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All Forum Posts by: Cody Dastrup

Cody Dastrup has started 4 posts and replied 20 times.

@Mark Brogan 21st century is so far my best option. I reached out yesterday and was told 10 year - 6.9% interest - 20% down. I don't HATE this, but 10 year term is short. $2700 payment on a 200k loan is a little heavy and will make it hard to cashflow. Looking to find something that is higher interest and longer terms (21st Century isn't flexible at all). I was told Mountain American Credit Union out of Utah may lend on this. Will be trying them next!

Background: I paid $370k for a 4bdr 2 ba in April of 2021 and got THE last short-term rental permit in the city. My mortgage is 1,700 per month and YOY I just did 54k (May 21' to May 22') in total revenue. My home is now worth $500k+ as real property and with the value added by the STR permit, probably worth $600k+ based on comps and my local realtor(great small market+highly regulated by city).

A for sale by owner just came up that really interests me. Very nice 900 sqft single-wide trailer on .15 acres that also has a STR permit that is transferable to the new owner. My first thought was, dang, it's a trailer. Then I got the P&L sheet from the current owner and it is doing 37k between Airbnb and VRBO! It is listed at $265k. Numbers all work out. The question I have is, how would you finance this? Any chance this appraises/will the appraisal take into account their previous rental income? 

Would love some advice from the community as this will only be my 2nd STR purchase! 

Quote from @Joshua Strickland:

@Philip Mullinax I love Myrtle, but was blown away by PCB. The beach is much nicer in my opinion, water is actually clear, and not even close to the amount of condos/hotels that Myrtle has. I can see a lot growth in the future for the panhandle. (Fingers crossed) 
With the software and tools that @Daniel Denning refers to for managing properties from afar (I bet we use some of the same apps), it makes for a pretty streamlined process to manage out of state.


 What is PCB? Sorry, new to the area 

@Deonte Brown thanks for the offer. If you have any info already compiled that you'd be willing to share, I'd love to check it out. After talking with a few area experts, I am exploring the option of doing a partnership and purchasing a house ($500-$650k range) without HOA and with a greater upside for appreciation in value. As of now, I am refining my strategy and will re-post once I know what I am looking for.

Does anyone know of any condo/townhome communities that are short term rental friendly (HOA's that allow it)?

I know Maya Condominiums are an example of a complex that allows it. Looking to stay close to Old Town Scottsdale and/or Scottsdale Fashion place. 

Originally posted by @Michael Baum:

Hey @Cody Dastrup, welcome to the forum! I have looked into modular home building for lots in north Idaho. Most people hear modular home and they think single wide mobile. So much mis-information on these.

What I would do is look at what various modular builders offer for financing themselves. For example:

https://lpratthomes.com/about-...

I have no affiliation with Pratt, but they have some nice designs that would do pretty well.

Does that look like a mobile home? That is one of their models and offers some mods. Like a massive porch with timber details etc.

Personally I think that with the costs of housing continuing to rise, modular homes built in a controlled factory and assembled on site will be the wave of the future. They just need to get by the mobile home stigma.

Just reached out to them and unfortunately they only ship tiny homes up to the area I want. She gave me a few referrals though. Champion Homes, DeerValley, and Sunshine. Will reach out to them 

Originally posted by @Michael Baum:

Hey @Cody Dastrup, welcome to the forum! I have looked into modular home building for lots in north Idaho. Most people hear modular home and they think single wide mobile. So much mis-information on these.

What I would do is look at what various modular builders offer for financing themselves. For example:

https://lpratthomes.com/about-...

I have no affiliation with Pratt, but they have some nice designs that would do pretty well.

Does that look like a mobile home? That is one of their models and offers some mods. Like a massive porch with timber details etc.

Personally I think that with the costs of housing continuing to rise, modular homes built in a controlled factory and assembled on site will be the wave of the future. They just need to get by the mobile home stigma.

 This is fantastic. Thanks so much, Michael!

@Luke Carl sorry, I was a bit confusing in my explanation. There are 0 active real estate listings "for sale" under $350k. Airdna shows some pretty favorable rentability scores/has 500+ active listings in the town w/ 52% occupancy. The market seems prime, but the barrier ($$$) to entry keeps new investors out.

Would love to learn more about this property. I have been looking in the area and would love to know what your experience has been 

THE QUESTION (s): Is there a workaround to financing a prefab as an investment property (short term rental) through a traditional lender (example https://factoryhomesoutlet.com...)? If not, is there a modular builder that is affordable and has cabin-style options? 

If you're interested in my story, here is what I am trying to do... 

Hey Everyone,

This is my first post and I am brand new to the Bigger Pockets network/world of real estate investing. I will preface what I am about to post first by saying that I have access to quite a bit of private capital and a great relationship with a lender but that I want to do this the "right way" as I am looking to scale this and help others that I care about building wealth.

The "Bad": I've identified multiple markets that have large barriers to entry including a limited supply of homes on market, significantly inflated housing prices. Markets are long-distance from a major city (lack of contractors, crew, supplies, etc.). The high level "problem" is that to buy into these markets would cost way too much and eat into revenue significantly.

Example: A cabin town in Montana that is within 20 min of Yellowstone, with 0 active listings sub $350k. 2 bed, 2 bath 1500 square foot cabin listed for $475k (.8 acres).  

The "Good": Because these markets have such large barriers to entry, there is little competition. Very few "investors" in area. No major hotels/Mdu's. Anyone buying an investment property is paying well over normal market value, thus increasing $ on nightly rental market. High demand/low supply. The land is cheap and always for sale.

Example: .62 Acre lot available for 65k currently

Opportunity: Building is too expensive and time-consuming based on a lack of supplies/labor in area. I'd like to purchase a plot of land (65k), pour a foundation (15-20k), and place a modular/prefab home on the property. The issue with prefab homes is that the bank is telling me that I cannot take out an investment loan on the property and that it would have to be listed as my primary residence. I asked about a modular home and have been told that a modular WOULD NOT be considered prefab, and that I could do a modular. Problem is that the modulars that I am finding are all "environmental companies" that are selling a product that is overpriced and frankly ridiculous options for what I am doing. (would cost the same as building).