Wainaina. I host a bi-weekly Zoom meeting for new/beginning investors who are between 15 and 25. It's a networking group, and we often have expert guests join our meetings. If you're interested, lmk.

Dan

User Stats

4
Posts
1
Votes
Ronnie Wainaina
1
Votes |
4
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Ronnie Wainaina
Replied

Hey Dan, I'm around that age range I would be interested

User Stats

4
Posts
1
Votes
Ronnie Wainaina
1
Votes |
4
Posts
Ronnie Wainaina
Replied

Thanks Ran and Josh for the advice I'll just stay patient I'm saving aroudn 70% of my income, so I'm in a decent situation right now.

User Stats

27,491
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40,430
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Nathan Gesner
Property Manager
Agent
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Cody, WY
40,430
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27,491
Posts
Nathan Gesner
Property Manager
Agent
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Cody, WY
ModeratorReplied
Quote from @Ronnie Wainaina:

It's reality. All the "experts" say you don't need any money, but that's just not true. Stop listening to the young people that started investing three years ago and instead look for the grey-haired investors with 30+ years under their belt. They'll tell you to increase earnings, reduce expenses, save up, sacrifice, take it slow.

  • Nathan Gesner
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The DIY Landlord
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User Stats

22
Posts
2
Votes
Replied
Quote from @Dan Sheeks:

Hey @Ronnie Wainaina. I host a bi-weekly Zoom meeting for new/beginning investors who are between 15 and 25. It's a networking group, and we often have expert guests join our meetings. If you're interested, lmk.

Dan

Hi Dan,
I’d like to get my son who is 19 into investing. Can you share your info with me so I can pass it along to him?
thanks
rob 

User Stats

166
Posts
115
Votes
Blake Novotney
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Wilmington, NC
115
Votes |
166
Posts
Blake Novotney
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Wilmington, NC
Replied

Why not use FHA or similar with 3.5-5% down to purchase a house hack? That would allow you to get started much sooner.

User Stats

55
Posts
29
Votes
Alexander Murillo
  • Real Estate Agent
  • St George, UT
29
Votes |
55
Posts
Alexander Murillo
  • Real Estate Agent
  • St George, UT
Replied

@Ronnie Wainaina what city do you plan on living in? Is $250k a realistic price for either a small multifamily or a single family home with 3+ bedrooms (the more the better)? An FHA loan with 3.5% down would be less than $9k down. There are also conventional loans for first time buyers at 3% down. Get seller to pay for closing costs. Saving 20% down will take forever, and is unnecessary. You already have some decent savings in case of emergency.

I'm not saying to rush or feel pressured. Learn to make an educated, numbers based analysis and decision. But depending on your home market, investing can be very realistic for you. In 5+ years you'll only have wished you started sooner.

User Stats

4
Posts
1
Votes
Ronnie Wainaina
1
Votes |
4
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Ronnie Wainaina
Replied

Hey Alex,

It's more challenging to find a small multifamily that is that price in a decent neighborhood in baltimore, it's below the average price. That's also another reason I'm rethinking the duplex idea, single family are easier at that price but still challenging because It's below the average price. It's still my preference to house hack a duplex but I'm open to house hacking a single family house.

Ronnie

User Stats

174
Posts
93
Votes
Tim Bee
  • Investor
  • California
93
Votes |
174
Posts
Tim Bee
  • Investor
  • California
Replied

Eliminate bills you don't need. ie netflix, Prime etc.  Cut down on bills you have to pay like lowering your phone plan to no more than $40/mo.  Raise your credit card limits as high as you can incase you have to tap them for a no interest hard money loan.  Delete all but two major credit cards.  Work overtime as much as you can.  Find out if any friends and family will give or loan you money.  Look at homes for sale and rents in the area every day so you know what an average deal looks like.   Find a realtor who already does what you want to do and have them shoot you deals.   Once you've done all that then, and ONLY then are you ready to buy.  When you do buy don't settle for anything less than the 1% rule.  Your first deal could bankrupt you if you don't follow that rule.  Your first deal could also make you independently wealthy if you can swing it.  You really have to want it.  But trust me I have 16 single family houses now, all paid off and the money is sweet.

User Stats

1,224
Posts
1,079
Votes
Joe Norman
  • Investor, Realtor
  • Baltimore, MD
1,079
Votes |
1,224
Posts
Joe Norman
  • Investor, Realtor
  • Baltimore, MD
Replied
Quote from @Ronnie Wainaina:

Hey Alex,

It's more challenging to find a small multifamily that is that price in a decent neighborhood in baltimore, it's below the average price. That's also another reason I'm rethinking the duplex idea, single family are easier at that price but still challenging because It's below the average price. It's still my preference to house hack a duplex but I'm open to house hacking a single family house.

Ronnie


 You are spot on with this. 2-4 unit buildings in Baltimore tend to be homes that were converted into cheap rental properties as opposed to purpose built, singly deeded multi-unit properties. Because of this they tend to be in areas with lower property values (and, therefore, neighborhoods with the challenges that contribute to lower property values). Are you looking only in Baltimore City or also in the surrounding counties?


Feel free to shoot me a PM if you want to discuss your goals in detail!

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User Stats

322
Posts
530
Votes
Carlos Valencia
  • Lender
  • 92703
530
Votes |
322
Posts
Carlos Valencia
  • Lender
  • 92703
Replied

Hi Ronnie, 

It sounds like you might want to maybe start with something a little bit more your budget or save more money. You can also get a co-borrower to help you qualify for more and bring in some money for the down payment. If thats not an option then consider maybe starting with a single family home and house hack it. This way if you manage to rent out the rooms in the single family home where you pay very little to nothing at all you can continue saving and still have an investment property. Once you reached your goal you can simply lease out the whole single family home and buy another investment property. Hope this helps.

@Albert Bui @Matthew Kwan

User Stats

6
Posts
0
Votes
Anthony D.
  • Edgewood, MD
0
Votes |
6
Posts
Anthony D.
  • Edgewood, MD
Replied

I am very new to the real estate world and am intimidated by the competitive market as well. However, I know that location is always a major factor. Therefore, I have changed my mindset. If you can't swim with the big fish in one pond, find another pond where you can become the big fish and learn to grow there.