Buying & Selling Real Estate
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated about 6 years ago, 10/11/2018
Cash Flow Per Door Expectations
I am actively seeking my first multifamily deal in the Hampton Roads, VA area. Am I off base for trying to get $150/door net cash flow on a quad that rents 700/month? That tends to put me at 80-85% of most asking prices with all my expenses and 20% down conventional financing.
Kevin
@Kevin Sack A lot depends on your local market. Brandon Turner uses $100/door as a base, but again you need to account for the local area conditions and demands. Ask some of the local investors here and through your local REI clubs.
@Brandon Turner thank you for speaking to my question during the Webinar tonight. Market is Hampton Roads, VA and cash flow as listed is 80-100/door/month with tenants paying utilities. The 15-20% discount I'm searching for will give me a 50% boost in cash flow. The local market currently has people paying close to full price, but I'm beginning to see repeat properties on the MLS with buyers falling through.
@Ernest Grindle can you be more specific with what factors you are referring to? My cash flow number is after PITI, maintenance reserves, 10% vacancy, 10% PM, and landscaping. This is my first deal so I'm making offers on properties that do not require major rehab...maybe paint and fixture updates at most.
- Rental Property Investor
- Erie, pa
- 9,404
- Votes |
- 6,023
- Posts
There’s Few good deals are on the mls . I look for 250-300 $ a door but will settle for no less than 200$ .the good deals are off market
Dollars per door is like the 1% or 2% rule. A good starting point, but not the whole story of course. If I read your posts correctly, it appears you're only looking at $80-100 a door, with no utilities paid by you? That seems like a really low profit. Although, 10% vacancy also seems pretty high. But I don't know your area. I figure 3% vacancy in my area. I have been outbid on numerous multi families this summer because the numbers just didn't make sense to me. Not sure how some people are getting cash flow. My guess is, they fake the numbers, to not include expenses or reserves for capex, maintenance, management, etc.
@Anthony Wick you are correct, it does seem low so I suspect people are making money from buying when the market was lower and are trying to capitalize on the higher prices now. Depending on the source, I am seeing 7-9.5% vacancy in the area so I'm using 10% to be conservative.