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Updated about 12 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Trevor Smith
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • Levittown, PA
0
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11
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Well Water vs. City Water??

Trevor Smith
  • Involved In Real Estate
  • Levittown, PA
Posted

I'm looking to buy a 2 bedroom 1 bath single family home as a rental property. It needs some work. i.e. new kitchen and bathroom, paint, finish hardwood floors, patch the roof, maybe paint exterior...I'm a little concerned because it has well water and a septic tank. It's been winterized so I'm unsure on how to make sure everything is working properly. Would it be best to switch it to city water? The property is listed for 32k. A property two houses down (also bank owned) is listed at 70k. I could most likely get $800-$950 in rent. Taxes and Insurance will be about $330 a month. Taxes are high, but I'm hoping to have it reassessed. Please Help!

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616
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Amy A.
  • Portland, ME
547
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616
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Amy A.
  • Portland, ME
Replied

About 2/3 of the REOs I've purchased have frozen pipes/boilers because they were either winterized too late or incorrectly. I always budget for all new plumbing and a new septic system. If they're ok I just make more money. If not, I'm ready for it.
Around here we have radon, so if the buyer tests and it's high, you can pay a few thousand for a filter. I find homes with public water are lower risk, but still buy where there's a well and budget appropriately.
Always check with the town. I just passed on a house in my town because as a planning board member I knew that the groundwater is contaminated with benzene and salt in that area. It didn't stop another local investor, who netted around $45,000 on the flip but didn't disclose the problem. The deal simply wasn't worth the loss of my real estate license or my integrity or reputation.

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