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Updated almost 3 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Tyler Clark
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Seeking Advice : Renting out $500k 3,300 sqft New Build

Tyler Clark
Posted

I have a brand new renter friendly $500k 3,300 sq/ft home in the Houston greater area and I am considering renting it out as I work overseas and don’t need to occupy the home. I am curious about others success renting such large/nice homes for $3,000-4,000 per month. Should I rent furnished? I see other homes in the area pending rental contracts at the $2,500 range often. Should I market the home to test the waters and see how many inquiries come in? All advice is appreciated as this is my first rental property, previously planned to be primary residence.

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Drew Sygit
#1 Market Trends & Data Contributor
  • Property Manager
  • Royal Oak, MI
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Drew Sygit
#1 Market Trends & Data Contributor
  • Property Manager
  • Royal Oak, MI
Replied

@Tyler Clark

To add to @Nathan Gesner advice:

In our experience, the #1 mistake owners make when selecting a Property Management Company (PMC) is ASSUMING instead of CONFIRMING.

It's often a case of not doing enough research, as they don't know what they don't know!

Owners mistakenly ASSUME all PMCs offer the exact SAME SERVICES and PERFORM those services EXACTLY THE SAME WAY, so price is the only differentiator.

So, the first question they usually ask a PMC is about fees - instead of asking about services and HOW those services are executed.

EXAMPLE: PMC states they will handle tenant screening – what does that specifically mean? What documents do they require, what credit scores do they allow, how do they verify previous rental history, etc.? You’d be shocked by how little actual screening many PMC’s do!

This also leads owners to ASSUME simpler is better when it comes to management contracts.

The reality is the opposite - if it's not in writing then the PMC doesn't have to provide the service or can charge extra for it!

We have a 14-page management contract that we've added our real experiences to over the years, with the intent of protecting both us AND the landlord. Beyond the Monthly Management, Placement & Maintenance fees, all other fees in our contract are IF EVENT -> THEN fees.

We don’t know any PMCs to recommend in the area mentioned, but since selecting the wrong PMC is usually more harmful than selecting a bad tenant, you might want to read our series about “How to Screen a PMC Better than a Tenant”:

https://www.biggerpockets.com/member-blogs/3094/91877-how-to-screen-a-pmc-better-than-a-tenant-part-1-services-and-processes

We recommend you get management contracts from several PMCs and compare the services they cover and, more importantly, what they each DO NOT cover.

EDUCATE YOURSELF - yes, it will take time, but will lead to a selection that better meets your expectations & avoids potentially costly surprises!

P.S. If you just hire the cheapest or first PMC you speak with and it turns into a bad experience, please don’t assume ALL PMC’s are bad and start trashing PMC’s in general. Take ownership of your mistake and learn to do the proper due diligence recommended above😊

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Logical Property Management.
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