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Updated over 7 years ago on . Most recent reply
![Dominic Foster's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/210337/1621433442-avatar-dominicfoster.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/cover=128x128&v=2)
Sell or continue to rent my Washington, DC condo?
Hey all - first time posting, but thought I'd seek advice on a condo that I own and rent out. This studio/junior one bedroom used to be the primary residence for my wife and me, but with a baby now in the mix we moved and found a great tenant. The lease term is coming to an end and the tenant is willing to either stay on or move out.
Property info:
700 sq ft studio/junior one bedroom with one full bath (has a dedicated sleeping area with translucent panels to provide some privacy from rest of unit), has a balcony, stainless steel appliances, exposed duct work, washer/dryer in unit
Located in U Street Corridor of Washington, DC
Finances:
Paid $348K in Feb 2011, current market value around $460K ($465K from Redfin, $485K from Zillow)
Mortgage balance of $249K; PITI + condo fee is $23K/year vs. $2,400/month or $28,800/year in rent. Building is 10 years old and unit has original finishes. No major repairs to date or anticipated. After agent commission and transfer taxes, etc I estimate I could get net proceeds of $174K.
When we initially decided to rent it out, I wanted to sell but my wife wanted to rent to hopefully gain additional appreciation since the neighborhood is still improving with new buildings and restaurants opening each month. I think it's only appreciated marginally in the past year that we've rented it out, and now would consider selling it with the potential tenant's move out. DC has tenant-friendly rental laws (TOPA) and selling an empty unit is substantially easier than having a tenant in place. Also, we are currently in DC so self-managing is easy, but are contemplating a move to another state which would make managing from a distance more challenging unless we went with a PM.
At the $348K purchase price and $8K closing costs with 20% down, I calculate a 6.7% CoC return. Using the $460K market rate, it plummets to 2.8%. Should I evaluate based on the purchase price or market rate? I think the right answer is to sell to lock in the appreciation and then redeploy the funds in better rental return markets, but wanted to see if I'm missing anything.
Most Popular Reply
![Dan Bernstein's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/192300/1621432219-avatar-danbernstein.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/crop=252x252@0x10/cover=128x128&v=2)
@Dominic Foster If you are planning on investing in real estate long term, I would sell and buy a multifamily with a 1031 exchange. Since properties sell super fast on U street, you could identify and tie up a multifamily with a longer study period and then 1031 exchange it into the new property.
Thats a lot of money to sit tied up in a one bedroom condo.