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All Forum Posts by: Gaetano Ciambriello

Gaetano Ciambriello has started 16 posts and replied 265 times.

Quote from @Jonathan Bock:

@Matthew Constantini

AI prompt says Philly is landlord friendly?  The machine has no emotion and no clue 


 Too funny. AI is a big fan of Kensington

DSCR is a no-income verification loan. As long as the projected rental income is greater than your total PITI payment, the property will qualify. Interest rates will be 7.5 - 9%~

HELOCs on an investment property typically come at a higher interest rate (13-15%~). The benefit is you do not have to pull on the $$ right away and payments are interest only.

A conventional cash-out refinance could work if you can show income and there is no pre-payment penalty unlike a DSCR loan.

Post: Furnished college rentals

Gaetano CiambrielloPosted
  • Lender
  • Posts 277
  • Votes 150

I invest in student housing and we do fully furnished rentals. Happy to answer any questions you have on the business.

Here are a couple photos:

https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/48/topics/1187121-stude...

I think it is a great business to be in. I created a post with some PROs and CONs on the business. Happy to answer any questions and help in any way!

https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/48/topics/1187121-stude...

Post: Student Housing PROs and CONs

Gaetano CiambrielloPosted
  • Lender
  • Posts 277
  • Votes 150

Here is another great thread on student rentals, with similar (but not 100%) experiences to ours.

https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/52/topics/491641-nearin...

Post: Student Housing PROs and CONs

Gaetano CiambrielloPosted
  • Lender
  • Posts 277
  • Votes 150

I have been investing in student housing for over four years now. I have a partnership with my brother-in-law and brother. We have learned quite a bit during that time and have had some wins and losses (learns). Here are some reasons you might want to invest in student rentals and a few challenges to keep in mind that you will need to overcome!

We currently operate 31 units in Connecticut. The goal is to keep buying in our market. Down the road we will look at other schools and opportunities.

I am happy to answer any questions you have on the asset class!

Why I Love Student Housing

Rent Premium - Students will typically pay 40-50% more in rental income than market rate housing. Parents typically foot the bill, so students are not as price sensitive.

    “Guaranteed” Rent - Parents will guarantee every single lease we sign. If we get 4 students on a lease, we also have one parent for each student. That is a total of 8 people on the lease. I know other student rental investors that do not require guarantors because of the additional administrative work and they say that the social pressure of not paying rent is enough insurance.

      Low Vacancy - LOCATION is everything with student rentals. They want to live near the campus, bars, wherever the action is! If you buy in the best locations, you will never have to worry about your house being vacant. I see many first time investors make the mistake of buying in a college town, but not where the students want to live.

        Business Sprints - You work like a lion in this business. Lots of sprinting and longer periods where there is minimal activity.

        1. Leasing season is 2.5 months of non-stop tenant inquiries and requests. If you do not rent during the “leasing season” you may be in for some trouble.
        2. Tenants turnover the same time every year. During that two week period, you are jamming non-stop. Inspections, renovations and touch-ups, and then cleanings to get the property ready for the next group.

        Student Housing Challenges

        Yearly Turnover - Every year you have tenant turnover. Some schools will allow underclassmen off campus, some won’t. Depending on who can live off campus will determine if your turnover will be yearly.

          Management Intensive - You are not dealing with one family, but four students in a house. They move in with their parents. That is now 12 people inspecting the house. Once the four students are in the house, you will hear from the girls often with maintenance requests. You need to have a streamlined process to deal with inbound requests. There will be many.

            Neighbors - You are not going to be a fan around town when you rent to college students. Make sure to introduce yourself, let them know they can reach out should they ever have a problem and let your students know they must be respectful. I recommend students introduce themselves to neighbors when moving in. Bonus points for bringing cookies or brownies.

            Decision Makers - You are dealing with 12 people when leasing a home vs. one person for a regular home. You have four students and eight parents. Everyone has an opinion on the house, the lease, how much rent they should pay, what items to redline in the lease, etc.

            Post: Renting College Students

            Gaetano CiambrielloPosted
            • Lender
            • Posts 277
            • Votes 150

            Why I Love Student Housing

            Rent Premium - Students will typically pay 40-50% more in rental income than market rate housing. Parents typically foot the bill, so students are not as price sensitive.

            “Guaranteed” Rent - Parents will guarantee every single lease we sign. If we get 4 students on a lease, we also have one parent for each student. That is a total of 8 people on the lease. I know other student rental investors that do not require guarantors because of the additional administrative work and they say that the social pressure of not paying rent is enough insurance.

            Low Vacancy - LOCATION is everything with student rentals. They want to live near the campus, bars, wherever the action is! If you buy in the best locations, you will never have to worry about your house being vacant. I see many first time investors make the mistake of buying in a college town, but not where the students want to live.

            Business Sprints - You work like a lion in this business. Lots of sprinting and short bursts followed by longer periods where there is minimal activity.

            1. Leasing season is 2.5 months of non-stop tenant inquiries and requests. If you do not rent during the “leasing season” you may be in for some trouble.
            2. Tenants turnover the same time every year. During that two week period, you are jamming non-stop. Inspections, renovations and touch-ups, and then cleanings to get the property ready for the next group.

            Post: Renting to College Students

            Gaetano CiambrielloPosted
            • Lender
            • Posts 277
            • Votes 150

            @Caleb Rehg if you are still looking to connect with someone in the student housing space, I'd be happy to chat!

            The hardest part is it is a lot of work!