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All Forum Posts by: Christopher Hughes

Christopher Hughes has started 4 posts and replied 16 times.

Joe,

That is something I noticed as well. Seems to be misleading but I am new to RE..

Post: Determing formua for positive cash flow

Christopher HughesPosted
  • Virginia Beach, VA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 5

Hi all,

New member here who is working on learning right now before I begin to make any investments down the road. The forums and podcast have been a great resource and I am hooked, trying to learn all I can. 

One thing I have noticed is that there seems to be a formula for those of us looking to pursue the buy & hold niche to determine if a property will have a positive cash flow. I am looking for some clarification on this formula so that I can begin to analyze properties and area to determine what would be a good investment decision. 

I've seen many say pulling $100+ out of a rental property is good, which I agree, and I've seen some say they are pulling $500 out of a property. This includes percentages for maintenance, vacancy, CAPEX, taxes? My question is, what all needs to be accounted for and what percentages etc?

Say for instance I am interested in properties in the $60-$80k range, with a 20% down payment. I've found properties in this range in my area that seem to rent for $1000-$1200. A mortgage in that range can fall in around $400 +/- depending on the total cost of the property. What else would you want to account for and deduct from the monthly rental income to come to the conclusion if it could be profitable? I find myself unable to see what may be a good move if I am unsure exactly what I need to make sure I account for. 

Post: Cash flow versus Cash on Cash

Christopher HughesPosted
  • Virginia Beach, VA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 5

Abdul,

New member here and not to sidetrack from the discussion here but when I see the discussions on "10% for maintenance, 10% CAPEX, 10% vacancy" etc. Is this meaning 10% of the overall rental price or is it talking 10% of the remainder of money after account for the mortgage and insurance? I am trying to figure out this formula I keep seeing people use. What all needs to be accounts for besides the items you listed (I would manage the property myself), and how are the percentages determined? Just rule of thumb?

Also, if you have a link to a good explanation of COC I would appreciate it!

Post: Introduction - Eager to learn!

Christopher HughesPosted
  • Virginia Beach, VA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 5

Brett, 

Thanks for the feedback. I look forward to learning as much as I can from the podcast, forums and any recommended books.

Chris 

Post: Introduction - Eager to learn!

Christopher HughesPosted
  • Virginia Beach, VA
  • Posts 16
  • Votes 5

Hi all,

I am a 29 y/o male with a young family (a 2 year old and 5 month old). I bought my first house which my family lives in almost 2 years ago. I utilized a VA loan since I am a veteran and the loan is roughly $228k with the house being valued at $233k currently.

I am very eager to learn about REI (assuming this means Real Estate Investing, I've seen it used on the forums among numerous other acronyms). Between the wife and I, we earn a respectable income, at least for our area and we would like to begin to use some of additional income for some investment opportunities once we finish off her school loans in 18 months. My goal is to rent out the current home, my current mortgage including PMI is $1,248 and the rents listed on Zillow for my house as well as most of the others in my neighborhood are $1,500 +/-. I have refinanced the loan under the VRRL (I believe is the term) so I shouldn't be tied to living in the house and should be able to rent it. With that said, I need to look into if I am eligible to use the VA loan again since I used it but then refinanced to VRRL. If so, then that may be an option for a $0 down loan.

I plan to begin listening to the podcast ASAP and I just purchased "The Book on Rental Property" by Brandon Turner as well. I live in Virginia Beach and would be interested in pursuing a buy & hold strategy to generate long term passive income for my family and ultimately long term financial freedom. 

I've ready tons of threads on the forums already, primarily in the success section to see what I can glean from it. 

One popular strategy seems to be Buy, Repair, Rent and Refinance, if I am getting that right. I do have some questions about this though since I am new to it all. 

- How do you handle the repairs if you aren't exactly a handyman yourself. Do you seek our a General Contractor to do the work and to help you determine what repairs need to be made? How do you handle the costs associated with this, do you have to have the money yourself or do you take out additional funding beyond the cost of the property to cover repair costs? 

- When you refinance, my understanding is that it can help get the rate down on the loan but also pull cash out against the value of the property to be used on another purchase. Does it ultimately end up increasing the amount owed as well? I would assume so, e.g. you have a $100k home loan, take a $30k refinance out for downpayment on another adventure, now you own $130k. 

- I also see people tend to use some sort of formula to determine if a rental will be cash flow position, where they factor in repairs, capex, management (i think to do that part myself), etc. What is this formula and what %'s are usually used apply against each factor you must consider and account for?

Any other recommendations based on my circumstances would be appreciated. I plan to attend TRIG in the near future to begin to learn from experienced investors so that i can be educated enough when the time comes that I can begin to make some moves and to try and build wealth through REI.

Chris

Congrats, I am surprised to see the number of improvements for $5,100. Is that number correct?