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Updated over 6 years ago on . Most recent reply
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Pay Off Debt or BRRRR?
Hey BP community, my wife and I are trying to make a decision about how to best deploy our savings. We have about $25,000 in liquid savings, which is enough for us to buy a single family BRRRR deal in our target market. In an ideal world everything would go great and 6 months later we would have our capital back and be earning $300-500/mo in cash flow. Unfortunately that doesn't always happen. I do have some experience investing, but am by no means an expert, and I've never attempted the BRRRR strategy.
Our second option is to pay off around $14,000 of debt (low interest rate, around $4%), which would save about $350/mo in expenses, allow us to get closer to FI, and increase our savings rate. This is a guaranteed return compared to investing, but obviously not the most optimal as we could potentially get much better returns in Real Estate. We also could pay off some 0% interest debt which would free up another ~$200/mo (These are interest free cell phone/laptop financing). If we paid this off it would be after paying off the debt with interest first.
The most optimal route seems to be the BRRRR deal in terms of ROI, since in 6 months (assuming I can pull my money out) I could pay off the debt at that point AND have the extra cash flow.
Thoughts??
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In a ideal world you invest and your income pays off all your debts. In the real world when you invest with bad debt and your investment hits the inevitable bump in the road your bad debt will sink you. This is a major contributing fact to failures in real estate investing.
Smart investors do not begin having bad debt as a albatross around their neck.