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Updated over 7 years ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

367
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Jeff G.
  • Investor
  • Wethersfield, CT
189
Votes |
367
Posts

Realistically, Who Gets 30+ Unit Apartments With No Money Down?

Jeff G.
  • Investor
  • Wethersfield, CT
Posted

I'm reading How to Make Big Money in Small Apartments by Lance Edwards. Informative or not, it has definitely got the "written by a real estate guru" vibe. Please level with me, folks. Who realistically gets 10-30 unit apartment complexes with "no money down"? I have definite interest in the small apartment space in that unit range. I'm skeptical.

I get that "no money down" nearly always means other people's money (OPM) and only very rarely means seller financing with no actual down payment on the part of the buyer. Also, any real deal will surely require incidental expenditures such as paying for inspections, some form of marketing budget, etc.

For those of you who have actually done this, how did you get the deal? How was it structured at closure? How was the income distributed going forward?

Lastly, what am I not likely to read from a book that I really should know going into a deal like this?

  • Jeff G.
  • Most Popular Reply

    User Stats

    1,730
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    Jason Hirko
    • Lender
    • San Antonio, TX
    1,511
    Votes |
    1,730
    Posts
    Jason Hirko
    • Lender
    • San Antonio, TX
    Replied

    @Jeff G. I don't know the book you're reading, but here's how I look at it - you need money to make 99.9% of deals happen. The key in may opinion is not leaving your money in it. The people who do it best are the ones who have figured out the ins and outs of financing and refinancing and take their capital from one deal to another in order to scale. SO in a way that is investing with no money, but not no money down.

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