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All Forum Posts by: Chad Lundquist

Chad Lundquist has started 17 posts and replied 71 times.

Post: Basement apartment investment (Income Property)

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Dustin Street:

Good job! What a creative way to house hack, and get your foot in the investment door. 


Thanks Dustin, I agree. It was definitely a way to keep the house that we're living in and drastically reduce our living expenses. I think that by the time we've recouped what we put into the project (including adding a new patio and deck above the apartment living space) it should cover over 75% of our entire house payment (PITI). I would definitely recommend doing this if you have the means / suitable layout for it.

Post: Basement apartment investment (Income Property)

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Wyatt Seidel:

This is beautiful. Great work my friend! 


 Thanks Wyatt, we love the way it turned out. I'd do it again in a heartbeat!!

Post: Basement apartment investment (Income Property)

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Caleb Brown:

Nice!


 Thanks Caleb. I can only take credit for the work, my wife did an amazing job designing it.

Post: Basement apartment investment (Income Property)

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26

Investment Info:

Single-family residence buy & hold investment in Kansas City.

Purchase price: $368,000
Cash invested: $45,000

This is an interesting investment as it's an apartment added to our current home in our basement. We decided to move forward with adding the apartment last summer rather than selling our house which is what we were planning to do. We came up with a floor plan, budget and schedule and decided to move forward around the beginning of May, 2022. Currently we have two (2) traveling nurses living in the apartment and paying $1,600 / month which is covering 70% of our total house payment (P.I.T.I.).

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

I've been a big fan of the HGTV program Income Property starring Scott McGillivray for a long time and wanted to add an apartment to our previous house as well. We love the house, neighbors and neighborhood and all of our family lives out of town including our children so it made a lot of sense to add the income property / apartment to the basement.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

This was an area of our basement that we no longer used and already had a 3/4 bath and most of the kitchen as well as the new tile flooring in the kitchen, bathroom and living area so there wasn't alot of work to do. We just had to add a Stove and Dishwasher to the kitchen; a wall separating the living spaces; finish off the unfinished area to add the bedroom, office, walk-in-closet and laundry area; and add fireproofing / sound-proofing insulation in the ceiling and walls.

How did you finance this deal?

We used cash and credit cards to fund the work for this project and once we were finished we added a HELOC to the property to pay ourselves back and pay off the credit card.

How did you add value to the deal?

By adding this apartment to our basement we added approximately $100k to the value of our property besides the fact that we changed our effective house payment from $2,282 per month to $682 per month. Of course we need to pay off the HELOC, but after that's paid off we'll be in very good shape.

What was the outcome?

As stated above we currently have it rented out to two (2) traveling nurses for $1,600 / mth, but we are transitioning to a long-term renter when the lease is up.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

We were doing great on budget / schedule in the beginning, but as the project continued we got a little behind on the budget and a few months behind on the schedule. The schedule was more of a factor of not knowing whether or not we would have it as a short-term or long-term rental. We decided on short-term so we ended up furnishing the apartment. I think that we would have a better idea of how to proceed on another one of these in the future.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

We found a great drywaller (Phillip Brumlow) and we worked with Country Club Bank for the HELOC. We've worked with them in the past to purchase our 6 unit apartment back in 2015 and they were great to work with again.

Post: How do you collect rent?

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Carini Rochester:
Quote from @Chad Lundquist:

I use Tenant Cloud and couldn't be happier with them. I use this platform for much more than just rent collection as well (maintenance requests, reminders, document storage, listings, etc). Very affordable and their customer service is top-notch. Highly recommend!

What plan are you purchasing (how much/month are you paying?)

 Carini, I use the Starter plan and I'm billed $144 / year. It gives me everything that I need for my five (5) properties.

Post: How do you collect rent?

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26

I use Tenant Cloud and couldn't be happier with them. I use this platform for much more than just rent collection as well (maintenance requests, reminders, document storage, listings, etc). Very affordable and their customer service is top-notch. Highly recommend!

Post: Looking for a deck builder

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26

Hey BP family, I'm looking for someone that builds decks at a fair rate. I need one built (14'-0" x 30'-0" - 10'-0" off the ground) for one of my properties and I'm having a hard time finding someone in the North Kansas City (Liberty) area. If you build decks or have any recommendations I would really appreciate it.

Thanks,

Chad

Post: Some tenants leaving & the remaining wants to bring new tenant in

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Mary Smith:

@Chad Lundquist This is honestly a tricky scenario. Either the remaining roommate finds someone to take over the entire lease, meaning that they find the 4th roommate too or then you do not rent to them. I honestly do not think it's going to be easy, or worth the time and effort to find an individual who would want to stay with a group of 3 friends. Either they find the 4th roommate or then best case you rent to a family.


 Thanks for the advise Mary. I know, it is a tricky situation and definitely a learning opportunity for future reference.

Post: Some tenants leaving & the remaining wants to bring new tenant in

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Nathan Gesner:
Quote from @Chad Lundquist:
Do you know this is a Fair Housing violation and could result in some serious fines or a lawsuit? You can't discriminate against children. You can create an occupancy limit based on the number of bedrooms, square footage, or other factors, but it needs to be reasonable and justifiable. My rule is generally two people per bedroom, plus one. That would limit you to seven people on a three bedroom unit. If the bedrooms are really small, you may chop that number down. If you have an office or other bonus space that could double as sleeping area, then you may need to increase your occupancy. Whatever you decide on, add it to your marketing so everyone is aware and it's applied equally to everyone.

I would argue a family with six kids is lower risk than four young people pooling their money.

 Also the "main" tenant, the one that's staying could easily afford it by himself so it's not like it's a bunch of kids pooling their money together.

Post: Some tenants leaving & the remaining wants to bring new tenant in

Chad Lundquist
Posted
  • Investor
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 26
Quote from @Nathan Gesner:
Quote from @Chad Lundquist:
Do you know this is a Fair Housing violation and could result in some serious fines or a lawsuit? You can't discriminate against children. You can create an occupancy limit based on the number of bedrooms, square footage, or other factors, but it needs to be reasonable and justifiable. My rule is generally two people per bedroom, plus one. That would limit you to seven people on a three bedroom unit. If the bedrooms are really small, you may chop that number down. If you have an office or other bonus space that could double as sleeping area, then you may need to increase your occupancy. Whatever you decide on, add it to your marketing so everyone is aware and it's applied equally to everyone.

I would argue a family with six kids is lower risk than four young people pooling their money.

 I thought about this Nathan, but I also rented to the first that filled out the application and they did have great credit.