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Updated about 7 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Hannah Diment
  • Studio City, CA
8
Votes |
9
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Thoughts on Hundred Year Older Multi Units?

Hannah Diment
  • Studio City, CA
Posted

Hello, I am a new investor in the Minneapolis area, and I am starting to look at properties-- I'm finding most if not all of the multi unit properties I'm going to see are 100+ years old... wow! While they have undergone various remodeling, I'm curious to hear from seasoned investors- what are your experiences with older properties like this?  What are the most important questions you're asking when buying and what extra costs/frequency of repairs have you found with your older properties?  The one I am going to see today is aesthetically nice, they clearly have done some updates, but my concern is with plumbing/structural things, have others had issues with this?

I am currently renting a unit in 100 yr old multi unit and since I have lived here (September) they have had to do nearly $20,000 in repairs between the heating system pooping out and the plumbing, is this typical?  

I love this community and really appreciate the wisdom :)

Happy investing!

Most Popular Reply

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742
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Bruce Runn
  • Investor
  • Minneapolis, MN
924
Votes |
742
Posts
Bruce Runn
  • Investor
  • Minneapolis, MN
Replied

@Hannah Diment

I currently own 14 properties (primarily in/near Uptown) and 13 are over 100 years old.  Love them!  They are in the best locations for rentals and when I buy something, I renovate to bring everything up to modern standard.  Rental properties that are close to Downtown Minneapolis were all mainly built in a large scale way starting in 1900.   Where possible, when I buy,  I update electrical boards if they have fuses, new wiring for extra outlets when they need more power, plumbing to insure there is good water flow,  heating if the systems need replacing or are gravity based, and roofs when needed.  For me, it's all part of the acquisition price since I hold long term.  In my profit formula, I set aside $300/month per building for repair and capex.  Over 8 years it has worked out to $125/month for repairs and $175/month for capital investment and I have every building on a schedule when items get updated or replaced so I have a good feel for what needs attention ahead of issues.  Not everything needs to replaced right away so it goes on a schedule for replacement and the repair contingency takes care of it.  This year, I am replacing 1 roof, 2 boilers, and 3 water heaters.  I end up is really nice properties with tons of character/old world charm in prime "A" locations.  I have over 1500 months of rentals and have had 1 vacancy in 8 years so essentially, the repairs pay for themselves since I literaly have a 0 vacancy rate.   Rather than putting a vacancy rate into my profit formula, I continually update and make my places nicer.

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