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Updated almost 9 years ago on . Most recent reply

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64
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Jeremy Hunsberger
  • Investor
  • Lancaster, Pa
13
Votes |
64
Posts

Investor from Pennsylvania

Jeremy Hunsberger
  • Investor
  • Lancaster, Pa
Posted

Hello all, Im a part-time investor looking for buy and hold properties. I currently own 13 units and counting. I do mostly buy and hold but will do a flip if the deal makes sense. My goal is to purchase 20+ units at a time and do real estate full time

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

920
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728
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Thomas Franklin
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Miami, FL
728
Votes |
920
Posts
Thomas Franklin
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Miami, FL
Replied

@Jeremy Hunsberger When it comes to determining my offer price, to acquire a distressed house, for flipping, I use the following formula to determine my Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO). This formula is the Profit Margin Formula that accounts, for 99.99%, of everything.

ARV – Desired Profit – Closing Costs to Buy – Repairs – 10% of Repairs – Holdings Costs – Concessions – Realtor Fees – Closing Costs to Sell = Your Offer (MAO or Maximum Allowable Offer).

ARV: After repaired value or what you think it will sell for once repaired.

Profit: This should be taken off the top first. Most people run their numbers to determine what their profit should be. That is backwards, you should use your profit to determine what your offer should be.

Closing Costs to Buy: What is it going to cost you to buy the property? If you are using hard money you need to budget for the points and fees as well as traditional third party closing fees.

Repairs: The money it is going to take you to rehab the property plus an extra 10% of estimated repair costs to account for unexpected repairs.

Holdings Costs: Here is where a lot of investors get tripped up. Start by determining an amount of time that you will hold the property, probably 4-6 months. Then add ALL costs related to holding the property (utility costs, insurance premiums, property taxes, loan payments, etc.).

Concessions: Concessions are what you give back to the buyer at closing. It could be for closing costs, unfinished repairs or something else. I typically subtract 3%, of the ARV.

Realtor Fees: What is the commission you are willing to pay your listing agent (unless you are the listing agent) and the buyer's agent. Utilize 7% of ARV.

Closing Costs to Sell: Title fees and other closing costs. You can budget around 4% of the sale price to cover these.

This is a conservative formula. If you come out ahead without Buyer Concessions, on budget, etc., this puts more money in your pocket, when you close at selling.

  • Thomas Franklin
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