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Updated 2 months ago on . Most recent reply

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George Falk
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Income Property Investments

George Falk
Posted

New to income property investment. Looking for second property. I would like to refi my current property and purchase or build a second income property. Interested in Utah and North Carolina markets and financing options. 

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Nathan Gesner
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Cody, WY
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Nathan Gesner
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Cody, WY
ModeratorReplied
Quote from @George Falk:

New to income property investment. Looking for second property. I would like to refi my current property and purchase or build a second income property. Interested in Utah and North Carolina markets and financing options. 


Your equity is not a savings account from which you can withdraw for free. If you cash out equity in a property, you are "borrowing" that money from the lender. Upfront expenses and monthly payments must be considered when calculating the return on your investment.

EXAMPLE
You cash out $100,000 of your equity and use this as a down payment on a $400,000 investment property. This creates two loan payments ($100,000 of equity and $300,000 on the new mortgage).

Key Numbers

  • Home Equity Loan Interest Rate: 6%
  • Mortgage Interest Rate: 7%
  • Rental Income: $3,000 per month
  • Expenses (management, taxes, insurance, maintenance): $800 per month

Income and Expenses

  • Monthly Rental Income: $3,000
  • Monthly Expenses: $800
  • Monthly Mortgage Payment: $2,000

Explanation

  • The investor earns $3,000 in rent each month.
  • They pay $2,000 on the investment property mortgage and $800 on other expenses.
  • This leaves $200 profit each month or $2,400 per year.
  • However, you have to pay $6,000 interest on the equity borrowed.
  • This leaves you with an annual loss of $3,600.

This example shows that while the rental property generates positive monthly income, the interest cost of borrowing the initial $100,000 results in an overall annual loss. The investor must consider whether the potential property value increase or other benefits outweigh this loss.

  • Nathan Gesner
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