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All Forum Posts by: James Mc Ree

James Mc Ree has started 25 posts and replied 1036 times.

Post: Help! Zillow scammer! What should I do?

James Mc ReePosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Malvern, PA
  • Posts 1,068
  • Votes 808

You could add something like this to your ad:

-----------

For the protection of all interested tenants, I will always meet you at the property to show it to you and will never ask for money to see the property.  Any requests to do otherwise are from scammers.

-----------

Something like that might keep the shadow off your property and reduce fraud concerns among your prospective tenants.  You could also include a link to Facebook, LinkedIn or your other favorite social media so prospects know what you should look like when they meet you.

Jim.

Post: Property management advice please

James Mc ReePosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Malvern, PA
  • Posts 1,068
  • Votes 808

@Tom V Why do you want to invest in real estate?  Naturally, everyone wants to make money, but it appears you have a time conflict: your growing business potentially versus your real estate empire.  You should think about the extent to which you are willing to make that tradeoff and what impact on your business you are willing to accept.

I think there is tremendous value in understanding real estate rental operations with your first or first few properties.  Outsourcing all of that means you could learn nothing and become a hostage to your management company.  For example, you can replace a gas water heater for $900 or $1800 depending on who you call around my area.  It will be the same water heater, same warranty and both jobs will be done well.  Which company will the PM firm call?  Is it the same if they get a % of cost?

You have probably read that real estate investing is really all about people.  Good tenants = good experience, bad tenants = something else.  What will your PM firm do for you besides provide screening data?  Does the firm select the tenant or you?  If the firm selects, do they provide a rent or tenant guarantee?  If you select, you need to decide what to do with someone with spotty credit, past drug use and a low credit score.  Screening data is cheap.  Good screening is invaluable.

Thinking only in terms of money, I think of real estate investing as a bond investment that requires a lot more work than a bond and is sometimes unreliable (vacancy).  You hope to get a steady rent with some steady expenses to obtain an annual yield.  You might want to consider a more passive investment if that is the extent of your desired involvement.  CrowdSourcing real estate might work for you in that case as you can still pull 9% or more with debt, or more with equity investments, and you can diversify yourself out of single property and your local area risks.  You are definitely hands-off in CrowdFunding.  A downside is you have almost no connection to the property and it can be a lot less fun!  8-)

Good luck!

Jim.

Post: Title Company for double closings in Philadelphia Pennsylvania

James Mc ReePosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Malvern, PA
  • Posts 1,068
  • Votes 808

Sage Premier Settlements
http://www.sagetitlegroup.com/sage-premier-settlem...

I just settled a transaction with them yesterday.  All went well.  They've done an additional 4 prior titles/settlements for me in the past 4 years and I've had no issues with them.  I can't compare them to other companies, but did have a good experience.

The office I went to is in Broomall, a little east of Philadelphia.  It is their company HQ.

Good luck!

Jim.

Post: Central AC upgrade and increase rent?

James Mc ReePosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Malvern, PA
  • Posts 1,068
  • Votes 808
Originally posted by @Todd Plambeck:

Are you adding AC where there was none before or replacing window units with central?  How much cheaper are your units now than those in the neighborhood that have central air?

The unit currently has window units and forced air heat.  Window units come out.  New c/a in.  The return ducts that empty into the basement are extended to the furnace and a/c which are on the other side of the basement.

I am buying the property for $72,000.  Most similar properties in the area are selling around $85,000 with central air.  Many of those have fully upgraded kitchens which mine lacks.  Mine is more of an "upgrade in place".  I am adding some cabinets to avoid a kitchen remodeling.

Jim.

Post: Central AC upgrade and increase rent?

James Mc ReePosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Malvern, PA
  • Posts 1,068
  • Votes 808

I settle on the unit Thursday.  It already has a finished basement.  My improvements were replacing the furnace, adding c/a and adding duct work to bring basement returns back to the furnace and a/c.  The returns just empty into the basement and we need them to connect to the furnace and a/c.

The old furnace still worked.  I thought now was a good time to replace it since I wanted to add c/a and a new furnace would require ductwork for the returns to comply with code anyway.

My spending drivers are improved resale value and rent competitiveness, as suggested above. The seller is motivated and price below market in a nice area. The ROI for the c/a is 2 years or less. It is harder to assess for the furnace since I don't know when it would actually fail. Murphy would have it fail at the worst possible time giving me some stress ROI too. 8-) Otherwise, I don't think a tenant cares if there is a new or old furnace if they are warm.

Jim.

Post: Central AC upgrade and increase rent?

James Mc ReePosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Malvern, PA
  • Posts 1,068
  • Votes 808

I am about to replace a 1950 gravity gas heater with a modern unit, add c/a and do a little basement duct work to a unit all for $5,800.

Around here (Delaware County, PA - near Phila), a "3Br, 1Ba, unfinished basement and no c/a" is the "base unit" for the row homes I buy.  Upgrades add a powder room, finish the basement and add c/a.  The base unit typically rents for about $1,000 - $1,100 while the fully upgraded unit rents for about $1,200 if you can ignore everything else that affects value for an over-simplified comparison.  That is very hard to do.  Condition, location and maintenance needs are very important.

One tenant factor you may run into is the affordability of c/a.  Lower income tenants may not be interested in c/a as it will increase their electricity bill and rent if you charge more.