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Updated 2 months ago on . Most recent reply

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Jessica Medvec
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Is “cash only” really cash?

Jessica Medvec
Posted

Found a property I really like in but it’s a total reno and our agent is telling us the purchase is cash only. The property has 7 acres with a 3/2 main house and a second separate 2/1 house (which also needs renovation) with its own drive.  
I’d like to buy the place, renovate it, and then live in it for a few years as my primary while renting out the 2/1, and then ultimately selling or renting out the main house too. 
wondering what the best purchase strategy would be considering I don’t have the full purchase price in cash on hand? The ask is 300k.   
Can I use a hard money loan or some other financing to get a cash deal? Would that loan include the renovation costs based on the ARV?

We have an LLC that holds real estate but have run into issues refinancing through the LLC when family is renting or ultimately living in the property so I'm also not sure if this should go through the LLC or be a personal purchase?

Thanks!

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Bradley Buxton
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Nevada
556
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Bradley Buxton
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Nevada
Replied

@Jessica Medvec

Usually when a seller wants cash the property is not lendable. The condition is so bad the home is not worth the purchase price for collateral. Whether that is actually true can be debatable and the seller might not want to deal with complex lending situations. A "total reno" can mean it's all original and very outdated but livable or it can be an absolute disaster with foundation issues and sewer and water problems. Find out from the seller agent why they think it's cash only. 

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