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All Forum Posts by: Alex Bruzda

Alex Bruzda has started 1 posts and replied 3 times.

Post: How bad is too bad to renovate and rent?

Alex BruzdaPosted
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 0

The current owner told me the property is not condemned and that he was planning on either fixing it up himself or selling it soon. Is there a way I could check on the condemnation status myself? 

Post: How bad is too bad to renovate and rent?

Alex BruzdaPosted
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 0

Definitely all comes down the numbers. I would be willing to attempt a full gut if there were enough potential profit because I have a lot of family support in the area (my father does flips). 

My plan would definitely be to buy, hold and rent. My goal has always been to never* sell a property if possible. I would like to accumulate as many properties as possible. Also I think this property might be difficult to resell, but would definitely be rentable. The property is 2 bd, 1 bt and only like 550 sq/ft and on a strange lot, but in my experience, renters don't seem to care about those specific things as much. 

The last thing is funding the reno. I have the cash necessary to buy the place, but I don't have enough cash to renovate the place. Hopefully because it's small, and I would just be renting it, the renovation wouldn't cost too much.

Post: How bad is too bad to renovate and rent?

Alex BruzdaPosted
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 0

There is a property in my neighborhood that looks abandoned (the door is bolted shut, a front window is cracked, and it's overgrown) that I have been curious about for a while because I live in a higher end area of the city. I finally looked up the tax records and found out the owner is a private real estate investor who lives out of state now. I called him and asked what he knew about the property, like how bad is it, is it vacant, how long has it been vacant, what kind of work needs to be done, that kind of stuff. He also told me that he would be interested in selling the property if I was interested in buying it and fixing up. He hasn't told me what he wants for it yet because the property wasn't listed, and he wants some time to think about it.

So my question is, how bad is too bad? Like if a place needs floor repairs the deal is good, but if it needs roof and floor repairs it's not? Seems like if you can get it for the right price and it's not condemned that almost any place could be worth it. 

Details:

- This would be my first fixer, but I my family is very involved in real estate, so I'm not totally green.

- ARV Comps for this property are in the $500k-$600k range in my neighborhood.

- The guy bought the property in 2004 and it's been vacant for a couple years, but he has been checking in on it periodically.