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Updated over 14 years ago on . Most recent reply
Temporary Renters?
Hi Guys I havent been around in a while but I need some advice in the situation I'm in.
I bought a condo last year, its beautiful, top floor 2 bedroom, 2 bath , 3 years old. I was planning on living in it for 5 years or more until I moved onto a house.
But I got injured at work and developed CRPS in my left arm which sucks, I can't do construction anymore, and I'm being sent back to school on disability, and plan on doing a Business Degree. With all of this happening I decided to move back home to be with my family (3500km's away) on the other side of Canada.
So I really need advice on what to do with this property. I need to leave to start school in about a month max. I have talked with a landlord who would take care of it. She charges half first months rent and 10 percent of each month. Which would net me a loss of about 200 dollars a month.
Or I could sell the property and basically after realtor costs and prepayment penalty I'd be pretty close to breaking even after spending 10,000$ on a downpayment last year.
I am actually moving back home with family so I will not be paying rent and I can handle paying a 200$ loss for the time being but I was thinking I will keep my eye out for a Rental Investment Property down home and when I see one I can "transfer or port the mortgage". Like a duplex or something, That way I keep my mortgage going, I wont have to come up with another downpayment , pay any penalties , or mortgage insurance again.
Does this sound like a good idea?
I havent talked to the landlord lady about thinking of selling it yet though? Has anyone ever rented a place out with intention of selling it in 6-12 months? How much notice do I have to give the tenants?
Thanks guys, I apoligize if I'm pretty confusing, its a rough time right now.
Andrew
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The management fees you quote are standard for our area.
I'd sell and be done with it. Not sure if you mean you walk away with $15000-17000 which is how I'd read "being up $5000-7000" when combined with your $10,000 down payment, or if you mean you'd walk away with $5-7K. Either way, I'd sell. In the first case you're actually turned a profit. In the second, the cost of you "renting" this condo during the time you've lived there is pretty reasonable.
As a rental, this is a serious loser. Your best case (i.e., the "phony cash flow = rent - PITI (and HOA)) is just break even. The reality is that things do go wrong. At the very least, you'll have some vacancy. Very likely you'll have some small maintenance, and since you'll be far away, you'll have to pay somebody to deal with trivial issues.
Plus, you just don't need the headaches of trying to deal with this from a distance. Sell and move on.
Sorry to hear about the CRPS. I'd never heard of that, so google educated me. That sounds nasty. Really sorry.