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Updated about 13 years ago on . Most recent reply
Increasing cash on cash return
Lately I've been dabbling the numbers to maximize the cash on cash return for rental properties.
I want to run this sample deal to make sure my numbers are correct. From what I can see a hard money > refi deal maximizes the cash on cash return.
Purchase Price: $47,000
Repairs: $5,000
All in: $52,000
Rental rate: $900 / mo - $10,800 / yr
Cash flow: $450 / mo - $5,400 / yr (financed)
CONVENTIONAL - 25% DOWN
Down payment: $11,750
Repairs: $5,000
Closing Cost: $750
Inspection: $300
Total Expenses: $17,800
Cash on cash return: $5,400 / $17,800 = 0.30
CASH -
Purchase: $47,000
Repairs: $5,000
Closing Cost: $750
Inspection: $300
Total Expenses: $53,050
Cash on cash return: $10,800 / $53,050 = 0.20
HARD MONEY > REFI 30 YR
Purchase: $1,560
Appraisal: $500
Inspection: $300
Closing Cost A-B: $750
Closing Cost B-C: $0
Total Expenses: $3,110
Cash on cash return: $5,400 / $3,110 = 1.73
Am I doing this correctly? I know I didn't allocate for anything on the taxes , etc on the cash deal so that number will be slightly lower. What I'm more interested in is the hard money to 30 year refinance.
Most Popular Reply
debt service isn't included in the 50%...that's reserved for taxes, insurance, management, vacancies, repairs, maintenance, utilities, trashouts, cap ex..etc.....