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All Forum Posts by: Beth Haselhorst

Beth Haselhorst has started 1 posts and replied 2 times.

Thanks @Max Householder. Great suggestions on a few other factors to consider when evaluating rental property. I'll try to focus my efforts on a few neighborhoods that have reasonable numbers on paper and then drive around to check it out myself. I'm not really a cyclist. :)

Thanks again!

Hi. I am a new investor and I'm trying to develop a checklist for evaluating neighborhoods in the St. Louis market for rental property. I’m looking for something that will focus my efforts so I don’t get bogged down by ALL the properties and ALL the possible measures.

I’m talking to people too, but when sitting at my computer and a property comes up, or my realtor sends me properties, I’d like a quick way to determine if it’s a good market.

Based on a BiggerPockets podcast where the guest gave great tangible suggestions on where he goes to evaluate the market, I’ve found www.bestplaces.net:

On that site, I type in the zip code, and look for these four things:

  1. Population is increasing
  2. Median home price is over $100,000 (so it makes sense to rent vs. buy)
  3. Positive Job Growth
  4. Home appreciation is going up. (sometimes I forego this one because MOST areas seem to show a decrease, which I found surprising, but I KNOW there are good areas here).

But I have realtors suggesting areas for good rental property cash flow that don’t meet ANY of those requirements.

My financial goals with rental property is long-term and would like to implement the BRRRR strategy.

Any suggestions on what to look for? Otherwise, I find myself looking at EVERY area and putting numbers for EVERY property into the BiggerPockets calculator and probably wasting a LOT of time.

Thanks for any help!