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Is the 65% of ARV rule Definite?
Hello my real estate family,
Is the "65% of ARV" rule engraved in stone? Should I not waste my time on a seller or "motivated seller" that is just not budging on the extra 10-20k I need to make the property meet the 65% of ARV? Should I not have them sign?
I would just like to know how serious these numbers are to most cash investors.
Any inputs or opinions welcome!
Wow, thank's a lot Devan,
You've definitely answered my question in full!
@Neil J.Ok I'm going to try to knock 2 birds with 1 stone....Ready? Let's go....
No, nothing is ever engraved in stone when it comes to Real Estate Investing.
As a wholesaler, you main position is to get sellers under contract at a discount, and enough where you can make your money, the buyer makes a handsome profit, and your seller get what they want.
However, if a seller is not motivated...then guess what my friend?...yes your guest it...they are not motivated.
You have some buyers that will buy at 80% max, some at 70% max, so where does that leave you? It leaves you at having buyers that meet certain price points.
For me, and this is just how my business model is...is that I have buyers with ROI/ARV price points and/or profit margins.
I.e. for the wholesale side of my REI business, because I see you are a wholesaler - my buyers want 40k- 50k profit in one part of the city, and 85k - 100k profit in the next... and That's PROFIT.
You will find that dollars out way %'s any day!
So here is what most wholesalers miss out on that makes some wholesalers like me stand out.
Most buyers have no problem letting you make your money. You can have a 20k assignment deal, as long as, the profit margin is good for your investor buyer.
A lot of Wholesalers you will see out there will print this in a deal... I see it all the time...and I will look something like this: Don't do this... learn early!
ARV: 100K
Rehab: 15k
Wholesale: 65k (Assignment fee 5k)
Profit: 20k
This is the furthest from the truth....
Your deal should include:
ARV
Rehab cost - Tell what the cost is - Roof, kitchen, floors etc
Real estate Agent Fees from the Flip Sale
Monthly Holding cost
Closing cost ( from the Purchase Closing Cost/ and from the Flip sale)
After all this is my Profit
I hope this helped.
Way to answer...
Originally posted by @Neil J.:
Hello my real estate family,
Is the "65% of ARV" rule engraved in stone? Should I not waste my time on a seller or "motivated seller" that is just not budging on the extra 10-20k I need to make the property meet the 65% of ARV? Should I not have them sign?
I would just like to know how serious these numbers are to most cash investors.
Any inputs or opinions welcome!
You need to talk to cash buyers and other buyers and find out what they want. As a wholesaler, you are getting people what they want.
Also, I have gone as high as $20 k EArnedt money in Seattle (Prices average around $500 k) if I want to lock down a great deal. In comparison, I may go $100 if it's a marginal deal like 15% below market value.
Finally, depends what buyers you have and the market. I have a "realtors real estate team as well and we have many retail buyers. The issue with wholesaling to retail buyers is that you can't get traditional financing these days on an assignment contract. So what I do is I take a 6% real estate commission instead of the wholesale fee and do it like any other FSBO transaction (not a pocket listing which we can't do in Seattle as a realtor).