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All Forum Posts by: Aly W.

Aly W. has started 42 posts and replied 2130 times.

Post: Gatlinburg Cabin Investments...

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

My friend says that because the area is booming with AirBnB's, many cleaners simply take on too many cabins. I'm considering going down there for a visit next month to scout it out. My husband and I own long term rentals in Florida, and are considering expanding into STRs. But the cleaning issue has me worried - we live in NJ.

Post: Gatlinburg Cabin Investments...

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

@Jenn Rees, congratulations! I have a friend who just bought her 2nd cabin there. What is your average daily rent going to be? My friend's biggest challenge was finding reliable cleaning people. She says they often don't show up. She and her boyfriend are handling that themselves for now. 

Post: Fix & Flip Completed, keep it rolling!

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

Great job! Where in Ocean County?

Post: Rentals in Gatlinburg Tennessee

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

Very interested in this market, as a friend recently purchased a cabin and renovated it in time for June rentals. She's doing very well with AirBnB. As others have said, the market is hot and properties are gone in a day. Still interested in learning more about this, from my friend and others. My husband and I have been invested in south Florida for almost 10 years (condos), but the recent regulations from condo boards are severely limiting additional opportunities. Time to look elsewhere. I appreciate all the info on this thread!

Post: Tenant Applicants say the dumbest things

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

Yup, canned response for those inquiries 

Post: Tenant Applicants say the dumbest things

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

99% of contacts don't read the ad - I can't count how many people have actually asked how many bedrooms and bathrooms there are, and what the rent is!!

Post: Trenton, NJ

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

@Nye Taylor, youre very welcome! My husband and I live an hour from Trenton and we both work, so it's not a place we can handle without the handyman we had. We do know other support people in town, but he was trustworthy and exceptional, and that is hard to find. We also have rentals in Florida, and again, we have a great support system there. It's critical. Your market sounds like a very good place, since you know it and are local to it. 

Trenton, like any city, has a lot of large-scale investors, and they have the systems in place to run things efficiently and cost effectively. With one or two properties, if there is one that's vacant or has been trashed, it's a very big hit to the individual investor.

Post: Trenton, NJ

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

All true about Trenton. We bought our first rental property in '08 for $60K, when the market was crashing. It seemed a great deal since the previous investor had paid about $80K. It was a 4/1.5 row house, basement, yard, rented for $1000 a month for most of the 10 years we had it. 

Our first tenant was an education in just about every way. Section 8 sounds like easy money, but it's not, same with TRA/TANF. After our 3rd disaster with those programs, we rented to those with jobs. Our 2nd property was a 3/2 rowhouse, paid about $55K for it, rented mostly for $900 a month for the 10 years we had it. Sold them last year in the low $40s. At least the mortgages had been paid down enough to walk away with money, and they had cash flowed well most of the time - minus vacancies, damage and evictions.

Late fees sound great in theory. Our experience was that once a tenant got behind on the rent, late fees only added up to an eviction. Many people, and not only in Trenton, don't have enough savings to sustain a job loss for very long. If they don't/can't/won't pay, file the eviction immediately. Sometimes they can get help through Social Services or Catholic Charities, but those organizations are also strapped for cash. 

We had an excellent attorney in Trenton, who does most evictions there. Have an attorney write your lease in Trenton, since they'll be handling the eviction - $300 (at the time), 6 weeks, $100 for the sheriff, and done. Evictions for non-payment are easy. For anything else, plan on more time and money.

Things may have changed, but you'll need a landlord license and every 2 years, a chimney/boiler inspection. The city loves to send violation notices for overgrown yards, whether they get the address right or not. We'd gotten quite a few of them over the years, for the vacant properties on either sides of ours. You'll spend quite a bit of time on the phone straightening that out. No matter if your lease says the tenant must maintain the yard, plan on paying for lawn care and extermination.

Water/sewer is lienable...if your tenant doesn't pay the bill, you'll have to or the city will put a lien on the property. If the bill is in your name and you plan on charging the tenant, great - but if they don't pay, you cannot shut it off. You'll have to evict. If it's in their name and they don't pay it, the city could take months before they shut it off...and at that point, the tenant will likely abandon the property, and you'll be stuck with the bills.

Insurance and taxes are high. If the property is vacant for more than 60 days, the insurance company can, and likely will, cancel the policy. They will not insure what they consider a vacant house. And not too many companies will insure in Trenton, and lack of competition keeps the rates high. Maybe they won't notice the house is empty - maybe they will.

We were ignorant about a lot of things as first time landlords. Trenton was  great education. Pricey at times and extremely stressful at other times, but we don't regret it. Just don't expect to sit around counting easy money. You'll work for it - or pay a management company to work it for you.

And keep in mind that almost all pets in Trenton are pit bulls. 

Post: Trenton, NJ

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

@Natalie Schanne, you are correct. However, our two long term tenants both decided to move within 2 months of each other. Our handyman had a stroke, and was no longer available to show or repair the properties. A vacant property in Trenton is a target - we had the pipes stolen from one of the houses when it was vacant between tenants years ago.

Finding decent tenants can take a couple of months, and again, a vacant house is a major issue. Securing the houses costs money, and what potential tenant wants to see boarded up windows? 

The property taxes are high. We had appealed them a few years ago and won, but then of course the city raised the tax rate. Our last tenants were great, but in that area, most if not all tenants are living one flat tire away from financial disaster. Although they had jobs, we never raised the rent. We never wanted them to leave, actually. 

They took good care of the properties, unlike most of the previous tenants. When they gave their notice, one after the other, we decided it was  good time to sell. My husband and have been investing in FL for years now, and since we plan to live there eventually, it was the right time to divest ourselves of the Trenton properties. 

Post: Trenton, NJ

Aly W.
Posted
  • Investor
  • Middletown, NJ
  • Posts 2,195
  • Votes 1,027

My husband and I owned 2 properties in Trenton for 10 years. We self-managed. We had a good handyman,  plumber and attorney, and that was all we needed. The handyman showed the properties to prospective tenants and managed repairs, along with the plumber. The attorney handled evictions, and I managed the tenants/finances. It can be done with a good team. I agree that one or two properties doesn't justify paying a PM company.