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Updated about 1 year ago on . Most recent reply
Absolute Net Lease tied to a residential property - pros/cons?
Hello all,
Thank you in advance for your feedback. I am seeking information on a potential deal I came across. The asset is a Residential home that is leased (absolute Net) to a medical treatment facility. I am familiar with the corporate NNN leases (primarily QSRs) but I have not seen this type of deal before.
Some high-level details: Lease term is 11 years left out of 15.
Cap rate: 6.5%
Leased to a Nationally recognized tenant.
Questions/comments:
This type of deal vs a QSR-type NNN feels better- since the underlying assets is a residential home in a local real estate market I know well. So the growth of the home should be tied to the growth of the local RE market (as compared to a stand-alone NNN). This house sits in a desirable area, and should the tenant move out, I could easily move into, sell, or rent the property to a local family (albeit at a much lower cap rate). This feels safter than buying a QSR. Thoughts on this logic?
Loan: For this type of deal does anyone know if you could get residential financing? or would you still need to go the corporate route?
Tax: Are there any tax benefits from this type of deal vs a QSR-NNN corporate deal? I am assuming you can take depreciation at 27.5 years vs. 39.
I appreciate any help the forum can provide.
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@Kevin G., I can't help but compare this to people trying to sell residential properties that THEY chose to airbnb for a much higher price than surrounding properties, simply because they were making more income from it.
So to Michael's point, at the end of the day, you are left with a single family residential property. The residual value of the property is not going to be more than any other single family in similar condition in 11 yrs, if the tenant does not renew.
From there, I would look at that estimated value, less any costs it will take to make it a "normal" SF home, assuming the medical treatment center has done some custom work to the house, factor in my cash flow that I can get for the next 11 years, and back into a value for the property.
Another thing I would consider: the deal is NNN during their lease term, but assuming they leave, what are your estimated capex bills? I.e. if furnace was new when lease started, it will likely be at end of useful life when lease is over, but quite possibly NOT before lease ends. As such, you will have a 15 yr old furnace to replace. Again, no difference any other residential or commercial property, but something to consider. Same with everything else in there. And not knowing how this property is treated, relative to a typical rental of a SFR, you may want to look at their lease to understand what condition is expected to be returned when the lease is ended.