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Updated over 6 years ago on . Most recent reply
![Abi Wegman's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/478911/1694665073-avatar-abiw.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/cover=128x128&v=2)
How to make low-rent properties cash flow?
Most of the expense assumptions I use are based on rent. For example, I budget 10% of rental income for PM, 10% for vacancy, and 10% for capex/maintenance. Then there are fixed costs: I generally budget $700/yr for insurance, and $200/mo for water+sewer as it must be paid by the owner (I'm looking in Cleveland, OH).
Given that I have fixed monthly costs of $258 (insurance + water/sewer), and 30% of my income will go to variable costs (I haven't even touched on property taxes, which runs ~10% to rental income in my analyses), how can you ever cash flow on a property unless it has disproportionately high rent?
Let's look at an example:
Price: $20,000
Rent: $450/mo
Sweet! 2% rule passed!
But now I have $45/mo for PM, $45/mo for vacancy, $45/mo for capex, $258/mo for insurance & water/sewer, and maybe $40/mo for property taxes...and now I'm looking at monthly expenses of $433/mo, which leaves me with $17/mo positive cash flow. There goes any hopes of getting a mortgage! It also doesn't leave a lot of room for error.
Now, I understand that Vacancy and Capex/Maintenance are not true monthly costs, but a $1,000 water heater in Year 3 is what I'm planning for, right?
So... please help me understand how this works. Are my expense assumptions too high? What am I missing here?
Most Popular Reply
![Aaron K.'s profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/349588/1621445918-avatar-aaronklatt.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/crop=2448x2448@407x0/cover=128x128&v=2)
I think the problem is in the insurance, you are paying $700 to insure $20,000 worth of property. Is it state law that water and sewer be paid by the owner? If not that is a cost to pass along.