Skip to content
×
Try PRO Free Today!
BiggerPockets Pro offers you a comprehensive suite of tools and resources
Market and Deal Finder Tools
Deal Analysis Calculators
Property Management Software
Exclusive discounts to Home Depot, RentRedi, and more
$0
7 days free
$828/yr or $69/mo when billed monthly.
$390/yr or $32.5/mo when billed annually.
7 days free. Cancel anytime.
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here

Join Over 3 Million Real Estate Investors

Create a free BiggerPockets account to comment, participate, and connect with over 3 million real estate investors.
Use your real name
By signing up, you indicate that you agree to the BiggerPockets Terms & Conditions.
The community here is like my own little personal real estate army that I can depend upon to help me through ANY problems I come across.
Multi-Family and Apartment Investing
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

Updated about 2 years ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

56
Posts
21
Votes
Alex Jacobson
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Boulder, CO
21
Votes |
56
Posts

Too good to be true? Needing a 2nd option. 10 Unit multi family Pueblo, CO

Alex Jacobson
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Boulder, CO
Posted

Looking for a fresh set of eyes to look at a rental analysis for a 10 unit efficiency apartment building in Pueblo, CO. 

COC ROI: 21.8%

CAP RATE: 11.3%

GRM: 61%

I used conservative estimates: 5% capital expenditures, maintenance and vacancy. (In my experience these will be less for the area.) and 7.5% interest rate and am still showing a healthy cash flow of $1,700 a month. 

 Is this too good to be true? I am also always looking for investor partners on deals as well.  

Thank you!

Analysis linked below: Bigger Pockets Rental analysis

  • Alex Jacobson

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

3,768
Posts
3,435
Votes
Evan Polaski
#3 Rehabbing & House Flipping Contributor
  • Cincinnati, OH
3,435
Votes |
3,768
Posts
Evan Polaski
#3 Rehabbing & House Flipping Contributor
  • Cincinnati, OH
Replied

Hi Alex, my few comments are:

Typically, but confirm with your lender, commercial loans will be 25%+ down. You underwrite to 20% down. Additionally, and almost more importantly, you need to know your lender's DSCR, since many commercial loans are limited by DSCR, not LTV (although an 11% cap rate is much higher than typical).

You have no reserves built into cash needs assumptions, which sounds risky to me, but I don't know the property or market.

Generally, my sentiment is the lower the rent, the more frequent and higher cost each turnover is.  At 5% vacancy, you are assuming a 5 of the 10 units will turn over each year.  At $1,500/turnover that is $7,500/dr just in turnover cost.  You budget has about $7k TOTAL in maintenance and capex combined. 

My general sentiment is this could be a good deal, but overall from my past experiences and not knowing this asset, I would expect to lower CoC return given more equity in and less cash flow, but as others noted, you still have reasonably good margin to work within.

  • Evan Polaski
  • [email protected]
  • 513-638-9799
  • Loading replies...