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All Forum Posts by: Austin B.

Austin B. has started 9 posts and replied 23 times.

Post: Crazy idea -- is it stupid?

Austin B.Posted
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 32

Hi all,

So I am new here. Love real estate & land. Always browsing Realtor.com just for the heck of it. I want to get into REI but I haven't been sure where to begin. Was considering house hacks but then I got laid off...so maybe not right now.

Anyway, I had a crazy idea that might actually work. Assuming I find some income in the meantime, that is. I currently own a house in Utah. Thanks to the market, this house has a sizable amount of equity in it and I've been here almost 2 years. I know this house is not the long-term place for me. I have a good roommate who I would like to keep.

I'm getting into competitive pistol shooting (USPSA). It's pretty popular here in Utah, along will all other shooting sports. The laws are very friendly to shooters. There is a club in Salt Lake City and near St. George. My idea was to purchase a parcel of land with a house on it in a more rural area -- not middle of nowhere but certainly more rural than here -- and build a shooting range on the property. I would then make it publicly available for a fee and start a Central Utah pistol shooters club. I suspect that such an enterprise could be profitable in the areas I am looking, although I do not know anything about the profitability of a shooting range so it's really a shot in the dark. This all assumes, of course, I do it legally and don't tick off the neighbors. I am thinking of minimum 10 acres.

Anyway, just curious as to what people's thoughts are on this endeavor. Thank you.

Originally posted by @Eric James:

With all due respect, with that attitude you shouldn't be a landlord. You'll end up losing money. 

 Ok, please forgive my naivety. As a new user, could you explain this statement a little more? Thank you.

Hello, I am new here. I currently own a single family home on a 1/2 acre lot in Utah. I was considering selling my house outright, but I have not lived in it for the complete two years, which means $$$ to IRS, so not fun.

A family came to me wanting to do a rent-to-own on my house. I'm very nervous about that since I know you have to fix the sale price upfront. I am considering a straight rental to them for the time. They are very persistent and tell me how much they love the house and it would be the perfect place to raise their family. I'm sympathetic to their needs, but I need to go into this with both eyes open, if I choose this route.

I'm a 31-year-old single man and have a friend who is my roommate. We'd likely still be roommates wherever we end up. I make $140k / year as a software engineer but have almost no cash thanks to my spending habits. If I rented my house to this family, I would need to set the rent high enough to cover my own expenses because I will need to rent another place to live. My mortgage is $1488 / month and yes, that does include PMI.


I wanted to get some opinions. I would love the increased cashflow. I want to get into real estate eventually. I could pay off all my non-mortgage debts and move into investing more quickly. However, there are a number of risks involved. I am not sure which route to pursue at this point in time. A number of my family members think this is a stupid idea; granted, they're all in lots of debt and have no RE investments. My main goals are this:

1) Increase income (cashflow)
2) Live somewhere I don't hate
3) Have a garage so I can store my bikes (big road cyclist here) and organ (I'm an organist and have a couple organ projects)