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An Nguyen
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Fixer upper or Good condition house for Rental

An Nguyen
Posted Jun 10 2024, 19:19

Hey everyone, 

I am learning to get into RE investment field, my plan is taking out equity of first primary house to buy another one for rent (single or multi family). My primary house estimate value is around $450k, I still owe $60k for mortgage, and I have $45k in high yields saving now. 

For the last few days I have done some research for fixer uppers projects BRRRR, my lender recommended go for HELOC because we try to keep expenses downs and easy to access the funds. And or course, short term loan for HELOC and then refinance later. But I have read many topics on here, many investors facing difficulties with BRRRR now as the market is "not right" which make me have to think again about this strategy. (70% rule still working for this market?)

My second option is no Fixer-uppers and just buy good condition house for rental investment. But by this way, I do not know if the equity can increase more than BRRRR strategy when refinance or NOT since there is no rehab involved.

With HELOC, I think they allow me to take out 70-80% of equity which will be $250k-$300k. What should be my next move? I am ready for any advice and tips from everyone.
Thank you

An

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Jonathan Greene#1 Starting Out Contributor
  • Specialist
  • Mendham, NJ
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Jonathan Greene#1 Starting Out Contributor
  • Specialist
  • Mendham, NJ
Replied Jun 11 2024, 05:14

You have very strong equity in your current home, but you don't want to burn it all and make your house worth less with more leverage. My concern in your post is this - "For the last few days". Is that all the time you have been doing research on this? If so, do not take action yet, you don't know enough. This is a good place to start, but why do you want another property? Do you have experience with renovation or landlording or mini-flips? Your capital is available to do it, but that doesn't mean it will work out well. It's not a great time to BRRRR so if buying something more turnkey as a newer investor is safer if you see appreciation in the future and you plan to hold in a long-term strategy.

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Sean-Luke Clark
  • Wholesaler
  • Nashville, TN
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Sean-Luke Clark
  • Wholesaler
  • Nashville, TN
Replied Jun 11 2024, 05:48

If you have $45k in a HYSA. I would just start talking to a Hard money lender IMO. More than likely your lender is also highly incentivized in you taking a HELOC. Which can sway that recommendation.

At the very least for your first 2 or 3. I would hold off on a LOC. After a couple deals under belt, then take out a massive line of credit and grow fast with the all-in volume game.

If you're in Nashville like me. Check out the REIN meetups and FB group. You'll get tons of resources and contacts

- Nashville Wholesaler/Investor 

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An Nguyen
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An Nguyen
Replied Jun 11 2024, 08:24
Quote from @Jonathan Greene:

You have very strong equity in your current home, but you don't want to burn it all and make your house worth less with more leverage. My concern in your post is this - "For the last few days". Is that all the time you have been doing research on this? If so, do not take action yet, you don't know enough. This is a good place to start, but why do you want another property? Do you have experience with renovation or landlording or mini-flips? Your capital is available to do it, but that doesn't mean it will work out well. It's not a great time to BRRRR so if buying something more turnkey as a newer investor is safer if you see appreciation in the future and you plan to hold in a long-term strategy.


 Thank you for the advice. Really helpful

Do you think HELOC can workout for turnkey investment or other loan types?

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An Nguyen
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An Nguyen
Replied Jun 11 2024, 08:31
Quote from @Sean-Luke Clark:

If you have $45k in a HYSA. I would just start talking to a Hard money lender IMO. More than likely your lender is also highly incentivized in you taking a HELOC. Which can sway that recommendation.

At the very least for your first 2 or 3. I would hold off on a LOC. After a couple deals under belt, then take out a massive line of credit and grow fast with the all-in volume game.

If you're in Nashville like me. Check out the REIN meetups and FB group. You'll get tons of resources and contacts

- Nashville Wholesaler/Investor 


 Thank you. 
Beside HELOC, is there any other loans for 1st rental investment that many investors consider to? Because right now I dont think it is good idea to refinance since I get 3.0% rate for my primary home.

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Jonathan Greene#1 Starting Out Contributor
  • Specialist
  • Mendham, NJ
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Jonathan Greene#1 Starting Out Contributor
  • Specialist
  • Mendham, NJ
Replied Jun 11 2024, 09:10
Quote from @An Nguyen:
Quote from @Jonathan Greene:

You have very strong equity in your current home, but you don't want to burn it all and make your house worth less with more leverage. My concern in your post is this - "For the last few days". Is that all the time you have been doing research on this? If so, do not take action yet, you don't know enough. This is a good place to start, but why do you want another property? Do you have experience with renovation or landlording or mini-flips? Your capital is available to do it, but that doesn't mean it will work out well. It's not a great time to BRRRR so if buying something more turnkey as a newer investor is safer if you see appreciation in the future and you plan to hold in a long-term strategy.


 Thank you for the advice. Really helpful

Do you think HELOC can workout for turnkey investment or other loan types?


You can use the money from a HELOC for anything you want. The rate usually gets activated when you use the funds. If you don't want to leverage your existing property, you would need 20-30% down on an investment property loan and it would be at a higher rate than your HELOC.

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Sean-Luke Clark
  • Wholesaler
  • Nashville, TN
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Sean-Luke Clark
  • Wholesaler
  • Nashville, TN
Replied Jun 11 2024, 11:43
Quote from @An Nguyen:
Quote from @Sean-Luke Clark:

If you have $45k in a HYSA. I would just start talking to a Hard money lender IMO. More than likely your lender is also highly incentivized in you taking a HELOC. Which can sway that recommendation.

At the very least for your first 2 or 3. I would hold off on a LOC. After a couple deals under belt, then take out a massive line of credit and grow fast with the all-in volume game.

If you're in Nashville like me. Check out the REIN meetups and FB group. You'll get tons of resources and contacts

- Nashville Wholesaler/Investor 


 Thank you. 
Beside HELOC, is there any other loans for 1st rental investment that many investors consider to? Because right now I dont think it is good idea to refinance since I get 3.0% rate for my primary home.


Besides a Hard Money Loan or HELOC, you could try and reach out for a personal/business line of credit? That is how one of my investors is operating at the moment.

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Karen Wanamarta
Agent
  • Investor
  • Nashville, TN
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Karen Wanamarta
Agent
  • Investor
  • Nashville, TN
Replied Jun 12 2024, 12:48
Quote from @An Nguyen:

Hey everyone, 

I am learning to get into RE investment field, my plan is taking out equity of first primary house to buy another one for rent (single or multi family). My primary house estimate value is around $450k, I still owe $60k for mortgage, and I have $45k in high yields saving now. 

For the last few days I have done some research for fixer uppers projects BRRRR, my lender recommended go for HELOC because we try to keep expenses downs and easy to access the funds. And or course, short term loan for HELOC and then refinance later. But I have read many topics on here, many investors facing difficulties with BRRRR now as the market is "not right" which make me have to think again about this strategy. (70% rule still working for this market?)

My second option is no Fixer-uppers and just buy good condition house for rental investment. But by this way, I do not know if the equity can increase more than BRRRR strategy when refinance or NOT since there is no rehab involved.

With HELOC, I think they allow me to take out 70-80% of equity which will be $250k-$300k. What should be my next move? I am ready for any advice and tips from everyone.
Thank you

An


Have you thought about doing creative financing or subject to deals? I have a few off market that could be a good fit/that could cash flow. Since you're locked in at a low rate I would think twice about doing a HELOC.

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John Williams
Property Manager
  • Property Manager
  • Clarksville, TN
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John Williams
Property Manager
  • Property Manager
  • Clarksville, TN
Replied Jul 17 2024, 11:56
Quote from @An Nguyen:

Hey everyone, 

I am learning to get into RE investment field, my plan is taking out equity of first primary house to buy another one for rent (single or multi family). My primary house estimate value is around $450k, I still owe $60k for mortgage, and I have $45k in high yields saving now. 

For the last few days I have done some research for fixer uppers projects BRRRR, my lender recommended go for HELOC because we try to keep expenses downs and easy to access the funds. And or course, short term loan for HELOC and then refinance later. But I have read many topics on here, many investors facing difficulties with BRRRR now as the market is "not right" which make me have to think again about this strategy. (70% rule still working for this market?)

My second option is no Fixer-uppers and just buy good condition house for rental investment. But by this way, I do not know if the equity can increase more than BRRRR strategy when refinance or NOT since there is no rehab involved.

With HELOC, I think they allow me to take out 70-80% of equity which will be $250k-$300k. What should be my next move? I am ready for any advice and tips from everyone.
Thank you

An


 I think your strategy could work either way in markets like Clarksville, TN!