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Updated about 5 hours ago on . Most recent reply

Should I sell my house, or rent it out?
Hi BP community,
I bought this house in Southwest Colorado for 365k in 2017. Put about 200k in renovations over the years. Refinanced at 3.25% in 2020 and now owe 405k. I could sell for about 825-850k right now. Not sure if it makes more sense to rent it out and be happy with the $1,000/mo in cashflow, or sell and buy better cashflow rentals with the 375k net proceeds? When I use the BP calculators is comes out with about 6-7% Cap Rate and about the same for Cash on Cash return. From what I understand, those numbers are not that great... Would love some help from more experienced investors to help me decide what to do! I will be moving to a different area and buying another property there. My 5-year goal is to invest in cashflowing properties and replace my 120k income.
Thank you!



Most Popular Reply

First, congrats on your great situation you find yourself in.
I'd say if you have no real plan for the equity, then leave it in the house for now. That's a large chunk of money to take out of a property. Were you looking to sink that into one project? Multiple? Looking to park it for 12%?
You are at a great rate on your mortgage and you'll make 1k per month while you come up with a solid plan. That equity in the house is a great safety net for you and it provides you access to cash. I'd guard that with my life. If it was me, I'd be looking to set up channels that are bringing me cash deals that are clearly 20% - 30% off market price. I'd set myself up to shop for cash buys where the big wholesalers, private dealers, Professional BRRRR investors shop. where investors are buying for 200k, you are buying for 150k.
If it needs rehab you can go to a lender right away and they will put you in a bridge loan program which will cash you out of the house at 80%/85% and provide rehab funds. If it does not need work, hold for 6 months and DSCR out into a 30yr. Either way, you ensure you are buying under market and you are maximizing your spread. Anyone with the liquidity to invest this way, should be doing so.