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Updated over 5 years ago, 06/25/2019
Single family rentals
I am interested in hearing from people whose portfolio consists of single family rentals. I currently own 7 sfr. I’ve had great success acquiring them over the past three years. But it seems like this is the point where most people start investing in multi family. I’m not really wanting to do that. I run a car dealership in Maryville TN and love my job. So I really just want to keep snagging up sfr. Hopefully over the next ten years I can acquire about 30 more. Has anyone taken the single family only route? If so please lend some information on why you chose it. My initial goal was 40. But with me only being 28 years old. I think I should be able to pass that up
- Rental Property Investor
- Greensboro / High point / Kernersville NC
- 30
- Votes |
- 17
- Posts
Originally posted by @Nathan Hall:
Right now I have a mixture of both that are working well (nothing crazy; duplex and SFRs). And I do get the point about multifamily providing more insulation on the payment if something goes wrong, but at the 2-4 unit level I think this is somewhat mitigated. And both of my SFRs are home runs right now, while the duplex has had hiccups. But it's also my breadwinner when it's working.
I'm curious what the "insulation" benefit of multifamily is for a thing below five units, or if it is. At my level I'm working all the math as a sum of a whole. At what point does that not work, or at what point do I "graduate"? I've got a contract on my next duplex and while I'm sure it will make me money in cash flow, I know that certain things will need replacing soon. Is it fair to myself to think of the entire portfolio as a multi-unit at this point? Why, or why not?
One of the major difference is financing. Multi starts at 5 units in one building, up to 4 units get financed on the basis of recent sales. Multi get financed on the income generated by the property.
Even if you have 20-30 SFR, it's still 20-30 roofs, driveways, etc
However, if you rehabbed all these units when purchased, it's not much needed in repairs for years and if it does - it's one at a time, not all 20-30 at the same time.
@Mark Fries If I lived in Jacksonville we would be friends. My Aunt lives there and loves it. My mom is planning to retire there as well. I love what you said about purchasing, managing, and your philosophy on dead equity.
Phillip,
Like you I am also a car dealer by day. I started buying real estate during the crash. It was a no brainer for me. Like buying 20 dollar bills for 10 bucks.
Indy, where you live, and the suburbs of Dayton where I live have a lot in common when it comes to real estate. Primarily the rate of return on SFR's. We are able to buy in decent areas (B, B-) and easily hit the one percent rule.
I picked up 85 SFR's during the crash and after and I'm still buying today (close on one tomorrow 65k all in 850.00 rent). I do have 35 or 40 multi doors. I find them harder to acquire, rent and manage. They can provide a slightly greater cash flow though, which can be important if you're leveraging.
IMO if you want to get rich with minimum stress continue on your path. If you want mega-rich, you'll probably need to go after the large Multi's. Bigger risk but bigger rewards.
Either way, good luck and happy hunting.
@Phillip Massey I didn't read the above comments but I have one client that has ~100 SF houses. They have purchased over a period of 15-20 years and are able to manage them with one employee and by working part time, roughly 20 hours per week. The husband is pretty much a handyman by trade so that helps them quite a bit, the employee and wife work on the property management side. They do very well and have a lot of equity, most of the people you find on here are trying to leverage up as quickly as possible and would call some of their income "purchased cash flow".
The benefits to SF is that they typically take less time managing, they are a little more liquid in case you wanted to sell, and they can appreciate a bit more although not guaranteed. It can be harder to get these to cash flow which is why many people look for multi-family in building a rental portfolio. Personally, I have both SF and MF - my SF properties were rehabs so I have some equity sitting in the deal which is why they work well. Many BP investors prefer to pull everything out and try to scale up.
Originally posted by @Berry Leonard:
Hi Phillip, my wife and I have acquired 18 SF rental homes. We purchase 2-3 properties per year, our target is 20-24 homes.
We only buy homes in owner occupied safe neighborhoods and target an average rent which is aligned to the average family income of the Triad NC area. We target $900 to $1400 rental rates with a 8-10% cap rate.
We have focused our purchases in a 10 mile radius, in many cases, we have multiple homes in the same neighborhood or on the same street. This allows us to reduce our travel and provide better service to our tenants.
Also, we seek long term tenants and incentivize four year leases with a minimum of two year lease. While we may lose some rent increases with long term leases, we lower our turn over and reduce our expenses. Also, our area cannot support constant rent increases so long term leases have much more benefit to our strategy. However, we are able to charge slightly above market rental rates because we do a good job rehabbing and maintaining our properties. I do not believe this model is possible with multi family.
We closely manage and maintain our properties to insure the highest quality product for our tenants. Also, we are a buy and hold investor and believe in maintaining our properties in top shape. We hear horror stories from many of our tenants about their past landlords and the poor maintenance. We believe this helps maintain tenants in SF rentals. When we secure a good tenant, we want them to stay forever.
We target tenants who want to live in neighborhoods and do not want to live in apartments or condos. I believe SF tenants take better care of our properties because they treat it like their home and we provide a high quality product.
We buy distressed properties, rehab and rent. Our goal is to rehab enough properties each year to minimize our taxes on the positive cash flow. I prefer to invest in more properties vs paying taxes to Uncle Sam. Our goal is to re-invest 100% of our profits for the next five years while paying down all of our mortgages. It is hard to find distressed multi family properties that would allow the same rehab cost to offset my cash flow and minimize taxes. One of our biggest goals is to minimize taxable income.
After our first four Homes, our progress slowed because we could not get under written by Fannie, so We only purchased with cash for a few years which slowed our progress. Several years ago, I found a local bank which allowed us to accelerate our purchases. We have decided to only take 10 yr loans because our goal is to pay off all the properties in the next 5-7 years. The principle pay down on a 10 year loan if 60% of the total payment. We typical finance one free and clear property to purchased the next property. After you acquire 3-4 free and clear properties, this model allows you to quickly add additional rentals. This model is possible with SF or multi family since we use commercial loans.
We believe SF homes offer lower risk if not leveraged to heavy and purchased at or below market price. Also, the rents must be aligned with the family income of the local market. If family incomes are NOT rising at the same rate as rents, increased rents are not sustainable.
I agree with other comments that multi-family should offer higher returns and faster equity growth. However, it requires much more due diligence than I have time to commit while working in my career.
We have developed a business model for our area and the numbers are easy to predict without much effort or added risk. We are conservative investors and looking for long term income growth and not short term profits.
As I get closer to retirement age, I believe SF properties offer lower risk with our business model vs MF.
Also, In our area, their our many major MF construction projects ongoing which will soon place a major strain on MF rentals. I believe SF properties are not competing with that market and have lower risk to the current over building we see in many markets.
Wow that’s awesome model you have! Thanks for sharing
Originally posted by @Gary L Wallman:
Phillip,
Like you I am also a car dealer by day. I started buying real estate during the crash. It was a no brainer for me. Like buying 20 dollar bills for 10 bucks.
Indy, where you live, and the suburbs of Dayton where I live have a lot in common when it comes to real estate. Primarily the rate of return on SFR's. We are able to buy in decent areas (B, B-) and easily hit the one percent rule.
I picked up 85 SFR's during the crash and after and I'm still buying today (close on one tomorrow 65k all in 850.00 rent). I do have 35 or 40 multi doors. I find them harder to acquire, rent and manage. They can provide a slightly greater cash flow though, which can be important if you're leveraging.
IMO if you want to get rich with minimum stress continue on your path. If you want mega-rich, you'll probably need to go after the large Multi's. Bigger risk but bigger rewards.
Either way, good luck and happy hunting.
85 sfrs! Whoa. That’s impressive. I just like the single family model. It works well for me. Thanks for sharing
I only have multi-family but I am interested in picking up some SFRs. One of the advantages of MFR is that you can more quickly get to a place where you can do pretty large capital expenditures out of revenue reducing the need for huge (per unit) cash reserves. However, I would like some conventionally financed SFRs to use as "move up" properties for good tenants, for possible appreciation, and in order to have some properties that I could more easily sell off to raise funds-- since I have mostly financed my MFRs in groups with commercial loans.
@Jeff Mauerman That's a great question. I was wondering the same thing. It probably depends on the condition of the mechanicals (HVAC, plumbing, roof) and quality of rehab completed before tenants move in.
@Mark Fries That sounds great and reasonable but how long does a $10k rehab hold up? Do you even look at property that needs major repair? Thanks
@Mark Fries it sounds like your strategy is to find houses for under $30k, that don't need kitchen or bath work, already have newer windows, and you have a contact who can sell you AC units installed for less than the cost of refrigerant... And all of this in a C neighborhood... My concern here is that you are really investing in D- neighborhoods... A quick search for Jacksonville brings up some very cheap houses including many active listings under $20k.
Sounds like it is working for you so I guess that is all that matters. I caution inexperienced investors from investing like this, many can't afford the hardship if a mistake is made upon purchase.
Phillip. You need to do what you're comfortable with. I lean multifamily, but that doesn't mean it's right. There is $ to be found in all niches, and it would be unfortunate if we all aimed for the same target. You'll have different market dynamics to consider, as hopefully you can acquire your additional properties in a down market to ensure that solid equity, but I wouldn't suggest you need to "graduate" to a different class if that's what you feel comfortable doing.
Best luck
A quick MLS search confirmed that Jacksonville probably has a strong D/F area as there are many abandoned houses that can be picked up for under $20k. It sounds like you are purchasing in this price range but you are finding properties in better areas AND finding houses that do not need kitchens, baths, windows, etc. Sounds like you found a good niche market for yourself.
Being that C/D/F areas are somewhat subjective I would caution new investors who think these are normal numbers.
Originally posted by @Gary L Wallman:
Phillip,
Like you I am also a car dealer by day. I started buying real estate during the crash. It was a no brainer for me. Like buying 20 dollar bills for 10 bucks.
Indy, where you live, and the suburbs of Dayton where I live have a lot in common when it comes to real estate. Primarily the rate of return on SFR's. We are able to buy in decent areas (B, B-) and easily hit the one percent rule.
I picked up 85 SFR's during the crash and after and I'm still buying today (close on one tomorrow 65k all in 850.00 rent). I do have 35 or 40 multi doors. I find them harder to acquire, rent and manage. They can provide a slightly greater cash flow though, which can be important if you're leveraging.
IMO if you want to get rich with minimum stress continue on your path. If you want mega-rich, you'll probably need to go after the large Multi's. Bigger risk but bigger rewards.
Either way, good luck and happy hunting.
85 sfrs! Whoa. That’s impressive. I just like the single family model. It works well for me. Thanks for sjarun