BRRRR - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat
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Updated over 3 years ago on . Most recent reply
Build to rent - too good to be true?
Hi BP! I've done four BRRR deals so far and recently hooked up with a builder and am looking seriously into small scale build-to-rent. Honestly it could be build-to-rent or build to sell, but I'm sticking with more conservative build-to-rent numbers in case something unforeseen happens with the market.
Would appreciate if I can get some feedback on my estimated return - I'm getting a little over 25% cash-on-cash returns after units are rented and refinanced but this feels too good to be true.
I realize there are many other intricacies associated with working capital, loan draws, time value of money, appraised values, etc... but just scoping at this point and trying to get reasonable numbers to start with
Inputs/Assumptions:
- 19,000 sq ft corner lot for ~$120,000 in Houston - subdivide into 4 lots at 4,750 sq ft each. No HOA restrictions
- $80/sq ft SFH build cost for 1700 sq ft house
- Property tax rate at 3%, insurance roughly 1%, property management at $125/month
Calculation:
- (Annual Rent - taxes - insurance - prop mgmt) / ((build + land cost) * 30% left in properties after refinance)
Any comments are appreciated!
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@Andrew Q. the $80/SF build cost seems incredibly low to me. I have a couple of new builds going on, and I'm significantly higher than that on both. Neither is a high end build either. If that's based on a quote from a contractor, I would suggest digging into it to see what he is leaving out of the quote. I dealt with this on one of my projects, where the contractor gave me an incredibly low $/SF like that, but left out a ton of line items and wasn't able to stick to budgeted numbers on several of the ones he did include. It turned out he was completely broke, so couldn't cover the shortfall, despite having a guaranteed price contract. Feel free to PM me, if you'd like to know who that contractor is, just in case he's made his way to Houston. I'm sure there are plenty out there doing the same thing though. If it were me, I would make sure the deal pencils out at $140/SF. I think you can do a little better than that, but not a ton. Of course, Houston is a bit different than San Antonio, but I can't imagine it's that far off.
- Joseph Cacciapaglia
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- (210) 940-4284