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Updated over 2 years ago, 03/30/2022
Best NEXT STEP to property number two?
Hello all,
I've made some posts about this property before and have gotten some great feedback! However, the market here in Colorado is evolving so quickly and I want to make sure I make a good choice considering my options are expanding.
With that said, I bought my first ever property a year ago using 12k-ish I had saved up on a 3% down FHA loan. I currently owe 274k on the home, have about 3-5k in sweat equity materials installed (floors, new tile, paint etc.) and the property is currently valued at 340k without my upgrades taken into account. The same floor plan has been selling in my neighborhood for about 350-370k.
While I enjoy living here, by no means is it my dream house or even something I see myself staying in for longer than financially appropriate. I bought the house planning to eventually save up, buy another, and rent this out. Potentially even doing a re-fi to get some cashflow for another. However I don't have enough equity to re-fi as of yet and my mortgage is a bit high ($1,600 a month at 3.25% (and I believe it would only rent for $1750-ish)). Which leads me to my point and question.
Should I consider selling and taking the approximate 40k after closing cost and tax exchanging to avoid paying capital gains?
I can buy another property as primary residence FHA 5% down. Meaning about 20k down on a home worth 400k. This would leave me with a upgraded home and some cash in my pocket to get a head start on the next.
Open to all ideas and appreciate any and all feedback!
Quote from @Devin McGinley:
Hello all,
I've made some posts about this property before and have gotten some great feedback! However, the market here in Colorado is evolving so quickly and I want to make sure I make a good choice considering my options are expanding.
With that said, I bought my first ever property a year ago using 12k-ish I had saved up on a 3% down FHA loan. I currently owe 274k on the home, have about 3-5k in sweat equity materials installed (floors, new tile, paint etc.) and the property is currently valued at 340k without my upgrades taken into account. The same floor plan has been selling in my neighborhood for about 350-370k.
While I enjoy living here, by no means is it my dream house or even something I see myself staying in for longer than financially appropriate. I bought the house planning to eventually save up, buy another, and rent this out. Potentially even doing a re-fi to get some cashflow for another. However I don't have enough equity to re-fi as of yet and my mortgage is a bit high ($1,600 a month at 3.25% (and I believe it would only rent for $1750-ish)). Which leads me to my point and question.
Should I consider selling and taking the approximate 40k after closing cost and tax exchanging to avoid paying capital gains?
I can buy another property as primary residence FHA 5% down. Meaning about 20k down on a home worth 400k. This would leave me with a upgraded home and some cash in my pocket to get a head start on the next.
Open to all ideas and appreciate any and all feedback!
Probably not especially if you're going to just turn around and buy a more expensive property that doesn't make you able to rent it out. 40k doesn't do a whole lot for you anymore especially in Colorado. This is also your primary residence. I don't see much room for you to improve upon what you're already in. You're trading more equity for less equity and a higher interest rate and payment since prices and rates went up. And then you have to pay FHA fees and closing costs again. I'd also say avoid doing FHA again unless it gets you in to a property that makes money on day one...... that you can't afford with a conventional or commercial loan down payment amount.
Quote from @Rodney Sums:
@Devin McGinley I would agree that selling to access the 40k in equity that you have would not be your best move. One of the greatest benefits of owning real estate is the long term, fixed rate debt that you acquire with a property, especially as interest rates continue to rise, so holding on to your property and the debt tied to it would be best for you in the long run.
Have you considered getting a HELOC on your current property as a way to access the equity in your home? We have a lender that will do a 100% LTV HELOC which would give you access to all the equity in your home which you could then put towards your next home purchase. Let me know if you'd like more info or want to chat through some other options!