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All Forum Posts by: Ellen Mitchell

Ellen Mitchell has started 3 posts and replied 10 times.

I am having the worst time finding the webinar for today

Help!

Post: Pocketbook Protection from tenant damage property

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5
Quote from @Tony Wilcox:

Something I always recommend my investor clients to do is require the tenant to carry renters insurance with you/or LLC listed as the additional insured. This way you are always alerted if policy is cancelled, and it would allow you to receive a check for a claim that they might have caused that you could claim under their liability. Renters insurance always comes with liability insurance that you can also require a minimum of.

So if the tenant has insurance, I could file a claim on that policy for damages caused by the tenant?

Post: Pocketbook Protection from tenant damage property

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5
Quote from @John Mocker:

Ellen,

Did you contact your insurance agent.  Why are they not covering the Vandalism?

It wasn't vandalism. It was animal damage. She had chickens under the house, and a multitude of animals inside. Urine and heavens knows what else. I had to replace all the subfloor and mitigate under the house. My agent said any damage had to be 'immediate' and animal damage is never covered.

Post: Pocketbook Protection from tenant damage property

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5

Is there any type of insurance available that covers tenant damage to a property? 

I recently had a tenant move, she created extensive damage to the property (about $40k in repairs so far). I know I can sue her for $5k, and will likely never see it. Yes, I will screen better, and I wanted to know if there was insurance that could help protect my pocketbook in the future.

Post: Things aren't going well. Any advice?

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5
Quote from @James Gillice:

Hello BP,

I bought my first rental property in early 2022, an out of state (KCMO) SFH. I bought from a turnkey company that is endorsed by BP. The home was not "turnkey" per say, but was sold by another investor through them (not sure the exact details, but this fact was disclosed beforehand). I got in before rates skyrocketed (4.25%). I used a HELOC on my personal residence for the down payment. Things went really well for the first year. Even with HELOC payment and maintenance costs, the cash was flowing and I was making several hundreds of dollars every month. I was planning repairs and upgrades while also paying down the HELOC in preparation to buy a second property. I though I had this figured out.

Then in early 2023 the repairs started increasing, including a major repair. A busted sewer line near the street (but not close enough to the street for the city to be responsible) cost me about 6K, plus maybe 3-4K in other repairs and maintenance around the same time (some elective, not mandatory. Like I said the cash was flowing). Plus I lost out on rent for over a month as the house was uninhabitable. I used up every bit of reserves and had to use the HELOC to make payments for a while. Now the tenant has moved (end of Nov) and I've just got the inspection report and repairs needed. The house has been pretty trashed, probably 12k in repairs.

The other side of this situation is the fact that since I bought the house, I've been laid off from work twice. I worked for a year in a just barely (not) enough to get by job. So things have been incredibly tight financially. I now have a new job that pays "enough" but this recent hit is making me re-consider my options going forward. Here are various ideas and factors that I'm considering...

1. Sell the home and cut my losses. Lose my 4% interest rate and search for another property. A year ago I could have sold and been debt free. Now I'm not going to get enough to pay it all off.

2. Keep the house but find a better property manager. Renters Warehouse is the manager that came with the house. They have been unsatisfactory but I don't have anything to compare to so I don't know if it's worth the effort to find a new one. Their repair processes take forever and they are horrible with communication. And theres about 10 points of contact so I never know which person I need to talk to to get something done. All information is second or third hand. They don't allow me to be as "hands off" as I'd like to be. Any recommendations in the Kansas City area?

3. Keep the house and try to find better vendors/quotes for the repairs. I've always gone with the PM recommendations because I really don't have time to do the research myself. But I've got to believe there are more competitive offers out there. Any recommendations in the Kansas City area?

4. Make the needed repairs as quoted, keep the same PM, and hope this bad patch is behind me. I'll be pushing the current limit of my HELOC (only 20k left) which will be bad if more emergencies come my way.

5. Send previous tenant to collections for back rent and repairs needed. Is this a complicated process? How much will it cost me up front? Will it even work?

In typing this out, I realize that I will need to seek better vendors and a new PM if I'm going to keep the property. So basically the question I have is...do I sell or keep the property at this point? Any suggestions or advice of any kind for this situation would be great.

Thanks in advance.

Hi James,

I'm sorry you're experiencing all of this. I am just finishing a $40k rehab to my rental property. I have self managed (not well clearly) the last 3 years, and have learned much through the rehab process. I don't believe this business is for the faint of heart! 

All I have for you is encouragement. If you can make it through this part, I think the rewards are great. And I understand the financial strain. Load up on good advisors, and breathe deep. You've got this!

Post: Document Checklist - Tenant Screening

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5

Hello!

New to BP and looking for a comprehensive checklist for screening new tenants. I have had a property manager in the past and took over management about 3 years ago. This is the first time screening a new tenant. I'm using Zillow for applications, so they give me criminal, eviction and credit score. I think I need a little more than just those items, like

*Paystubs

*Bank statements?

*Photo ID

*References - personal and rental

*Employment & Supervisor info


What else do y'all ask for?

Post: Financing - Mobile Home Rental

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5

I'm looking to take some equity out of my rental. Doublewide mobile home, perm foundation and own .19 lot.  

Paid for rehab after the last tenant with primary home HELOC and credit cards, so my credit score took a hit.

I want to payoff the rehab, and take an additional $125k to purchase new primary home. That would get me 3 of the 5 doors I want. Does anyone do that sort of lending?

Post: Boise, Idaho Investor Meetup

Ellen MitchellPosted
  • Boise, ID
  • Posts 10
  • Votes 5

Hello! 

I am in the early stages of becoming a rental investor. I plan to take the real estate licensing course in the next few month. I currently have 1 rental property with a goal to purchase 4 more in the next 6 years.

Looking forward to meeting people in the industry!

Ellen Mitchell