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Updated over 5 years ago,

User Stats

21
Posts
10
Votes
Chad Matthews
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Philomath, OR
10
Votes |
21
Posts

Fix & Flip Bank Owned

Chad Matthews
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Philomath, OR
Posted

Investment Info:

Single-family residence fix & flip investment.

Purchase price: $294,000
Cash invested: $30,000
Sale price: $384,000

This was a bank owned property that we had to pay cash for. It was in pretty good shape and our plan was to do a few cosmetic upgrades. We offered 70% of the projected ARV and the bank countered. Plan was for new carpet / flooring, new paint, and a new fence for privacy in the backyard. Our hope was to be in for about 15K of repairs and sell for 399K. As happens, things took a little longer, we decided to add granite and new appliances, and costs grew closer to 30K.

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

This deal was close to home and was appealing because of its location.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

This was a bank owned auction property. I knew the value far better than the large national bank who was holding the note.

How did you finance this deal?

Financing was done through a partnership with an investor.

How did you add value to the deal?

We provided cosmetic fixes.

What was the outcome?

Successful sale after a longer than desired holding period.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

Find the balance between improving and sale price. If an improvement will just drive the price higher but not provide greater net cash in my pocket, it isn't worth it.
I won't be so "willing" and "nice" in taking contingent offers from buyers unless I have a sizable non-refundable bit of earnest money. If the buyer doesn't have skin in the game then they aren't "in the game".