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Updated over 5 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Eric Gebhardt
  • Milwaukee, WI
13
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Single family rentals in Milwaukee?

Eric Gebhardt
  • Milwaukee, WI
Posted

Hi all, I am a newbie with a house in Bayview. I have another property I am interested in moving into and renovating and or purchasing and renting as a single family rental. I would also like to keep my house and rent it out.

Both houses are three bedroom and 1.5 bath. Garage 1,800 sf. generally what is a good range to put in my proforma for rents?

Secondly is it harder to rent out single family homes?

Lastly any pro tips?

THANKS!

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Marcus Auerbach
#5 Market Trends & Data Contributor
  • Investor and Real Estate Agent
  • Milwaukee - Mequon, WI
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Marcus Auerbach
#5 Market Trends & Data Contributor
  • Investor and Real Estate Agent
  • Milwaukee - Mequon, WI
Replied

@Eric Gebhardt we have made the switch to SF almost ten years ago and I have never looked back - easy to rent, easy to manage, no tenant to tenant conflicts etc.

Rents depend very much on the location (especially in Bayview like Matt said) the school district and the level of condition and finishes. When you look at properties around the median price point you have on the lower side what I call "functional tenants" - looking for the best deal that meets their functional requirements - number of bedrooms, yard, parking, commute. They are budget minded and will accept dated finishes. Rents are typically between $1100 and $1400 depending on neighborhood and property size if I may generalize that across Milwaukee. 

We target what I call "lifestyle tenants" who want an open concept floorplan, a finished basement, modern lighting, great outdoor space and basically new everything - and are willing to pay for it. We rent mostly to families, so school district plays a big role as well. Our rents range from $1,400 to $2,200, with an average around $1,550.

There is actually a rental market over $2,000 in Milwaukee, but with a smaller tenant pool. And then you have your lux segemnt $3,000 to $5,000 (probably less then 1% or the market) and ultra lux over $5,000 (extreme outliers). As you go up in range your turnover and vacancy times increase quickly and you are dealing with very high expectations. Commercially it is obviously better to stay close to the median, however there are investors who will disagree with me and focus on lux - typically new developments.

Here is a pro-tip. Generally speaking I would say MF cashflow a little better out of the gate, SF are a little stronger on the equity side. Of course we are no where near a 2% rent to value ratio - typically a little under 1% - but we have a much better rent to capex ratio: a new furnace will cost exactly the same, no matter if your rent is $600 or $1600.

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