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Updated 29 days ago on . Most recent reply
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Lemon or no?
I have a confession: my only duplex, which I gave owned now for 2 years and recently moved out of from a house hack, has proven to cost me more to maintain/pay taxes/repair/fix etc to the point where my cash flow is close to zero. Reason being, I hired a property management company (just now) and they're wonderful, they start officially in a couple days. But is this going to be worth it? I've had so much emotional and financial stress from this house after I moved out (mostly from a mean and very demanding tenant). They take decent care of the property, but I would get texts all the time telling me to fix many things (some valid, some completely unnecessary) and would get upset if I ever denied any of the requests. Well, we are getting into the cold months and without going into too much detail, it's become extremely scary to talk with them and try and amicably handle requests. The house is in very good shape, but not perfect, it was built in 1959.
I guess my question is this: is the very low cash flow (due to my low down-payment and high interest) going to improve? Or when is the time to throw in the towel? I've dealt with so much stress. Am I not cut out for this? I'm trying to do the right thing each time and feel like I'm being abused. I hope management works, but taxes are flying, insurance is flying, and I just wonder if I made a mistake with this property.
anyway, sorry for the rant...
Most Popular Reply
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- Property Manager
- Royal Oak, MI
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@Daniel Windingstad congrats!
You've learned:
1) The basics of landlording
2) That it's not for you
Now, how can you apply your landlording knowledge to "manage your manager"?
Do NOT assume they know everything. Yes, they will do many things better than you, but some things it's not possible for them to be as attentive and quick responding as you.
Also, no one's perfect, so keep tabs on them in general.
Regarding holding or selling: why did you buy this in the first place?
Value and rents should eventually increase to turn cashflow positive and build your wealth.
You're next learning experience will be, now that you are out of day-to-day management, how will you be able to handle the inevitable expense challenges? Will you "freak out" when you have to write a check for maintenance or eviction?
The next 3-9 months will tell you...
- Drew Sygit
- [email protected]
- 248-209-6824
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