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Updated about 10 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Jason J.
  • Los Angeles, CA
1
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14
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Does buying a Rental property significantly effect your ability to buy a Residential property down the line?

Jason J.
  • Los Angeles, CA
Posted

I want to get more into real estate investing (looking into buying my first MFR soon), but I'm also concerned about how this will effect my purchasing power down the line.

Okay, i know that's a pretty general statement, so I'll post a more specific hypothetical scenario:

Lets I'm 29 y/o and make 100k/yr right now in Los Angeles. 

I buy an MFR for 500k (purely as investment, no interest in living in it), and things go smoothly with renting it out and soon enough I'm making a little bit of money on the property.

5 years down the line, I get married, have to move to Boston for work (or some other city far away), and I'm ready to buy my first real Residential home to live in. Now I'm looking to buy a 1-million dollar home.

How much will the 400K that I borrowed for the MFR effect my ability to buy my new residential in Boston... 5 years from now? Let's assume I'm now 34, making 125k/yr, and the MFR is paying for itself.

a) Will I only be able to buy a small house since I already have a 400K loan?
b) Financially speaking, what are some things I need to think about?
c) Am I no longer qualified for the FHA (assuming I never lived in my rental)?

(Sorry if this is an amateur question, I just want to know what my limitations might be down the line if I end up buying an investment before my residential). 

Most Popular Reply

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1,022
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Brian P.
  • Wholesaler
  • Salt Lake City, UT
401
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1,022
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Brian P.
  • Wholesaler
  • Salt Lake City, UT
Replied

Jason

Two things, I never ever had a problem with a banker saying to me you have these cash flowing properties in good areas and that might cause a problem and yes I know the banking industry has produced many, many idiots the last few decades but the only thing that started to show up for me during the pretend banker period was the number of loans that you had, no matter how good your asset sheet was. 

I ran into an idiot lender that if they looked at my holdings they would have found if you spread the loans out the average loan was for 40% of the value of the property and I was asking for a 70% LTV, in a desirable area for the new loan. I happened to be friends with one of the co-owners of the bank and gave him a call and I quickly got a return call from the underwriter telling me he had pulled strings and got my loan arranged. I told him thank you for using your influence and getting that done. He wasn't bright enough to add 2 and 2 and ask why he just got his *** chewed out. I really do miss the days when you could just deal directly with one of the officers of the local branch. Of course they still had jerks then too but you had a decent shot at going up one level and getting what you wanted.

The second thing is where the properties are located. Are they in Beverly Hills, or Compton.  I would rather go to a banker and show 3 properties in BH then 15 in Compton.

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