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BRRRR - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat
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Updated 9 months ago on . Most recent reply

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Alyssa Teepen
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Cash out refinance clarification

Alyssa Teepen
Posted

I recently took out a HELOC on my primary mortgage and have used this to purchase a home for 32,000 with rehab cost of 150,000 and ARV of 220k. The goal, initially, was to sell this property, however we would really like to keep it to rent at this point. We are about 1 month away from completion and I need to finalize our next steps.

The problem is... I cannot wrap my head around the cash out refinance portion of this situation despite my tireless efforts. I have gone through scenario after scenario and feel like I am not getting accurate numbers to go off of. 

Please help me, in simple terms, understand the process. I know we will need a renter prior to doing a cash out refinance and we will have to determine the seasoning period of our lender, but going off of 6 months at this point for simplicity. Rents for single family home, 3 bed 1.5 bath in this area run around 1,00-1,400/month. Property tax around 200/month and Insurance 130/month.

Based on a Heloc at 182,000 when all is done my plan would be to do a cash out refi to pay this down/off and use remaining cash flow + W2 income to pay the rest off. Working off of the scenario that we would get 70% of our appraised value of 220K, our cash out would be 154,000. Correct? Would that just be a check or deposit in the bank that we can then use to pay down our Heloc? Then what would the loan amount on the home be at that point? 154,000 I take it? The remaining 66,000 remains as equity in the home. When then can this be accessed in the future?

Thank you for any help! 

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River Sava
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#2 BRRRR - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat Contributor
  • Lender
  • USA
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1,920
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River Sava
Pro Member
#2 BRRRR - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat Contributor
  • Lender
  • USA
Replied

Hi Alyssa - There is a lot of info out there on cash outs which can be very confusing!

If you're doing a dscr cash out refi, you're refinancing your mortgage to get cash from your home's equity while also considering your ability to cover your debts based on your income. AKA it is a way to access some of the money you've put into your home while also making sure you can still afford your mortgage payments and other debts.

You will need a renter in place as rental income is apart of the calculations when underwriting these loans in addition to the other factors you mentioned like monthly housing expenses (PITIA: principle, interest, taxes, insurance, assocaited fees ARV, debt outstanding. However, with a dscr cash out, your credit will come into play as well as leverage meaning that more info is needed to understand the cash out proceeds of your scenario.

Also, the timeline for these area about 30 days give or take and the proceeds must be used for a business purpose. I hope this helps, and more than happy to connect with you and answer further questions.

  • River Sava
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