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All Forum Posts by: Greg Carr

Greg Carr has started 10 posts and replied 50 times.

Post: Full time investor joining Bigger Pockets from Dallas Fort Worth :)

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

It's always good to boost our DFW community! Welcome to bigger pockets!

Post: General Contractor in Fort Worth

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

I'm looking for some solid, experienced general contractors in Fort Worth to work on single family investment properties. Obviously they need to rehab cheap and quickly. It is not for my own, but my client's that I wholesale to.

Post: Ways to Increase Your ROI

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

There is so much information out there, sometimes you just don't know where to go. I am a fan of taking my time to read or listen to a whole book, and get some very deep answers, but sometimes you just need the bullet points. My purpose here is to just give the bullet points, and a reader can have the option to look further into each one on their own.

These are obviously my opinions. Feel free to argue your point.

So, here is an up-front list of simple ways to increase your ROI. I want this list to grow as we add to and improve it.

  • Buy the highest ARV you can afford: The higher the ARV, the higher your ROI. If I buy a house for 100K, put in 50k of work, and list for 200k, I will get about a 50k return (not including closing costs etc.). If I buy a house for 200k, put in 80k of work, and list it for 350k, then I'm obviously going to get a greater return for putting in about the same amount of time.
  • Buy & hold: If you flip a property, you make a flat return. If you rent a property, you are not only collecting rent, but your property value will go up over the term of the loan. If you hold the property past the term, you will be pocketing some great passive income.
  • Use a rehab loan: A rehab loan will loan at a higher DTI and will approve of distressed properties. After the repairs are completed it rolls into a conventional loan. Put plainly, less money down = more deals = bigger ROI. If I have 100k cash and I flip and rent one property with a 120k ARV, I'm doing good. If I use a rehab loan and flip and rent 3 properties with 120k ARV each, I'm doing great!
    This is something that a lot of investors do not take advantage of because they simply do not understand it. The loan costs will be higher, but it is easily offset by the returns.
  • Flip then hold: One thing you can do is flip 2 or 3 houses to build up larger cash reserves then buy a rental. Theoretically, this allows you to buy a bigger property to rent which will collect a larger rent over the years. I know a few people who do this over and over again, and it seems like a solid plan.
  • Good, cheap contractors: Many contractors will quote $20,000 to fix a foundation, when there are others out there that can do it for less than $5,000 and still do a decent job. Still, others will also do it for less than 5k but not even finish, and next time you call him he's already beat it and skipped town. I think getting a good referral from a reputable source (IE your friend who used them several times) is the easiest way to find good contractors. However, many will never turn down a contract, so you may see a good contractor go downhill fast if too many people start working with him (example: he's used to doing 3 at a time, now he's doing 7, and 2 don't even get finished in time or at all).

Post: The Land Geek

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42
Originally posted by @Richard D.:

Never even heard of it, but I have flipped raw land, and so far average 200% ROI. My thoughts on buying courses that give you generic ideas, its a waste of money and time. You would be better served reading BP blogs, listening to podcasts, and asking questions in the forums. Plus, you don't waste money you could use to buy raw land!

As a side note, city of Fort Worth, Texas has sold property for as low as $100.00, how much is the course?

 Where do you go to buy land from the city? Is it an auction?

Post: Howdy from Dallas/Fort Worth

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

Honestly I think regular stocks are a better investment than REITs.

Post: New to DFW / fort worth

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

There are many places to meet other investors in Fort Worth!

A few recommendations:

  • Try the facebook page "Dallas Fort Worth Real Estate Investors".
  • The courthouse has an auction on the first Tuesday of every month, and it is packed with investors.
  • Meetup.com is a great way to find other investors.

Post: New from Fort Worth

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

@Tim Leslie Hey I noticed you are from Minneapolis. I grew up in Lakeville! How is the market doing in Minnesota? I'm curious how my old state is doing :P.

Post: New from Fort Worth

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

Hey!

I'm Greg Carr from Fort Worth. I am a new real estate agent working with investment properties. I hope to learn more about real estate so I can help others as well as start investing on my own eventually. If I'm lucky I may even meet an investment partner.

Cheers.

Post: Newbie from Dallas/Fort Worth

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

Welcome to bigger pockets! I am in the same boat and I hope we both can reach our goals.

Post: Become an Agent - Minnesota

Greg CarrPosted
  • Residential Real Estate Agent
  • Fort Worth, TX
  • Posts 53
  • Votes 42

If you want to learn more about regulations, take it in class.

If you want to save time and do it at your own pace, take it online.

I took mine online.

Just make sure you study hard for the exam. I was the only one that passed in my exam room...