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All Forum Posts by: Gary Striewski

Gary Striewski has started 4 posts and replied 13 times.

Post: Rental Property HELOC's

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6

Hey there, BP. Wondering if anyone has had luck in Connecticut with finding lenders who will lend on investment/rental properties. Specifically HELOC's. Thanks!

Post: Making the switch from self-managed to property management. HELP

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6

Thanks @David Wolber appreciate the note. I have contracts from all prospects right now so definitely comparing thoroughly. Much appreciated!

Post: Making the switch from self-managed to property management. HELP

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6

Thank you @Dave Poeppelmeier @Nathan Gesner @Corby Goade @Drew Sygit. All helpful tips. Added two more calls to make thru contacts found thru narpm.org. Appreciate the help. Glad I asked/planned on asking most of the crucial things you guys listed. Feeling confident that after these two calls, I'll be able to choose from the 5 I'll have spoken with. Thanks again. 

Post: Making the switch from self-managed to property management. HELP

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6

Hey everyone, Connecticut based investor with 2 condos and 1 multi-family in the Hartford/Bristol area that I want to put under property management. In the last week, all of my tenants have reached out for this or that, fix/maintenance or otherwise, while my dad is visiting for the week AND I am still working. So it's the perfect storm. I was always planning on going with property management but now the decision is expedited. I have some feelers out to a handful of accredited companies locally but wanted to gauge the room on what questions I absolutely need to be asking and making sure is included in whatever outlet I go with. I'm ok with the percentage fee, and ideally looking for a full-service manager who will do everything from set up viewings to turning units when vacant and everything in between. Especially handling all calls/texts/emails from tenants. Looking to keep all properties with one property manager for now and see how it goes. Thanks and looking forward to the responses.

Post: How Many HOA's is Too Many HOA's

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6
Interesting. Thanks for the insight. You always just assume (or at least it's taught in CT Real Estate school) that everything inside the paint is yours while everything behind it is the Associations. I learned that wasn't true recently when having to replace a shower valve out of pocket. 

I appreciate the note!

Originally posted by @John Mocker:

Gary,

Our agency insures both Condo Units and Condo Associations. One of the advantages of CT for a Unit Owner is that the laws have been amended to put more of the Insurance claims under the Association. Of course that shifts the cost and it comes back in higher HOA fees. The big advantage is there is no back & forth on who's responsibility it is to pay for it. That caused delays, lawsuits, etc.

I would suggest you review with your agent the actual bylaws of each association.  Look for what the description of the unit is (where does your ownership begin, the bare walls or the studs...) and what you own inside (ie. fixures, cabinets, sheetrock, etc.).  Then find out what the association is required to cover.  You may own the sheetrock but they may have to insure it.  Once you know what is your responsibility, then you can decide if you have enough coverage.  I find, when I'm quoting on condo units, both owned and rented, that the limits seem to have been picked arbitrarily

Post: How Many HOA's is Too Many HOA's

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6
Originally posted by @Kenneth Garrett:

@Gary Striewski

That is definitely one of the challenges of HOA's where a capital project needs to funded and your fees go up or a special assessment is required for a couple of years. I like the idea that your property taxes are generally less as well as insurance but it generally gets cancelled out with HOA dues. I have numerous properties and some have small HOA's, generally areas where there is a lake. The dues are extremely low. As long as it is managed well (HOA) I think it's fine. I know investors who only buy condos to avoid big expenses you have with SFR. As long as it's profitable I see it as a good strategy.

Pros and cons on both sides that's for sure. I've had my attorney go thru each set of condo docs and the financials pretty thoroughly and major work has actually been done very recently before I joined so that's a bit of peace of mind. The x-factor tho like you mentioned is the unexpected and that's what I fear. Item X is needed for a building in the complex and we are stuck with the assessment. So long as the HOA is ran ethically I am ok with small increases and even slight annual bumps, we are voting to add another member to one of the HOA's and I plan on putting my name in the hat so I can be more involved and see it all firsthand. I appreciate the perspective. Thanks!

Post: How Many HOA's is Too Many HOA's

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6
Originally posted by @Filipe Pereira:
Originally posted by @Gary Striewski:

I suppose I just fear the day an assessment is levied or there is a drastic change in fees or the budget isn't handled well and the unit owners are stuck with those mistakes.

This is the number one reason I will probably never buy a condo (never say never, right?). I'm very budgeted and the idea that one day I could come home, open my mail and see that the HOA that manages the complex I own a condo in forgot to replace the roof 2 years ago (random scenario) and now needs X amount of money right away terrifies me. I think the best way to hedge against this is to have serious money saved up so that the bumps in the road don't affect you.

The other part of this is just mentally accepting that there will be things that you cannot control on properties you do Not have complete Financial control over. Heck, there are properties that we do have complete financial control over and things still come up on our radar from time to time.

In terms of being proactive, I'd try to be as involved with the HOA as possible. But if you're buying condos all over Connecticut, that's pretty hard to do unless you have a very active property manager.

I hear ya. After locking down this one I plan on going SFR and Multi. Two of the three condos have pretty buttoned up, large scale and reputable Property Management Companies with owners on both sides. That helps imo. And roofs/parking lots were done within the last two years on both. So hopefully no major CapEx for awhile but the third condo is the wild card. A little bit looser of a HOA and Property Manager per tenants, but their budget is in the black and I'll be quick to call out any funny business. I appreciate the perspective as always.

Post: How Many HOA's is Too Many HOA's

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6

I'm closing soon on my third condo in the greater Hartford area and am looking forward to adding to my portfolio but I'm wondering at what point I should pause on condo acquisition and not stack so many properties with the variable of all variables (HOA) on top of one another. I have friends who have dozens of condos and love them and some who have a variety among other things. Understanding the communities financials and budget are the first thing I look at, and here in CT we close with attorneys who also do that diligence. I suppose I just fear the day an assessment is levied or there is a drastic change in fees or the budget isn't handled well and the unit owners are stuck with those mistakes. I know those are the inherent risks with condo ownership but are there others out there who invest similarly that have found a way to mitigate some of that or at least come to terms/peace of mind with these hypotheticals?

Post: Meet ups in central or northern CT??

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6

What's up, guys....

Went thru the thread and would like to hop on any sort of meet-up either virtually or otherwise. Would even be open to trying to put one together somewhere locally if people are interested. 

Post: Buying a multi-family with long-term existing tenants in-lease

Gary StriewskiPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • CONNECTICUT
  • Posts 13
  • Votes 6
Originally posted by @Calvin Stewart:

@Gary Striewski it seems like you are going through a similar situation that I recently went through when purchasing my duplex.

Tenant has lived in their unit for quite some time. Rent was under market value and I had to honor their lease until it expires.

If you do make the decision to purchase the property. During the closing process, be sure you have the tenant complete an estoppel certificate to confirm security deposit, lease terms, and if there were any verbal agreements between the seller and the tenant and have a lease assignment agreement completed so you become the lessor of the property for the remainder of that lease.

Awesome tips. I appreciate that, Calvin. Those steps have all been added to the checklist.